by Christopher Clark
Unfortunately,
the England Women’s Football team just lost the semi-final of the World Cup to
the juggernaut that is the US.
Firstly, it showed that the curse of England
sport does not just apply to men’s teams and we will never make another World
Cup Final in any team sport for as long as I live - apart from the Netball.
It
also took me back to the match against Cameroon in the Round of 16. Cameroon
were not expected to win, and did not, but they felt frustration and started
fouling some England players. This is not unexpected in any sporting match; no
one feels happy when they are losing, but the backlash was immense. Newspapers
were declaring it ‘Shameful’, ‘This wasn’t football’, ‘Shaming the game’ and
calling the team ‘Camerloons’. The England manager Phil Neville wondered if
this event had ruined the game for millions of little girls all over the globe
and English journalists decided not to ask questions in the press conference,
but instead have a go at the Cameroonian Manager. Obviously the same standards
are in place for the men’s game; they never abuse the referee, go in for
overzealous challenges or just racially abuse many of their opponents.
That
is not true at all. The standards of the men’s game are much lower; whole crowds racially abuse players, violent tackles are fairly standard and players
often get in the referee’s face. For example, the 2006 World Cup match between
Portugal and the Netherlands, called the ‘Battle of Nürnburg’, had 16 yellow
cards and 4 reds; the teams were never accused of ruining the game for millions
of young boys. The same applies to Zinedine Zidane’s head-butt later in the
tournament, which rather than being vilified, now is a statue that was once
shown in Paris. Even worse is that Phil Neville himself admitted in a
documentary that he and his brother repeatedly and deliberately fouled Jose
Antonio Reyes in a match against Arsenal in order to intimidate him. He is
possibly not the man to be preaching about fouling and vilifying the Cameroon
team.
There
are obviously occasions when male footballers are put to justice, such as Luis
Suarez biting people for a mid-game snack, but they are rarely accused of
shaming the sport and have not had the charge of putting boys off the game.
Furthermore, the Cameroon team are only part-time, they will have little chance
of reaching this level again, due to much greater levels of investment going
into Western teams. The frustration that they felt is very understandable to
any of us that has played in a game against a much better team, with feelings
that refereeing decisions were going against us. Indeed, the many problems with VAR (including many decisions that went against the England team) is an important topic - though one for another day.
The women’s teams should be allowed to get irritated without
these silly accusations being levelled on them. Finally,
if you want to watch some decent football without the players jumping on the
floor when any slight gust of wind hit them, the World Cup final is coming soon,
and the US team is going to be virtually unstoppable. Hopefully the brilliant
Megan Rapinoe will be back in time and be wonderfully outspoken in the
post-match interviews again.
Comments
Post a Comment
Comments with names are more likely to be published.