One Weird Weekend

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ONE WEIRD WEEKEND

By Touch the Light

I like football. But seriously...

I like football.

I like the way the game flows. I like the passionate intensity so many of the supporters show. I like seeing a goal in the very first minute and not knowing if that’ll be the final score or it’s going to end up 7-3. I like it that teams of no-hopers such as Swansea City can become established Premier League outfits, and I have to admit that I take a perverse pleasure in watching some sides move in the opposite direction.

But tonight I’m wondering if the game hasn’t changed so much I’d be better off following some other sport. Cheese rolling, maybe.

It’s already been a difficult season for me. I support three clubs: Sunderland, which is where I choose to live; Hartlepool United, from my home town; and Portsmouth, the city where I spent my formative years and which will always have a special place in my heart.

At the time of writing there’s a very real possibility — many pundits would say a near certainty — that all three will be relegated from their respective divisions this year.

I have no problem with that. Shit happens. What does success really mean if there’s no chance of failure?

Yet today I’ve learned that Sunderland have sacked manager Martin O’Neill and appointed as his replacement the former Italian international Paolo di Canio. As a result David Milliband, brother of opposition Labour Party leader Ed Milliband, has severed his connections with the club owing to di Canio’s ‘fascist’ leanings, including his admiration for Benito Mussolini.

This was news to me. I’d always admired di Canio. Okay, he once pushed a referee to the ground after being sent off but the same guy demonstrated a unique degree of sportsmanship when in one game he had the opportunity to score but caught the ball because he’d noticed that the goalkeeper was injured and demanded that the game be stopped so he could receive treatment.

But I can’t abide right-wing views. They make me sick to the stomach. If di Canio really holds some of the opinions I’ve seen mentioned on the blogs I’ve been reading tonight then I hope he fails — big time.

Sunderland is a pretty depressed place. But its people are wonderful. There’s an undercurrent of racism here, but it’s the kind I grew up with, a benign hangover from the days of Empire. ‘Made In Britain’ and all that. (This is not to excuse it, by the way!)

What the city doesn’t need is a flamboyant character shouting his mouth off and by doing so making its image worse than it already is.

Thank you for your time.

Richard Furness

Comments

Racism

The USA has you beat there are people here that are Racist to are President because he is of color on his fathers side . The fact that he is the American dream of any poor kid can grow up to be President doesn,t count or that he worked hard to get where he is.
Plus he has agreat smile

THANKS for listening

Please let me squeeze in between?

Andrea Lena's picture

...I'm probably straddling the aisle here after going back and forth for several decades. I must say that while some folks might be pre-occupied with the President's skin tone, most folks I know, Democrat and Republican and Independent alike, if they are upset, remain disappointed with him over his policies. I have yet to read or hear from any family, friends, or acquaintances who speak in anything less than respect for him and his office. He does, however, have a great smile.

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

In general, the personal is not political

I find few things as poisonous as the idea that everything must be politicized. If you enjoy a coach / team for their playing, continue enjoying it for such. They're athletes, and you're watching them play a game, and presumably cheering for them to win. You may safely continue doing so regardless of whether or not you agree with their politics. Over politicizing life is one reason politics becomes ever more bitter. I hope you can resist it.

Titania

titania.jpg

Titania

Lord, what fools these mortals be!

It's Not As Simple As That, Not Here

If it was anywhere but Sunderland I'd be inclined to agree. But perhaps more than anywhere else in the UK the football club is synonymous with the city. It stands for us all. Its ethos and its reputation matter far more than the performances of its athletes. It hasn't been a successful club for decades but it remains a great club, the heart of a community that has precious little going for it. This man isn't right for us.

Ban nothing. Question everything.

Racism can infect all parts

of life. If more people would stop spouting racist remarks and look at the facts, the world would be a much better place.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine