It was 1988 and a politically-attuned sixth-former was arguing with a rugby-mad friend another over whether apartheid South Africa should be readmitted to international sport.
Exasperated with the ban on the Springboks, which he believed was ruining his favourite game at international level, the rugger-bugger insisted to me, “I think politics should keep out of sport!” Oh, if only.
Politics certainly has tampered with the Beautiful Game too often. Benito Mussolini made the Azzurri wear black shirts at the 1934 World Cup in honour of his fascist movement. Hitler assumed the more talented Austrian wunderteam into a greater German eleven, losing the talents of Matthias Sindelar and others. Then there was the Argentine junta’s manipulation of the 1978 World Cup, Silvio Berlusconi’s use of A.C. Milan as a springboard for his political career and so on.
As football exerts such a strong emotional Togel Hongkong pull on so many people, it is a wonder more politicians do not ally themselves with a successful club or national team.
The players are often the victims, from the England eleven forced by the British ambassador to give Nazi salutes in Berlin in 1938 to the talented Yugoslavia team forced to exit Euro ’92 before a ball had been kicked, to Israel’s national team who, absurdly, play in UEFA competition instead of the AFC.
This month the US axed a planned friendly in Cairo, leaving its players without a February friendly. The USSF had no option but to cancel. …