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Terry’s failed Cape Town Coup

World Cup 2010 | Tuesday 22 June 2010 by Richard Blayney

terry-v-capello

So here we are on the eve of England’s decisive World Cup game against Slovenia. I am sure coming into this World Cup they did not expect their final group game to be as do-or-die as one of the knockout games, but it is and they had better get it right or get ready for a hell of a reception when they return to England. Qualification is still in their hands should they win but it hasn’t just been their performances on the pitch that have let them down, but rather the battle of power between wannabe player-manager John Terry and reigning camp chief Fabio Capello. For a moment at the beginning of the week, the good ship England was taking onboard water and for a minute looked like it might even sink, dragging their World Cup hopes down in turn, but a quiet couple of days has left many hoping that the repair work is complete and that focus is now fully on the 90 minutes that matter. So before they finally bury the hatchet – or perhaps drag it up and start tossing it around the dressing room if things don’t go right tomorrow – here is what has left the England team on a knife edge of tension inside the camp with one group game to go.

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Capello and Terry go on public tit-for-tat

World Cup 2010 | Monday 21 June 2010 by Richard Blayney

FabioCapellovTerry

Fabio Capello was today furious at John Terry’s decision to air the English national teams dirty laundry in public and responded by going in front of the same group of media hacks to criticise him right back. The actions of both men goes some way to summing up the quickly deteriorating 2010 World Cup campaign for England. I wrote a few days ago about England and France going into turmoil but no longer had I submitted the blog than things continued to spiral for both sides. The French players protested the Anelka expulsion by sitting on training and England’s former captain John Terry decided to go public with his dismay with how things are being run in the England camp. If you believe what is being written in the press, not all the England players are pleased with JT’s decision to go public and Capello certainly isn’t.

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John Terry signs and apology to Wayne

Football | Sunday 14 March 2010 by Richard Blayney

Funny stuff this and some brass neck on these guys to ask this question. Terry looks furious but credit to him for holding it together and not thumping them. I suspect he had an idea the whole thing would have been videoed from one angle or another. Now while John Terry deserves some stick for his behaviour of late, this is also a reason why some players are very coy with fans these days – this camera is clearly hidden and hoping to catch a Terry freak out.

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Bridge skips past Terry in handshake and rightly so

Football | Saturday 27 February 2010 by Richard Blayney

Credit has to be given to Wayne Bridge for not stopping for a split second before laying John Terry out with a right hook to the jaw. It would have earned Bridge a massive suspension but it also would have earned the love of everyone who wasn’t a Chelsea fan. As it turns out Bridge perhaps gets even more respect for ignoring Terry and getting on with the game and hurting Terry in a bigger way than a right hook might have done by winning the three points. Oh who am I kidding, he should have thumped him.

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The filter between Blatters brain and his mouth goes missing again

Football | Thursday 11 February 2010 by Richard Blayney

If loose lips sink ships, FIFA boss Sepp Blatter could famously take down armadas.

— Cathal Kelly, Toronto Star, 11 Feb ‘10

You’re probably wondering ‘what now,’ when you hear that Blatter has talked crap again in front of the Worlds media. Well this time he is trying to excuse John Terry’s extra-marital activities by saying that if he was from a Latin country he would likely be applauded. Really Sepp? Really?

“Listen, this is a special approach in the Anglo-Saxon countries. If this had happened in let’s say Latin countries, then I think he would have been applauded,” said Blatter as the gathered hacks scribbled into their notebooks with excitement as their favorite quote barer came good again.

Seriously, if this guy wasn’t the most powerful man in the game and if he didn’t represent the game as the head of FIFA it might be funny. However he is all of these things and therefore it is just frightening. I’ve said many times how this man is a disaster for Football and usually it comes from the nonsense he spouts from his flimsy loose tongue.

This article on today’s Toronto Star website basically sums it all up.

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The John Terry dilema

Football | Wednesday 3 February 2010 by Richard Blayney

Think I’d ignore this story altogether? Yes I am late but I’m not in it for the juicy gossip, just the Football side of it, though both have become intertwined so much the last lot of days it is hard to discuss one without getting caught up in the other. Much like trying to write about how Golf would be affected by the Tiger Woods scandal or more-so what would happen next with Tiger Woods in a Golfing context. Yep, this John Terry affair with his team-mates ex-girlfriend and then getting her pregnant and paying for an abortion is Britain’s very own Tiger Woods scandal and the tabloids are going for the throat on this one, hoping to dig up more woman, more gossip and more to bring Terry down with. The guy should never have got the injunction and pissed off the British hacks to this degree. Even in a World Cup year when these same writers profess their undying love for all things English Football with their full support are they willing to risk it all by bringing down the clubs captain.

That isn’t to say Terry is innocent, after all he made his own bed and in the end, he gave them something to write about by acting the fool in the first place, but I have always said the private lives of anyone, regardless of the money they make or the fact they are a celebrity should remain private and what they do behind closed doors, is none of our business. But it is in our faces now and that is the reality and questions must be asked about whether it is right for him to go on as England captain?

Personally, now that it is all out in the open I really think the guy should be stood down. His team-mate Wayne Bridge whose ex-girlfriend Terry is alleged to have had an affair with could well be in the dressing room with him at the World Cup and for Terry to be standing there with the captains armband on saying, “Right boys, follow me into battle, I’m your leader and I’m going to win you the World Cup,” you have to imagine would leave one half of the dressing room backing Bridge and then you run into all sorts of problems. Some experts argue that this won’t hurt the dressing room, and it may not, but then there is the moral issue also. Sports stars shouldn’t be looked at as roll models, but the England manager has said that he expects his players to be stand up people and remember what they are representing. As captain, John Terry represents his entire country on the football scene and these latest problems won’t sit well with a lot of people.

I personally couldn’t care less, if I was English and busting for England to win the World Cup I’d only care if I thought it would tear the team apart so close to the event itself, but while it may or may not, is it worth Capello taking the risk? Taking the risk that the team fall out, that Bridge and Terry have issues and England’s best shot at glory in many years is destroyed by some non-footballing issue. Many team mates over the years have hated one another off the field but when they cross the white line they act professionally and get the job done because it benefits them as well to be successful, but is it worth the risk? Of course if the answer to something like that is yes then a new can of worms opens – stripping Terry of the captaincy wouldn’t be enough, you’d have to banish him from the squad altogether. Of course Terry is a much better player than Bridge but what kind of message would that send if Capello left Bridge out of his squad to avoid controversy.

No doubt about it, this is Fabio Capello’s toughest decision of his England managerial tenure. It’ll be much tougher than deciding his squad and if he gets it wrong the media will, unfortunately, come down on him. John Terry should have done the right thing and took the problem out of his managers hands by volunteering to step down. Throw in an apology and suddenly, with five months still to go until the World Cup, there is plenty of time to heal the wounds and focus on Football. Depending on what Capello does it could go wrong every time just as easily as it could go right:

1. He keeps Terry as captain and the dressing room revolts throwing the WC dreams into tatters.

2. He drops Terry as captain but keeps him in the squad and England don’t win and the media point to this decision as the pivotal moment.

3. He drops Terry from the squad and… (see above).

4. He doesn’t pick Bridge and the press go wild that he ditched the innocent guy in all of this just to keep the balance of the team even though Bridge’s place in the squad is not guaranteed anyway.

Oh to be Fabio Capello (though the headache might be worth it for the salary!)

In a sporting context, what makes this much worse than the Tiger Woods affair is that Football is a team sport and so many other players dreaming of World Cup glory could have that left in jeopardy thanks to John Terry’s private lift turning public.

On a side note away from Terry but on the subject of sport stars under 24/7 scrutiny comes another reality in the modern society that we live in; With mobile phones with built in cameras that have instant access to Internet uploading, the superstars we love to watch are under the eye more than ever … one bad photo of a footballer, generously taking a photo with some female fan with his first beer of the night in his hands but caught blinking as the photo is being taken is on the net in seconds and it looks like he is a drunken mess picking up random woman at the bar. Sports stars aren’t that open to their fans that much as it is, but this sort of stuff drives the fans away even more. There are plenty of sports stars out there who refuse to have their photo taken in public with fans because of what may be implied, and that is a shame.

And on a final note I want to refer to the word Scandal. I will use in a tag of this post and I used it on some of the Tiger Woods articles a month or two ago. What a shame that a sportsblog is forced to tag some borderline sports story with words such as Scandal. Another one I’ve had to use over the years that I wish I didn’t is Drug Cheat and Steroids etc.

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