“Brazilian invaders” an issue for Blatter
This week I read this interesting article from Martha on The Offside. I though it would be nice to share since for the past few weeks we have heard lots and lots about speculations on what is the problem with international football (the picture is also from her (!) )
FIFA President Sepp Blatter has found the real problem for international football, and it’s nothing to do with bankrupt FAs, England being crap, or the outrageously punishing World Cup qualifying road down with South and Central American nations have to travel. No, it’s Brazilians, specifically those who play abroad. According to Blatter, “If we don’t take care about the invaders from Brazil … then the next World Cups in 2014 and 2018 out of the 32 teams … we will have 16 full of Brazilian players.” Never descends into hyperbole, does he?
here is a long, long, long tradition in football of playing for national teams other than the ones to which you’re ethnically attached; for a while, FIFA even allowed players to turn out for more than one team at the senior level — Jose Altafini, for example, won the World Cup with Brazil in 1958, then played for Italy in 1960. And, while that’s no longer legal, there are players all over the world playing for adopted nations, from Freddie Adu (ethnically Ghanaian) playing for the US, to Alex (a dreaded Brazilian) play for Japan; further complicating matters are those with grandparents from the country for which they play, like Mauro Camoranesi who, though born and raised in Argentina, plays for Italy, the country from which his grandparents emigrated to South America.
Brazilians aren’t the only ones being adopted by new homelands in order to play at the international level, nor are they the only ones being courted by nations looking to improve their international prospects. So, if you consider foreigners (But how do you define them? Naturalized citizens? Anyone not born there? Those without at least one grandparent from the country in question?) in your national team a problem, I guess this is a bit one. But for Blatter to rage only against the inclusion of ethic Brazilians in other national teams is completely absurd, and just another sign of his need to bluster about something — anything — on a regular basis.







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worldcup 2018 | Dec 3, 2007 | Reply
nonsense maybe a few will but a never a whole team…