
Football
fans were given something meaty to chew on recently when the English
Football Association appointed an Italian, Fabio Capello, as manager
of the national team. Capello, in turn, brought with him a bevy of
besuited Italian colleagues to help him to ensure that England
qualify for, and preferably do well in, the next major tournament,
the 2010 World Cup.
Most
football fans, including large sections of the press, have been
tearing their hair out in frustration because the England team hasn’t
been doing too well recently in comparison with the top national
sides. (Let’s leave aside the fact that England isn’t strictly
speaking a nation and that the United Kingdom actually has four
‘national’ teams). The crunch came when the previous manager,
Steve McClaren, failed to ‘lead’ England to the 2008 European
Championship finals this coming summer. He was considered not to have
enough charisma or technical know-how for the job. Capello was seen
as the best qualified manager to take over. The only fly in the
ointment was his nationality, but for the sake of getting the right
man, this was overlooked and those who would have preferred an
Englishman breathed a collective sigh of resignation. At least this
foreigner, with his no-nonsense approach and impressive managerial
CV, might knock a bunch of spoiled, overpaid players into shape and
win something.
This
is not the first time a foreigner has been involved in English
football, although based on the press coverage and fan reaction, we’d
have been forgiven for thinking so. Only a few years ago, the England
team was managed by a Swede, Sven-Goran Eriksson, but, perhaps
because he spoke good English and was temperamentally more like an
Englishman than Capello, he was more readily accepted. More
significantly, there is now a proliferation of non-English players in
professional English club football, to the extent that some sides
rarely field an English player at all. In this sense, the game in
some quarters is truly cosmopolitan.
Looking
farther back, the reality is that there has always been a foreign or
non-local element in English football. Almost from its inception as
an organised sport, in the late nineteenth century, players moved
around from club to club if their services were required. Thus we
had, firstly, northerners playing for southern clubs and vice versa,
then Scots playing for and managing English clubs, then English
players and managers moving abroad to foreign clubs as their overseas
counterparts came in the opposite direction, only more recently in
far greater numbers. At every stage of increasing “foreignness”,
there were many objectors.
But
after the inevitable cries of horror, each encroachment of
‘foreigners’ into the game is accepted as long as it helps ‘your’
team to win. For the fans, winning is an end in itself, a kind of
vicarious success and reflected glory. For the players, it means a
better living (sometimes, in the case of the top players,
dramatically so). For the clubs, it is a means of making profits, or
at least avoiding losses and staying in business. So if foreign
players and managers can help in the process of winning, most people
involved in the game are satisfied, albeit grudgingly in some cases.
The
other side of the coin is that employing foreign players and managers
is regarded as a failure for the national game. The general view is
that the England team is not good enough because, as a result of the
foreign influx, there aren’t thought to be enough good English
players or managers bubbling up through the system.
Shame,
we are told, and we hear players saying that to play for their
country is the greatest honour. But interestingly, club managers
aren’t so patriotic – they don’t like ‘call-ups’ for fear
their players get injured and reduce the chances of winning for their
club.
The
issue of club versus country or national versus foreigner in football
is a reflection of the confused attitude to nationalism in capitalist
society in general. After all, organised football is entirely a
product of capitalism. The same is true of all modern professional
sport. Its increasingly ruthless and competitive nature is a direct
result of the increasingly ruthless and competitive society it is a
part of. Here are some more examples which show the increasing
pervasiveness of capitalism into sport as in everyday life.
-
Sponsorship is a big
money-spinner: thus we see a proliferation of company logos on team kit
and perimeter fencing. ‘Lesser’ sports get away with even more crass
commercialism, such as the large RBS logo painted into the centre of
rugby pitches and angled directly at the camera such that it is almost
constantly in view.
-
Merchandising is an
integral aspect of any football club’s everyday activities: typified by
the annual introduction of new strip to keep up sales of replica
shirts.
-
Pressure to succeed
becomes ever greater: at some clubs, huge sums are paid for what are
seen as star players and managers (regardless of nationality), who are
then discarded almost as a matter of routine after a year or less if
they don’t bring instant success.
-
As in many other areas of
capitalism, the top strata of football are awash with money while
there’s precious little to spare lower down, with many of the smaller
clubs are living from week to week.
-
We have the absurd
situation of millionaire players bullying referees who until recently
didn’t even get paid to do the job.
-
There is regular
tinkering with the laws of the game to make it a more entertaining, and
thus saleable, ‘product’.
-
Clubs are now known as
brands – even some players such as Beckham.
-
Returning to the
nationality issue, the increase in foreign ‘trade’ reflects the
increasingly global nature of capitalism: witness the recent proposal
of the Premier League for an extra match per team each season, to be
played at various venues around the world – there can be no other
reason than that of generating more profit.
-
The game is
ultra-competitive: mistakes by players or referees are more and more
costly; at a far lower level we have pushy parents on the touchline at
school matches bullying their children to play harder and be more like
the heroes they worship.
-
So much rides on success
that you have to have a winner. This is particularly ironic in football
when roughly 25% of matches are drawn. The draw is increasingly
unacceptable, hence the increasing number of penalty shoot-outs to
replace replays.
-
The desire to win also
perversely means a fear of losing – for many decades the game has been
over-defensive, with too few goals.
-
Teams are run on almost
military lines, with the players being routinely drilled like soldiers
by their coaches and disciplined by referees and organising bodies.
-
Football is now a
so-called ‘middle class’ game and lower-paid fans are being priced out.
To watch even a modest club play can cost three times as much as a
cinema ticket.
Most
of the above observations are commented on weekly in the national
press. Most football fans agree that money coupled with the
overweening greed of the big clubs is spoiling the game. Alas,
lasting solutions are never suggested since most fans and journalists
are as blinkered by the constraints of money-based society as the
sport’s practitioners.
The
only way to stop the rich clubs getting richer and the poor clubs
getting poorer is not to limit the amount of money in the game or to
distribute it more evenly – a virtually impossible task anyway –
but to take the money out of football altogether. And that in turn
means abolishing money in all other areas of life. And how do we stop
foreigners being brought in to manage the national team? Well, why
don’t we try abolishing nationality? The national football team is
a product of the nation as a competing political unit in capitalism,
and in a nationless society would have no role.
ROD
SHAW
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