Aline Pellegrino Comments on Women’s Soccer in Brazil (Seth Browner TIFO 1/13/14)

Female Footballer Divulges the Inequalities in the Football-Crazed Nation of Brazil

Brazil, famous for its lush jungles and sunny beaches, is a hub of success international soccer playing. Claiming more World Cup titles than any other country, football is an indispensable facet of its diverse society. However, the hidden side to this athletic fanaticism is that the nation’s love of football is highly unequal. Women soccer players receive little acclaim. The sport has many steps to take before it can catch up to the level it is practiced at for men. Brazilian international player Aline Pellegrino deplores these inequities and succinctly elaborates on her active front to ignite the women’s soccer movement in an article in Public Radio International.

TIFO: Symbolism of difference between Catalan and Spanish identities through Soccer

Here’s the article.

I think the author does an interesting job of trying to show the similarities between Cataluña and Madrid, but I’m not sure if this actually is true.  The Catalans prove that they are not okay being under Madrid’s power by setting up movements using their large big money maker the article mentions, FC Barcelona.

This article show why I disagree with the other article.

The players that the article mention are pretty meaningful in terms of symbolism of soccer for Spain.  The Catalans have proved that they are equal, if not better, as seen through both articles talking about how many Catalans are on the national team.

 

A really interesting quote from the second article on the Spanish take on football from their national teams head coach:

“The Spain coach also looked ahead to the 2014 World Cup finals, admitting that even though Spain were defending champions, “The normal thing is for us not to win it and that is a good thing…” [and] “We need that insecurity against our rivals, who are all good (Spain will face Holland, Chile and eAustralia in the group stage). In the past nobody expected us to get past the quarter finals and now everyone expects us to win. We need to measure our optimism and that is not easy,” he said. 

Carter TIFO: Racism in Serbian football fan culture

Racism in Serbian football fan culture: the establishment fails to act

Recently in a U-21 game with Serbia and England spiraled out of control upon Serbian fans chanting racist remarks, not an uncommon occurrence during Serbian matches but certainly a first on the global stage. These acts of racism being a prevalent feature in Serbian soccer establishes the “systematic failures of the Serbian political leadership”, not to mention the racial intolerance of many other Eastern European countries.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/oct/19/racism-unchallenged-serbian-establishment-football

Women’s Soccer Improving in the United States (Seth Browner TIFO 1/10/14)

How Women’s Soccer has Grown in the United States

There is a universal note in inequality movements where improvement must acknowledged for the growth of any campaign. Women’s soccer in the United States, and abroad, is not any different. Since, the first women’s team played on a field in the United States in 1985, much progress has been made. Title IX legislation has expanded soccer programs for females at the university dramatically. Female soccer players had at one time been as celebrated profiles as athletes like Ryan Lochte and Mariano Rivera. Mia Hamm and Joy Fawcett boasted numerous sponsorships and captured the adulation of a generation of Americans. The US women’s team has never a slot lower than second in FIFA’s international rankings- something the US men’s team would adore. However, there’s work to be done. WUSA discontinued due to low attendance and investors look askance at the worthwhileness of pouring money into a women’s  league in this country, blogger Julian Cardillo reports.  But, headway has been made.

http://www.boston.com/sports/soccer/blog/2013/04/in_100_years_wo.html

PCQ 4 Fascism and Soccer in Italy.

Chapter 3

The fascists in Italy had a number or uses for football that proved to be advantageous to their political goals.  One the referee crisis gave them an opportunity to step in and restore order during the dispute which made the government look like it had a handle on the situation.  After this established a precedent of government involvement in soccer the government attempted to regulate the leagues according to fascist ideals such as removing foreign players and coach’s despite the detrimental effect this had on the quality of teams.  To counteract this loss of talent the government declared any descendants of Italians living abroad could play for Italian teams.

Another aspect of this chapter that I found interesting was despite the fascist hopes of unifying the country through soccer the structure of the games threatened to lead to the development of regionalism which ran counter to and threatened the fascist ideals.

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Fascism: Good or Bad for Italian Football?

The two chapters of Simon Martin’s book ‘Football and Fascism: The National Game under Mussolini’ deal with the early influence of Fascism on the game in the 1920s and 1930s and their effect on the teams of the 1930s. Martin makes clear that Fascist Italy saw football as both a good and bad influence upon its people. The regime saw the incredible influence that the sport and its players had over the population. By reorganizing the league structures and making it marginally under the control of government appointed persons the Regime sought to use the sport as tool of unifying its people and exporting the virtues of Fascism to the rest of the world.

What I found particularly important was the new regulations that sought to limit the ‘rivalry’ factor between city teams. For a large period of its history Italy was comprised of city states which traded and warred with each other for centuries. It was only in the 1870s that these city-states were fleshed together to make modern Italy. Fast-forward to the 1920s and many of these old rivalries were revived through the cities’ respective teams. Many viewed the rivalries as beneficial for the teams as they provided a steady flow of fans to the stadiums.

However Mussolini’s government saw the potential danger of these rivalries fracturing the national identity of Italy, core to Fascism fundamental tenets. As football was one of the tools through which the new government would promote itself to the world having such fractures was detrimental to the countries image. After several incidents of unsportsmanlike conduct and potential riots arose, the new governing bodies moved to alleviate the high emotions that surrounded these rivalries. By decompressing these rivalries, an unprecedented growth in north-south play and player movement occurred within the newly established leagues. This invariably led to a healthier playing atmosphere as well as allowed competition to occur outside of strictly regional rivalries.

By attaching itself so closely to the development of the leagues Mussolini’s regime began inextricably tied with Italian football. As such, extra weight was added to Italy’s international play as it was representing not only the nation but the institution of Fascism. Italy’s subsequent World Cup wins in 1934 and 1938 helped to give credence to the Regime’s investment in the sport. However the team, representing the regime, suffered backlash as Fascism’s ugly side became more known throughout the world. Fascism’s obsession with nationalist pride prevented many of Italy’s finest players from taking to the field as well as prevented a beneficial flow of foreign talent. In the end Fascism was only able to marginally influence the beginnings of the Italian soccer leagues as its continued presence brought an unwanted negative attention.

 

Quotations

Football would be fatally condemned to degenerate into the trick of a money grabber, worthy of repressive police measures and the contempt of the citizens….Because it is a grave problem we are setting about resolving it in a Fascist manner: that is seriously.

In essence, league football had not changed beyond recognition, but the principle of a truly national competition had been established, even if it was still contested on a north-south basis. It was the first step in the regime’s unification…

While calcio was the perfect allegory for the merits of the idealized Fascist society, it failed to resolve — and thereby exposed — many of the contradictions that existed within the constructed Italian Fascist identity. 

Questions

Would modern leagues benefit from the same governmental oversight and restructuring as under Fascism?

 

 

 

 

 

Fascism and Soccer in Italy (Seth Browner PCQ 1/9/14)

Football and Fascism: The National Game Under Mussolini, by Martin Simon

The intrusion of politics into domestic and international soccer is nothing new; many governments lender their support to football to achieve some sort of means. However, Italy under the pre-World War II dictatorship provides a particularly apt example, as the author Mr. Simon notes. By the 1920s, football in Italy had become a national institution that was highly esteemed. Know as calcio in Italian, the game was very popular and engendered much loyalty and fanaticism.

On the other hand, much structural and administration reforms were needed in the game. Many ministerial aspects of the game were inept. One move in attempt to solve this dilemma was to move the structural center to Milan. I found the choice of this city unsurprising. Milan, and other cities in northern Italy, were always the leading centers of Italian industry and economics. While Rome might be the political, and to some degree, the cultural hub of Italian, Milan is the financial heart of the peninsula. The move to Milan caused controversy nonetheless.

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TIFO Soccer Star Migration Irks Football Association of Malawi

This article discusses a star player in Malawi moving to play in Mozambique.  The player was the top scorer for his club and the article reports how the Malawi Football association complained that the player had not filled out all the paperwork required to leave for another team.  The article shows how smaller and less rich clubs try to use bureaucratic procedure to keep strong players being recruited by bigger clubs.