Two bananas thrown on a football pitch, separated by 26 years.
One thrown at John Barnes in 1988 in an English soccer match and another at Dani Alves in 2014 during a Spanish league game.
Throwing fruit to
racially taunt players in their place of work. Barnes kicked it away
during the Merseyside derby between Liverpool and Everton, Barcelona
star Alves picked it up and ate it in Sunday's match against Villarreal.
Does it show how
ineffective sport's ongoing fight against racism has been, or as one
leading ex-player argues, does the Brazilian's quick thinking
demonstrates just how far football has come in 26 years.
"In the 1980s, players
weren't taking a stance," former Tottenham Hotspur player and current
trustee of anti-racism campaign group Kick It Out, Garth Crooks, told
CNN. "They're doing it now.
Barnes kicks it out of
the way, Alves picks it up and eats it. In a show of defiance, it's his
way of saying how stupid this is. This is a banana. That is all it
signifies. You eat these things.
"There's a real message
in there to the idiots, if they can see it. To the intelligent and
educated, they will think we shouldn't have to endure that type of
behavior in our football club. There's no place for it here."
Barcelona full-back Alves, who posted a clip of the incident on Instagram, is not the first player to ignore the taunts
Kevin-Prince Boateng
walked off the pitch in 2013 after being abused by opposition fans
during an AC Milan game in Italy, while other leading players like
Manchester City's Yaya Toure, Samuel Eto'o of Chelsea and AC Milan's
Mario Balotelli have all taken their own stances against racist abuse.
Social media reaction
But it was Alves'
response that struck a chord on social media, with the Brazilian's Barca
teammate Neymar's vociferous in support of his club and international
colleague.
They're all prepared to say, stop you better do something about this or I walk," added Crooks.
It's challenging football to do something about a problem that it has found difficult to do something about in the past.
It will focus the supporters' minds [by players making a stance] and make them ask questions of themselves."
These days anti-racism
campaign groups -- such as Kick It Out and Show Racism the Red Card --
are around to pressurize the football authorities when players like
Alves are abused.
And such has been the
progress in the fight against racist abuse that, according to one of the
legends of the game, what happened to Alves at the El Madrigal Stadium
remains an isolated incident.
"I think if you mention
that, it is ridiculous, as you have one case, and all over the world
they play soccer, and you have one case," Brazil legend Pele told CNN.
"This is nothing. You
have a lot of other problems, a lot of criminals. But in football, you
have one crazy guy who says bad things."
Some might express
surprise at Pele's comments -- given that both Liverpool's Suarez and
Chelsea's John Terry have been found guilty by England's Football
Association of racially abusing an opponent in recent high profile cases
in England.
"I think Pele is right
to say it is an isolated incident, but I think he is wrong to make that
isolated incident any less important than it is," countered Crooks.
"It's embarrassed not
just an international player, but a top Spanish club [Villarreal] and
the entire Spanish Football Federation.
"It's all around the
world, we're all taking about it. Top players are eating bananas and
taking the mickey out of, not just the incident, but of Villarreal and
the Spanish federation [Neymar's campaign]. They're mocking them, it's
embarrassing."
Although Villarreal
moved swiftly to hand a life ban to the fan responsible for throwing the
banana at Alves, the Royal Spanish Football Federation has yet to make a
decision on the case.
Source:CNN
No comments:
Post a Comment