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 <title>World Cup Soccer News - michel platini</title>
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 <title>Platini soothes growing pains of Ukraine</title>
 <link>http://www.ublo.net/platini_soothes_growing_pains_of_ukraine.htm</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;Michel Platini  has said he is at last confident  Ukraine  can host  Euro 2012 .     After several &#039;last chance&#039; warnings over the past three years, the UEFA boss can tear a few fewer hairs out now the four stadia do seem to be on track for next summer.  &quot;A year ago, we were deciding whether to leave four or two cities,&quot; Platini told reporters on a tour of Kharkiv. &quot;And today we have four cities.&quot;  &quot;There are no serious problems in preparing for Euro 2012,&quot; he continued, &quot;but there are many minor tasks and problems that need to be solved.&quot;  For Platini, a successful Euro 2012 is crucial to his reputation as an organiser of big soccer tournaments as he continues his silent campaign for the FIFA Presidency at some point in the future.     The Frenchman has found the two hosts&#039; lack of infrastructure and slow construction  progress compared to western European nations an ongoing headache, and has constantly had to threaten them with being stripped of hosting rights. Spain was the first nation touted as a replacement back in 2008, when World Soccer&#039;s Keir Radnedge boldly announced neither Poland nor Ukraine would host Euro 2012.  Then Germany entered the picture, either as sole host or as joint organiser with Poland. Now it is clear UEFA is not turning back and is throwing its cards on the table with the two unknown East European hosts. By rights the tournament should have been Italy&#039;s, but the calciopoli scandal and an upsurge in high-profile hooliganism let the duo in through the back door.     It promises to be a unique European Championship, a foretaste perhaps of the 2018 World Cup in neighbouring Russia.  The cheap transport promised to fans facing extraordinarily long journeys between venues (Gdansk to Donetsk is 933 miles/1502km) yet to materialise.  Next month Platini visits Poland to inspect their venues, with the opening date of Warsaw&#039;s new arena still up in the air.  (c) Sean O&#039;Conor &amp;amp; Soccerphile   UEFA EURO 2012  8th June -1st July 2012  VENUES   Poland  Warsaw 58,224 (opening game and semi-final) Gdansk 44,636 Poznan 43,090 Wroclaw 44,416   Ukraine  Kiev 63,195 (semi-final and final) Donetsk 50,055 Kharkiv 35,721 Lviv 34, 915   Qualifiers  Poland, Ukraine, Germany, Spain, Netherlands, Italy and ten others to be decided. &lt;strong &gt; Tags&lt;/strong&gt;   World Cup Pens   World Cup Posters   Euro 2012   football&lt;/p&gt;
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 <source url="http://feeds.feedburner.com/Soccerphile">Soccerphile</source>
 <category domain="http://www.ublo.net/feed/euro_2012">euro 2012</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ublo.net/feed/michel_platini">michel platini</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ublo.net/feed/sean_oconor">sean o&#039;conor</category>
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 <category domain="http://www.ublo.net/feed/ukraine">ukraine</category>
 <pubDate>Tue, 27 Sep 2011 23:46:57 +0000</pubDate>
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 <title>Political footballs</title>
 <link>http://www.ublo.net/political_footballs.htm</link>
 <description>&lt;p&gt;The  English football season  reaches its  climax in the same week as the  British  General Election  campaign reaches the finish line.  Like  the annual Premier League toss-up between Chelsea and Manchester United,  the General Election is usually a straight fight between the reds and  blues, but this year the election has seen an orange team appear from  nowhere in the form of a congenial and assured televisual image named   Nick Clegg .  There is no orange interloper in football however,  where Hull City fell out the Premier League and Wolves struggled,  although Blackpool may yet make it to the promised land via the  play-offs.  Football and politics have generally taken different  roads in Britain, perhaps as a testament to the social delineation of the  working class in industrial regions from the ruling class in the  Westminster village. But the sport&#039;s booming popularity in recent years  has dragged the suits into the grounds, or at least forced them to  pay lip service to the people&#039;s game from the lofty perch of the  executive box.  Although overseas leaders had been doing it for  years, such as when Benito Mussolini shamelessly  hijacked the 1934  World Cup , it was Huddersfield FC man  Harold Wilson  who  first twigged that football&#039;s popularity could rub off onto British  politicians, when  England  won the World Cup  during his Premiership. As comic creation  Alf  Garnett quipped , it must have been Wilson who made England wear Labour  red for the final.  Wilson&#039;s populist move backfired when he  closely identified himself with England&#039;s 1970 squad, whose  painful  elimination &#039;s proximity to  the election  cost  him his job, he later claimed.  The Prime Minister had himself photographed with  the team in front    of No. 10, Downing Street, setting a precedent repeated every four  years since. In the 1980s, a PM virulently hostile to football held sway  but even the Iron Lady found her swinging handbag unable to put soccer  in its place and she grudgingly went ahead with some winsome  photoshoots with Emlyn Hughes, Kevin Keegan et al.   Margaret Thatcher  saw no connection between her  economic policies and the growth of spectator violence, and was taken  aback when FA Secretary Ted Croker told her pointedly,  &quot;Not our hooligans, Prime Minister, but yours. The products of your  society.&quot;  Her magic wand was an ill-conceived  plan to force fans to carry an I.D. card, which would be withdrawn from  the miscreants.  It was an unnecessary endeavour, which would  have failed to stop fights outside grounds and was obviated anyway by  the arrival of CCTV inside them, but was enthusiastically trumpeted for  too long by the shrill Colin Moynihan, aka The Miniature for Sport,  until the Hillsborough tragedy sank the soccer ID ship for good.  The  Thatcher years did foment some form of politicisation among fans  and legacies of her general disconnection from the  industrial regions who breathed football strongest included the  Football  Supporters Association , the start of supporter involvement in clubs and a burgeoning  fanzine culture rejecting the official face of the game and the authorities.  The grassroots  were very green in the late 1980s as Thatcher&#039;s reign tottered towards  its inevitable end, but football remained very much a minority interest in  Britain as a whole. The fences, the strict policing, the labeling of fans as  hooligans by the largely right-wing media had created a siege mentality  among die-hards constantly challenging the public consensus that  football belonged in the gutter. The enlightenment of Italia &#039;90 and the seismic year zero of  Sky TV&#039;s Premier League in 1993 lay in an unimagined future.  Thatcher&#039;s successor  John Major   was less abrasive than his predecessor towards everything, and  immediately said he was a Chelsea fan, making sure he was filmed  attending games with fellow Tory  David Mellor  MP,  although interestingly his sporting interests were listed as &#039;cricket  and rugby&#039; before he became PM.  Pavarotti, Gazza and all had brought a spring-cleaning no-one  had expected, but the after-effects in England of that summer in Italy were too powerful and popular to ignore at the highest level again. Engaging with England&#039;s football culture was now de rigueur for its top politicians.   Tony Blair  joined the club, claiming he was a  Newcastle fan (his constituency was in the North-East), kicking around  with Alex Ferguson and Kevin Keegan and rushing to tell the nation he  was one of us when England were knocked out the World Cup.   Gordon Brown  has wasted little time  kicking a ball for the cameras to launch England&#039;s 2018 World Cup bid,  and the Scot who lost an eye at rugby made sure the film crew was there  to see him grinning at the Three Lions winning at football on telly.     Well-to-do Londoner     and Old Etonian   David Cameron  has been at pains to paint himself as a footy man. He claims to support Aston Villa    (his uncle used to be chairman), attached a St. George&#039;s cross to his bicycle in 2006 and invited  himself to David Beckham&#039;s pre-World Cup party when he was not  on the guest list. Never again will a British party leader shun the  nation&#039;s number one sport you can be sure, but how refreshing it would be if they  did, expressing a preference for a less-mainstream game or pastime instead of pandering  to the PR protocols.  While leaders are desperate to appear as  fans, even to the extent of  humiliating  themselves , the players are generally much less keen on politics,  preferring to enjoy their lifestyles without concern for the bigger  picture, although their stratospheric wages militate towards right-wing  votes. Even in the 1960s, Hunter Davies was surprised when writing &#039;The Glory Game&#039; that none of the  Tottenham players he got to know were Labour supporters at a time when the majority of the nation was  left-leaning.  An exception to the apolitical player  was Scotland international Pat Nevin, who campaigned openly for Labour  and made a point of travelling to Chelsea games by tube to dispel the  image of overpaid stars voting for whoever would hand them the lowest  taxes.  Frank Lampard, who has been a vocal supporter of the  Conservative Party, stands out as a politically-aware footballer  today, while Sir  Alex  Ferguson continues to fly the flag for Labour . But they are still voices  in the wilderness.  Everyone ought to care about politics,  whatever their status. And the nation cares about football sufficiently  in terms of hours and money to make the  election  relevant to fans . Gary Lineker said he would not reveal his voting intention for fear of alienating some of his fans, and perhaps that is the wisest counsel, but should not stars of  any description consider using their clout to campaign on an issue that matters, even if not on a Jamie Oliver scale?  So is this election relevant to football fans? Labour&#039;s proposal to let fans own 25%  of clubs is at least worth debating. With on average four clubs a year  in Britain going into administration over the past decade, and clubs run  in such a cavalier fashion it makes investment banks look prudent, how  the game is regulated by government does matter - just ask Crystal Palace or  Portsmouth supporters this season. With Michel Platini&#039;s calls for English clubs to sort themselves out or face sanction growing louder all the time, the fields of politics and football are far from mutually exclusive.  But the reality is football  will be low to non-existent in people&#039;s minds as they enter the polling  stations on Thursday. Most players don&#039;t really care who wins any more  than the politicians care who wins the Premier League this weekend, but  you can bet the latter will still be screaming they are one of us once the  World Cup kicks off in June. As long as football enthralls millions, politics will be looking to jump on the bandwagon.           (c) Sean O&#039;Conor &amp;amp; Soccerphile&lt;/p&gt;
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 <category domain="http://www.ublo.net/feed/general_election">general election</category>
 <category domain="http://www.ublo.net/feed/michel_platini">michel platini</category>
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 <pubDate>Wed, 05 May 2010 17:22:02 +0000</pubDate>
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