Sunday, December 5, 2010

World Cup 2010 Blog: African Footballer of the Year: And the Nominations Are…

World Cup 2010 Blog: African Footballer of the Year: And the Nominations Are…

Link to International Football News - World Cup Blog

African Footballer of the Year: And the Nominations Are…

Posted: 04 Dec 2010 04:09 PM PST

Drogba African Player of the Year 2006

The reigning African Player of the Year, Didier Drogba, has a chance to add a 3rd to his 2009 and 2006 titles.

The shortlist of nominees for Africa’s Footballer of the Year were released today, naming five players up for the 2010 award. A few months ago, a longer list was leaked – and denounced – that included 17 players being considered for the award. As always, the award will be given to the player who best represented the continent at the club and national level of the game.

And the nominees are…

Didier Drogba (Côte D'Ivoire/Chelsea)
Salomon Kalou (Côte D'Ivoire/Chelsea)
Asamoah Gyan (
Ghana/Sunderland)
Samuel Eto’o (
Cameroon/Inter)
Seydou Keita (Mali/Barcelona)

As I mentioned, this is just a shortlist – meaning this list will be trimmed down to create a final list of three players. Basically, this is a list of nominees to be nominated for the award. So, these five will have to wait until the final list is announced on December 11th to break out the champagne bottles to celebrate. After that, it is a short wait until the awards ceremony on December 20th in Cairo to congratulate the new African Player of the Year.

So, how is this shindig decided?

Unlike the FIFA Ballon D’Or which includes votes from journalists, coaches and national team captains – the African Player of the Year is decided by the national coaches of the continent’s 53 countries affiliated with the Confederation of African Football (CAF). So, when making your predictions – consider the qualities valued by coaches.

Who are the favorites?

Well, the heavy weights in this competition are pretty easy to pick out. Both Drogba and Eto’o have already previously won the award. Drogba is the reigning African Player of the Year, having won in 2009 for the second time since picking up the award in 2006. Eto’o won three consecutive awards in 2003, 2004 and 2005. On reputation and name alone, they would have to be considered as serious contenders. Especially with their recent club success. Eto’o led Inter to Serie A and European glory last season and Drogba played a pivotal role in Chelsea’s title win.

But, neither of those players had spectacular World Cups this summer. Both the Ivory coast and Cameroon failed to qualify for the knock-out stages of the tournament, which may overshadow both Eto’o and Drogba’s impressive club performances.

It wouldn’t be unreasonable to suggest that the voters might give more weight to the World Cup since it was the continent’s first time hosting the event (in addition to being the sport’s most coveted award). But, if that was true – wouldn’t they have named more African players who excelled this summer? Ghana’s single nomination is a bit of a surprise for me considering the stand-out performances of Andre Ayew (Marseille/Ghana) and Kevin Prince Boateng (Milan/Ghana) – both of whom have also been performing well for their clubs since returning from South Africa.

But, instead of going with a couple of young, fresh faces – the EPL received two additional nominees in Sunderland’s Gyan and Chelsea’s Kalou. If Gyan were to win, it would be due to the success of the entire Ghana team this summer. His goals and leadership helped Ghana reach the quarterfinals this summer – but Ghana’s success was a result of a team effort, not a single individual’s performance.

Kalou doesn’t appear to stand much of a chance of winning this award, being overshadowed by Drogba in every possible way. Given that they play for the same team at both the club and national level, Drogba will always outshine him when it comes to praise and awards.

The only player who may have less of a chance of winning this award than Kalou is Barcelona and Mali’s Seydou Keita. Unless of course, you factor in nepotism- then his chances increase dramatically. As the nephew of former African Footballer of the Year, Salif Keita (1970) – he has a chance to carry on the family legacy. But, as I said: that chance appears to be very small. Based on his club performance and Barcelona’s success this year, it is hard to argue he outshined Drogba or Eto’o. On the international level, his chances only continue to dwindle. He is the only player on this list who plays for a country (Mali) not present at this summer’s World Cup. Mali also did not progress to the quarterfinals of the African Cup of Nations in January. So, while its nice to have his individual talent recognized and to include smaller nations in the spotlight – it seems unlikely to amount to more than that.

But, the player of the year isn’t the only trophy up for grabs in Cairo in a few weeks time.

Other awards include…

Young Player of the Year: Kwadwo Asamoah (Udinese and Ghana), Ryad Boudebouz (Sochaux and Algeria) and Moussa Maazou (Bordeaux and Nigeria)

National Team of the Year: Algeria, Egypt and Ghana

Coach of the Year: Lamine N’Diaye (TP Mazembe Englebert, winner of CAF Champions League title), Milovan Rajevac (Ghana’s World Cup manager) and Hassan Shehata (Egypt).

Best African-based Player: Alain Dioko (TP Mazembe), Mohamed Gedo and Ahmed Hassan (both Al-Ahly)

Best African Club: CS Sfaxien (Tunisia), FUS Rabat (Morocco) and TP Mazembe (DR Congo)


Saturday, December 4, 2010

World Cup 2010 Blog: “Zidane & Friends Do Shower Karaoke” plus 1 more

World Cup 2010 Blog: “Zidane & Friends Do Shower Karaoke” plus 1 more

Link to International Football News - World Cup Blog

Zidane & Friends Do Shower Karaoke

Posted: 03 Dec 2010 10:40 AM PST

This video may have been floating around the internet for ages, with persistent rumors of its existence spliced into clips, but for those of us new to the Zizou and friends doing karaoke in a Turkish steam bath…well, this should either make or break your day.

Being sure the scene for this little clip is set properly, it includes…

- Some men nude, some in towels.
- Steam.
- A shower.
- Laurent Blanc’s blurred-out man parts.
- White boy dancing.
- At least one world class mustache.

Do you suppose nude dancing, steam bathes and mustaches was the missing link during South Africa? Blanc must’ve brought his good stuff to turn the good ship Les Bleus right around…and into a Village People viral.


The BBC Explains Why England Lost

Posted: 03 Dec 2010 09:40 AM PST

And yes, the BBC is on the list, possibly ranked one through three.

Ghosting around the internet today is like stumbling through a scorched earth, and anything with a superfluous u runs the gamut from rage to sorrow to bewilderment to magnanimousness, having been forcibly removed of their inalienable right to win the bid. Because they’re England, or something.

Hopefully this video can bring a sense of understanding and closure to the grand old tournament which will be World Cup 2018: Not England, allowing an entire nation to move on and maybe, just maybe, admit that if David Cameron had too waded through a marsh shirtless with a gun, they’d have won the @#$%in’ thing.


Friday, December 3, 2010

World Cup 2010 Blog: “No Rest For The Curious: Looking Ahead To World Cup 2026” plus 2 more

World Cup 2010 Blog: “No Rest For The Curious: Looking Ahead To World Cup 2026” plus 2 more

Link to International Football News - World Cup Blog

No Rest For The Curious: Looking Ahead To World Cup 2026

Posted: 03 Dec 2010 06:00 AM PST

2026Who in the flippin' fluff cares about 2018 & 2022 anymore?

This is sort of like getting a new toy: the joy is in the anticipation, but once the toy arrives, within 48 hours it's tossed into the once-desired toy graveyard.

So while Russia and Qatar spend the next few years deflecting criticism over the progress of their World Cups – there's no honeymoon period here – we'll be busy fumbling around for the next (next, next…next) big thing: 2026.

First off, I haven't the slightest when the 2026 bid is happening. Roughly 7 years before the bid based on previous timelines, so you can say anything you'd like right now and not reap the consequences until 2019 (the way life should be).

That said, this subject came up based on one simple question: will the US bid in 2026?

And upon consideration…well, they'd have to, right? Asia and Europe, two federations with massive clout, are both eliminated as continents which will be hosting, and Brazil will have held 2014, you'd think giving a greater chance to a non-South American bid.

China was one of the major contenders, but that’s now completely off the board thanks to Qatar’s 1.6 million people to their 1.3 billion. Little dudes (with big bankrolls) can fight.

Off the top of the old noggin, some options:

US –They want another World Cup, period. Plus maybe Eric Wynalda will finally shut up.
Colombia – They were the only other country to bid for 2014 with Brazil before pulling out, '86 (when they were forced to hand the WC to Mexico due to finances) must still burn, while FIFA's made mention they should bid again.
Morocco – They were supposed to be the first African World Cup, but lost out to South Africa. Whether they want to or not is another question.
Australia – They feel like an inevitability one of these years, for no other reason than I say so. They can probably skirt around the "Asian federation" rules by mailing FIFA a map.
Egypt – Because one of these years, they'd like to play in a World Cup again.
Trinidad & Tobago – Somewhere ridiculous is bound to be on the list…and then win it. (See: Warner, Jack.)
Democratic Republic of the Congo – If we learned anything from the recent votes, FIFA loves it some legacy building. Where better to plant a flag?
Canada – Don’t snicker; Steve Nash needs something to do once he retires.

What has to be considered is that Uruguay-Argentina has already been proposed and formally bid for 2030 for obvious reasons: 100 years of World Cup returning home with a helping hand from the land next door. You’d have to imagine that one’s been earmarked within the organization, to be passed down to Sepp’s successor (should he ever die) along with the keys to a diamond vault somewhere deep in the bowels of Zurich. This feels like South America can be taken off the board, leaving just Africa, North America and Oceania New Zealand.

Of course there’s an easy answer to all of this: FIFA will change the rules yet again, leaving the world guessing and England rebuffed once again.

And maybe it's time to get out of the house and breathe for a couple…or seven…years.


World Cups 2018 & 2022 Voting Breakdown

Posted: 02 Dec 2010 10:16 AM PST

Qatar-World-Cup-Bid-1

The bid nonsurprise today was that there was a mild surprise – Qatar – which poked its way through to World Cup glory. Russia was always one of the likely candidates, but everyone had thought the United States and their safe bid would conquer the day.

Not so, and legacy building was apparently more important to FIFA than a bit of a cash guarantee.

These are the breakdowns for voting on the bids, via the Guardian.

Two major, major surprises from the tallies:

i. England never had a prayer, some of which may be sour grapes due to the BBC documentary unleashed on suspecting FIFA members just Monday. Betherlands 2018 was the odds on favorite to be the first bid down, and they doubled the English votes.

Apparently England’s major tournament overconfidence applies to the bid process as well.

ii. Very few, I think, gave South Korea much of a chance of anything, much less trumping Japan’s bid from the technological future, and this was further hampered by the recent kerfuffle with the north, as a few games were due to be played in North Korea were they to have won the bid.

But then it appears FIFA would love nothing more to play peace broker – well, one thing more: make its mark on the Arab world.

And one last thing: was Putin’s decision to no-show in Zurich in protest of England’s treatment of the bid committee an absolute masterstroke? Might’ve been. You’d think it to be horribly transparent, but these are public figures who love nothing more than a pat on the back and friends in high places, genuine or not…

The Votes

2018:

First round: England 2, Holland/Belgium 4, Spain/Portugal 7 votes, Russia 9 votes

Second round:
Holland/Belgium 2, Spain/Portugal 7, Russia 13

Russia win

2022:

First round: Australia 1, Japan 3, USA 3, South Korea 4, Qatar 11 (Australia eliminated)

Second round: Japan 2 votes, Korea Republic 5 votes, Qatar 10 votes and USA 5 votes (Japan eliminated)

Third round: Korea Republic 5 votes, Qatar 11 votes, USA 6 votes (Korea Republic eliminated)

Fourth round: Qatar 14 votes and USA 8 votes (Qatar obtained an absolute majority)

Qatar win


Russia’s 2018 Bid & Stadiums Video

Posted: 02 Dec 2010 08:17 AM PST

Russia2018

The Qatar bid video made the rounds on the internet like some celebrity sex video, but Russia’s bid video fell well below the radar, mostly because their bid wasn’t rooted in some far-off fantasy world.

Just watching it now, because, if you haven’t heard, they just got the World Cup, it’s a surprisingly good proposal and a nice video. And proof that to sell stuff, you don’t need Morgan Freeman.

Entire markets just crashed upon this revelation.

Also worth noting we now have to sets of Olympics piggybacking World Cups, or vice-versa: Brazil/Rio and Sochi/Russia.