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WORLD CUP

Eriksson seeks to shrug off ghosts of tournaments past

Sven-Göran Eriksson is hoping to lead the Ivory Coast out of a World Cup group populated by Brazil and Portugal, sides that dumped England out of major tournaments when the Swede was at the helm.

The 62-year-old Swede recently put in charge of Didier Drogba-skippered Ivory Coast must face both his old demons during the first round next month in what is widely

regarded as the toughest of the eight first-round groups in South Africa.

Only mini-league winners and runners-up qualify for the knockout phase of the four-yearly football showpiece, meaning Brazil, Ivory Coast or Portugal will be flying home long before the June 11-July 11 showpiece ends.

Brazil have been crowned champions a record five times and are favoured to win a group completed by rank outsiders North Korea, leaving the Ivorians and Portuguese fighting for the second slot.

They clash in the opening Group G fixture on June 15 in Port Elizabeth and Eriksson concedes the losers will be in serious trouble just 90 minutes into their World Cup campaign.

“We play Portugal first and it will be a decisive match, like a final to both teams,” he admitted ahead of the showdown at the 45,000-seat Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in the Indian Ocean city of Port Elizabeth.

“I am desperate for a change of luck as Portugal knocked England out of the World Cup four years ago and out of the Euro 2004 with both games being settled by penalty shoot-outs.”

Brazil put paid to England’s 2002 World Cup dreams.

Eriksson was appointed less than three months before the World Cup after Bosnian Vahid Halilhodzic paid the ultimate price for a 2010 African Nations Cup quarter-finals exit by the west African ‘Elephants’.

Furious at being dumped after two losses in two years, Halilhodzic warned Eriksson he was inheriting “great players, but not a great team, as some do not want to play with others.

“I think the Nations Cup defeat against Algeria was good because it revealed these internal fractures,” Halilhodzic told Ivorian newspaper Le Patriote after his dismissal.

Drogba, fellow striker Salomon Kalou, midfielders Yaya Toure and Didier Zokora and defenders Emmanuel Eboue and Kolo Toure head a ‘golden generation’ of Ivorians who have promised much but delivered no silverware.

“Some of us are getting on age wise and the World Cup will probably be our last chance. I would love to lift a trophy and go out in style,” Spain-based ‘enforcer’ Zokora said wishfully.

“We have been around for about 10 years without achieving anything. That is so frustrating and it would be a huge waste if we did not win a trophy with this generation.”

Time-strapped Eriksson has only friendlies against fellow World Cup qualifiers Paraguay and Japan before naming the team to face Portugal and Boubacar Barry seems set to remain first-choice goalkeeper.

Eboue, Kolo Toure, Souleymane Bamba and Siaka Tiene are strong contenders for back-four places and the midfield quartet should include Zokora and Yaya Toure with Chelsea team-mates Drogba and Kalou the strike force.

Good enough to survive the ‘group of death’? Maybe. Good enough to knock out possible second-round opponents Spain? Maybe not. Good enough to go all the way and become the first African winners of the World Cup? Definitely not.

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SPORT

Norway’s football clubs to vote on Qatar World Cup boycott

Will Norwegian football star Erling Braut Haaland stay home or play on what fans have dubbed a "cemetery?" This Sunday, a meeting of Norway's football community will decide whether to boycott next year's World Cup in Qatar.

Norway's football clubs to vote on Qatar World Cup boycott
Norway's forward Erling Haaland (L) and teammates wear jerseys reading "Fair play for migrant workers" before the international friendly football match between Norway and Greece at La Rosaleda stadium in Malaga in preperation for the UEFA European Championships, on June 6, 2021. JORGE GUERRERO / AFP

Under pressure from grassroots activists the Norwegian Football Federation(NFF) has decided to hold an extraordinary congress to decide on whether to pass up football’s showpiece event all together.

The games on the pitches in the Middle Eastern emirate will “unfortunately be like playing on a cemetery,” according to Ole Kristian Sandvik, spokesman of the Norwegian Supporters Alliance (NSA), invoking a commonly used metaphor among opponents of Norway’s participation.

Norway, which has not qualified for a major international competition since Euro 2000, is currently fourth in its World Cup qualifying group behind Turkey, the Netherlands and Montenegro. 

So while qualification seems an uphill task, the result of the vote could have an impact on whether Norway and its young star Haaland — one of the rising stars of world football — continue to play qualifying matches. 

The movement calling for a boycott began north of the Arctic Circle when football club Tromso IL spoke out against turning a blind eye to alleged human rights abuses at the end of February.

“We can no longer sit and watch people die in the name of football,” the first division club proclaimed.

Qatar has faced criticism for its treatment of migrant workers, many of whom are involved in the construction of stadiums and infrastructure for the 2022 World Cup, with campaigners accusing employers of exploitation and forcing labourers to work in dangerous conditions.

Qatari authorities meanwhile insist they have done more than any country in the region to improve worker welfare.

“There is no doubt that this World Cup should never have been awarded to Qatar,” Tom Hogli, a former professional footballer turned public relations officer for Tromso IL, told AFP.

“The conditions there are abominable and many have lost their lives,” he added.

In March, a spokesman for the Qatari organisers put the number of deaths on the construction sites at “three” since 2014, with another 35 having died away from their workplaces, challenging the heavy toll reported by some rights groups.

Push from fans
The Tromso call began gathering pace in Norway, where clubs operate under a democratic structure, and under pressure from fans, many teams now say “nei” (no).

According to Sandvik, the fans feel that the deaths on the World Cup sites would have been avoided “if they had not had to build hotels, railways and stadiums”.

Nearly half of Norwegians, 49 percent, now say they are in favour of a boycott, while only 29 percent are against it, according to a poll published by newspaper VG on Wednesday.

The Nordic country’s national squad has already protested conditions in Qatar, but stopped short of calling for a boycott.

Before recent Norway games, Borussia Dortmund superstar Haaland, captain Martin Odegaard and the rest of the team have worn t-shirts with slogans like “Human rights on and off the pitch.”

Other countries, like Germany, the Netherlands and Denmark have also followed suit.

FIFA, on the other hand, argue that awarding the hosting of the World Cup in Qatar has opened the door to social progress.

“We know there is still work to be done, but we need to recognise the significant progress achieved in a very short time,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said in May.

‘Few successes’ 
While the executive committee of the NFF have said they regret Qatar being awarded the World Cup, they oppose a boycott.

President Terje Svendsen said he thought it was “not the right tool to improve the human rights situation or the working conditions in Qatar,” when speaking at the federation’s ordinary annual congress in March.

According to the NFF, a boycott could end up costing Norway 205 million Norwegian kroner ($24 million, 20 million euros) in fines and compensation as well as lost revenue.

Feeling the pressure from grassroots campaigns, the NFF referred the matter to an extraordinary congress which on Sunday will bring together the eight members of its executive committee, representatives of 18 districts and of hundreds of professional and amateur clubs.

The discussions will be revolve around the findings of an expert committee which, with the exception of two members representing fans, has also come out against a boycott.

“For a boycott to succeed, you need a critical mass behind it, an opposition that calls for it in the country, the UN to put pressure on the
authorities, the business world, the trade unions and civil society to put pressure on it in the long term,” committee chairman Sven Mollekleiv said in a debate hosted by broadcaster TV2.

“Historically, there are few successes,” he said.

Rather than a boycott, the committee recommended 26 measures to consolidate and further the gains made in Qatar but also to ensure that FIFA doesn’t become complicit in so called “sportswashing” — the polishing of a country’s public image through a major sporting event.

Some initial supporters of a boycott, like Tromso’s Hogli, have since sided with these conclusions, although calls for a complete boycott remain.

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