OZGOD
Senior Test Player
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2005
- Runs
- 27,187
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These nationalism debates always crop up now and then eh. First Arrigo Sacchi saying that too many blacks and foreigners playing for Italy in the football (nevermind that they are Italian citizens) then now you have Mo Farah not being considered British because presumably he was born in Somalia.
I guess this problem crops up more often in countries where there is a lot of immigration and there is a melting pot of people from different parts of the world, like England, Australia, the US, Canada, and to a lesser extent parts of Western Europe which have a lot of African and East European immigration. You don't often hear these debates in places like India or Pakistan where there's not a lot of immigration (other than regional immigration from neighbouring countries). You don't really hear about them in China or Japan or South East Asia. It's usually places like the ones I mentioned earlier, where people will say "but he's not Australian, he's from Russia" or "he's not American he's from Mexico" or "he's not British, he's South African".
So what constitutes being a "true national" to you? Is merely being a citizen not enough these days?
I guess this problem crops up more often in countries where there is a lot of immigration and there is a melting pot of people from different parts of the world, like England, Australia, the US, Canada, and to a lesser extent parts of Western Europe which have a lot of African and East European immigration. You don't often hear these debates in places like India or Pakistan where there's not a lot of immigration (other than regional immigration from neighbouring countries). You don't really hear about them in China or Japan or South East Asia. It's usually places like the ones I mentioned earlier, where people will say "but he's not Australian, he's from Russia" or "he's not American he's from Mexico" or "he's not British, he's South African".
So what constitutes being a "true national" to you? Is merely being a citizen not enough these days?
Mo Farah has accused his team-mate Andy Vernon of not regarding him as British, following their row on Twitter this week. Farah claimed that the bad blood between the pair has festered since last year’s European Championships, following a comment Vernon made when the pair were celebrating after finishing first and second respectively in the 10,000m.
“We were sitting down together with a number of staff and athletes,” said Farah, who moved from Somalia to Britain when he was nine. “One comment he made, which I didn’t really like, was to say that he should have won the gold. I was like: ‘What, the gold should have been given to you?’ And I was like: ‘Because he was the only European guy?’
“You can’t say something like that. I was just kind of biting my tongue at the time.”
But Vernon, while admitting a conversation between the pair had taken place in Zurich, said that Farah had made an “outrageous misrepresentation of the chat” they had – and that he was sorry for any offence caused.
“What I did say was complete tongue-in-cheek,” said Vernon. “I said: ‘I’m European champion.’ That was it. I don’t discard him as British – it’s complete lies. His management team have been very snide at making me out to be a bad guy. He laughed at the time. If he did take it out of context, it wasn’t meant that way and I apologise.”
“I’ve known Mo for 12 years. We weren’t best of friends but we were pals. I was delighted when we finished first and second in the 10,000m and I celebrated with him. There’s nothing more I would like right now than a two-way press conference when we can discus what happened because what he said is not what I said. He has played the cheap shot. He has played the card. I don’t know what I can do.”
Vernon also claimed that Farah’s tweets on Tuesday night to him had been sent by a third party, adding: “I don’t think he is that kind of person. His Twitter account is managed by someone else, that’s common knowledge.”
Meanwhile Farah has admitted that his tweets, during which he branded his rival “an embarrassment” who had not won anything “decent”, should not have been sent. “I do apologise,” he said. “I shouldn’t have reacted that way. We do have some history in the past, me and Andy. In terms of making it public, that was never the right thing to do. My frustration just got the better of me.
“But with an athlete like him, one I’ve been on the podium with, it was difficult to bite my tongue,” he said. “I couldn’t do it. Andy has a history of disrespecting athletes. You know, me and Andy, we’re not best friends, we’ll never be best friends. That’s just how it is. I just have to concentrate on my running and do what I have to do.”
http://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ernon-athletics-european-championships-zurich