If England Walk off the Pitch Because of Abuse, Racism Wins

Soccer Football - Champions League - Group H - Lille v Chelsea - Stade Pierre-Mauroy, Lille, France - October 2, 2019, Chelsea's Tammy Abraham celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
Soccer Football - Champions League - Group H - Lille v Chelsea - Stade Pierre-Mauroy, Lille, France - October 2, 2019, Chelsea's Tammy Abraham celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
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If England Walk off the Pitch Because of Abuse, Racism Wins

Soccer Football - Champions League - Group H - Lille v Chelsea - Stade Pierre-Mauroy, Lille, France - October 2, 2019, Chelsea's Tammy Abraham celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
Soccer Football - Champions League - Group H - Lille v Chelsea - Stade Pierre-Mauroy, Lille, France - October 2, 2019, Chelsea's Tammy Abraham celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol

was shocked to hear that England’s players are considering walking off if they hear racial abuse from the crowd when they play Bulgaria on Monday night. There is something poignant about the resilience black players have shown over the past 40 years. They have always reminded themselves of who they were representing and the decision has always been not to leave the pitch, no matter what is happening in the stands.

I think it will set the game back if England walk off.

The ramifications extend a lot further than the result. Many black people I have spoken to in and out of football think that racism will win if England head down this path.

Where does it go from there? For many years I have said that racism in football provides fascist movements with a vehicle to promote their message and taking this initiative will play into their hands.

Players have to stay on the pitch. If they walk off, the people chanting abuse have achieved their aim. Are England going to walk off if they are 3-0 up with 10 minutes left? Will they make that statement? Think about it. The team bus is on the way to the game and fans are surrounding it, banging on it, shouting racial abuse. Are the players going to tell the driver to turn around and go to the airport? Of course not.

Another potential ramification is whether the racists will react badly if the teams go off. Will they feel wronged? Will they want some kind of payback outside the stadium? Will they aim their anger at England fans? What if there are black England fans at the game in Sofia?

Uefa and Fifa think that fans will self-govern, that other fans will stop the racist chanting when they hear it, but this just leads to anarchy on the terraces. The people doing this have an agenda – they want violence. The risk is going back to the dark days of hooliganism.

Uefa and Fifa have to do more. They have to deal with it ruthlessly after the game and the punishment should be known before the game. This is a popular sport, a spectator sport.

I know that Gareth Southgate has said that England have faith in Uefa’s three-step protocol, but imagine people watching at home waiting for 10-15 minutes for something to happen if the referee takes the players off in the event of racist chanting.

We also have to look at it from a playing perspective. The players will need to warm up when they return to the pitch to guard against injury.

The problem is that Fifa and Uefa are reactive, not proactive; they act after the event. The punishments they hand out for racism have been menial. They should have a ruthless mindset if there is racist chanting. Be radical. If your fans racially abuse players or spectators your next three or four games should be away from home. If it happens, the ban should be increased.

I never thought about walking off when I was playing. It was not an option and black players back then probably would have been on their own if they had protested by walking off. Your manager probably would have just brought on a substitute.

What comes into question is your mental state. Modern players are paid vast amounts of money to be in this arena. If someone abuses you on the streets, away from that arena, how will you behave? Are you going to give up on life?

Players can call on sports psychologists these days. There are so many resources available to them. Players of my generation did not. We had to get on with it. That is how people judge your character. This is a social problem, not a football problem. The only way to silence the racist voices is to shut the stadiums down, to play behind closed doors.

The best advice I can give to Tammy Abraham or anyone is to play well. Score a goal, score a hat‑trick. Then go and stand in front of them again to say they cannot beat you, they cannot affect you. Walking off is tantamount to submission. They have won if you do that.

(The Guardian)



France Must Be Even More Efficient in Attack Against Morocco, Says Deschamps

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - France Press Conference - Boston Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts, US - July 8, 2026 France coach Didier Deschamps during the press conference. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - France Press Conference - Boston Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts, US - July 8, 2026 France coach Didier Deschamps during the press conference. (Reuters)
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France Must Be Even More Efficient in Attack Against Morocco, Says Deschamps

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - France Press Conference - Boston Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts, US - July 8, 2026 France coach Didier Deschamps during the press conference. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - France Press Conference - Boston Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts, US - July 8, 2026 France coach Didier Deschamps during the press conference. (Reuters)

France have scored a ‌tournament-leading 14 goals in the World Cup so far but coach Didier Deschamps urged his players on Wednesday to achieve even greater attacking efficiency when they take on Morocco in Thursday's quarter-final.

The meeting is a rematch of the 2022 World Cup semi-final, when France ended Morocco's historic run in Qatar, but this time the North Africans are no longer the surprise outsiders but a confident side aiming for the title.

"We have to be efficient, offensively speaking," Deschamps told a press conference. "In all the areas both teams have strong assets."

"We are efficient but ‌we could ‌have done better on this front. Sometimes you ‌have ⁠six chances and ⁠score two goals and sometimes you have two chances and score twice. It is more important to be efficient."

France edged past Paraguay in the round of 16 with a scrappy 1-0 win courtesy of a Kylian Mbappe penalty. The France captain has seven goals in the tournament, second behind Argentina's Lionel Messi, who has eight.

Mbappe, Ousmane ⁠Dembele, Michael Olise and Bradley Barcola have given France ‌one of the most dangerous forward ‌lines at the World Cup.

Morocco eased through their group stage, before knocking ‌out Netherlands and co-hosts Canada, and confirming their status as serious ‌title contenders.

"Morocco's profile is not the one of Paraguay. We met them four years ago in the semi-finals," Deschamps said. "They played the AFCON (Africa Cup of Nations) final. They have top individuals. They are not here to play. ‌They are here to win. We have to be ready and perform and deliver against this great ⁠team."

Deschamps will ⁠need to wait and see whether midfielder Aurelien Tchouameni, who has been nursing a muscle injury, will be fit in time for the game.

"He feels better but I left early from the hotel this morning. I cannot say more. He might take part in training today. All other players they are available," Deschamps said.

As for France's appeal to have Michael Olise's yellow card in the game against Paraguay rescinded, Deschamps said FIFA had informed them the caution stood.

The ruling comes days after the furor caused by FIFA's decision to suspend a match ban after a red card was given to US player Folarin Balogun and following an intervention by President Donald Trump.


France v Morocco Rematch as World Cup Quarter-Finals Get Under Way

 Morocco's Ayoub Amaimouni (21), Neil El Aynaoui (24), Achraf Hakimi (2), Brahim Diaz (10) and Gessime Yassine (16) celebrate after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)
Morocco's Ayoub Amaimouni (21), Neil El Aynaoui (24), Achraf Hakimi (2), Brahim Diaz (10) and Gessime Yassine (16) celebrate after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)
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France v Morocco Rematch as World Cup Quarter-Finals Get Under Way

 Morocco's Ayoub Amaimouni (21), Neil El Aynaoui (24), Achraf Hakimi (2), Brahim Diaz (10) and Gessime Yassine (16) celebrate after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)
Morocco's Ayoub Amaimouni (21), Neil El Aynaoui (24), Achraf Hakimi (2), Brahim Diaz (10) and Gessime Yassine (16) celebrate after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)

France begin their final push towards a third World Cup crown on Thursday when they take on Morocco in a blockbuster showdown as a star-studded quarter-final line-up kicks off.

After a month of scintillating action that has dispelled pre-tournament anxieties over sky-high ticket prices and geopolitics, the biggest, boldest and most logistically complex World Cup ever staged has been whittled down to eight teams.

France, who have emerged as the outstanding team of the tournament after a series of dazzling attacking displays, face arguably their toughest test so far in the shape of African champions Morocco at the Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, outside Boston.

Les Bleus have surged into the last eight in style, scoring 14 goals in five games -- seven of them from in-form captain Kylian Mbappe.

Mbappe is one of four star strikers who are leading the chase for the World Cup's Golden Boot as the tournament enters the home stretch.

Argentina's Lionel Messi tops the scoring chart with eight, Mbappe and Norway's Erling Haaland have seven each and England's Harry Kane has six.

Thursday's opening quarter-final is a repeat of the 2022 World Cup semi-final in Qatar, won 2-0 by France, who would go on to lose in the final against Argentina.

- Tactical nous -

Morocco meanwhile have looked impressive en route to the last eight, easing through the group phase before battling past the Netherlands in the last 32 and swatting aside Canada in the round of 16 last weekend.

The Atlas Lions will threaten France with a mix of technical quality, physicality and tactical nous under the guidance of coach Mohamed Ouahbi, who masterminded Morocco's shock victory in the under-20 World Cup last year.

The winner will advance to a semi-final showdown against the victor of Friday's tie in Los Angeles between European champions Spain and Belgium.

The Spaniards eliminated Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal in the last 16 on Monday to advance with a clinical 1-0 victory.

England's midfielder #10 Jude Bellingham (L) celebrates scoring his team's first goal with teammate forward #09 Harry Kane (R) during the 2026 World Cup round of 16 football match between Mexico and England at the Mexico City Stadium in Mexico City on July 5, 2026. (AFP)

While La Roja haven't hit the dizzying attacking heights of France, they will fancy their chances of navigating a Belgium side who have slowly built momentum over the course of the tournament.

Belgium struggled through the group phase with lackluster draws in their first two matches before routing New Zealand 5-1 to secure their place in the knockout rounds.

They came back from the dead in the last 32 to beat Senegal 3-2, when they had trailed 2-0 with four minutes to go, before dismantling the United States 4-1 with arguably their best display of the tournament in Seattle on Monday.

- Houdini act -

On the other side of the draw, holders Argentina face Switzerland in Kansas City on Saturday after staggering into the quarter-finals.

The South Americans, aiming to become the first back-to-back champions since Brazil in 1962, were given an almighty scare by Cape Verde in the last 32 before winning 3-2 in extra-time.

On Tuesday, Messi inspired an incredible Houdini act in a 3-2 defeat of Egypt in Atlanta, when the reigning champions recovered from 2-0 down with 11 minutes of normal time remaining to snatch victory.

Messi was reduced to tears of relief after that roller coaster victory.

"We wanted to stay in the tournament," the Argentina captain said afterwards.

"We didn't want today to be the end, we didn't want to go home."

The winner of Argentina-Switzerland will face either Norway or England in the semi-finals in Atlanta next week.

England advanced to the last eight on Sunday with a pulsating 3-2 defeat of Mexico in the Azteca Stadium, winning an extraordinary, drama-filled contest which has given the Three Lions renewed belief in their bid to win a first major title since 1966.

England's talismanic midfield star Jude Bellingham says the victory reinforced his belief that the Three Lions can claim the ultimate prize -- and wants his team-mates to feel the same.

"I'm convinced of it and I hope that a win like this can give them that same conviction that they're top players and we shouldn't fear anyone," Bellingham said.

Blocking England's path is a formidable Norway side spearheaded by the irrepressible Haaland, who scored both goals in Sunday's last 16 win over Brazil.

"We have to study England but obviously we have seen them in their previous games in the tournament and they will be a very strong opponent, but hopefully it will be a very even and tight game," Norway coach Stale Solbakken said.


World Cup Grind Beginning to Take Its Toll on Norway Squad, Says Coach

 Norway's head coach Stale Solbakken gives a press conference in Montclair, New Jersey, on July, 6, 2026 during the 2026 World Cup football tournament. (AFP)
Norway's head coach Stale Solbakken gives a press conference in Montclair, New Jersey, on July, 6, 2026 during the 2026 World Cup football tournament. (AFP)
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World Cup Grind Beginning to Take Its Toll on Norway Squad, Says Coach

 Norway's head coach Stale Solbakken gives a press conference in Montclair, New Jersey, on July, 6, 2026 during the 2026 World Cup football tournament. (AFP)
Norway's head coach Stale Solbakken gives a press conference in Montclair, New Jersey, on July, 6, 2026 during the 2026 World Cup football tournament. (AFP)

Norway ‌coach Stale Solbakken said some of his players have been feeling under the weather ahead of their World Cup quarter-final against England on Saturday, as a month of travel, training and high-pressure games begins to take its toll on the squad.

Striker Jorgen Strand Larsen is one of those ‌dealing with ‌health issues, Solbakken added.

"We've ‌really ⁠only had Jorgen ⁠who has had a fever, but then there's been a bit of coughing and rasping scattered throughout," Solbakken told reporters. "But there's air conditioning, flights, changing rooms and all that.

"There's ⁠50 people (in Norway's travelling party), ‌so it would ‌be strange if something or other didn't ‌crop up."

Marcus Holmgren Pedersen missed the ‌2-1 win over Brazil in the round of 16 due to illness, though Solbakken thought the pressure of the World ‌Cup experience may also have affected the 25-year-old.

"I think, without ⁠being ⁠a doctor, that it's a combination of the boy being young, he's come to the World Cup and thought, 'I'm going to be a backup for Julian (Ryerson)', he's had two games and played great," Solbakken explained.

"He's got a lot of stimulation, his head is full, his body is full of impressions, and then the system collapses a bit."