Jan Vertonghen Case Shows Concussion Is All Part of the Sporting Capitalism System

Tottenham’s Jan Vertonghen sustained a concussion in the 2019 Champions League semi-final against Ajax and for most of the following season had dizziness and headaches. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images via Reuters
Tottenham’s Jan Vertonghen sustained a concussion in the 2019 Champions League semi-final against Ajax and for most of the following season had dizziness and headaches. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images via Reuters
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Jan Vertonghen Case Shows Concussion Is All Part of the Sporting Capitalism System

Tottenham’s Jan Vertonghen sustained a concussion in the 2019 Champions League semi-final against Ajax and for most of the following season had dizziness and headaches. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images via Reuters
Tottenham’s Jan Vertonghen sustained a concussion in the 2019 Champions League semi-final against Ajax and for most of the following season had dizziness and headaches. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images via Reuters

It was around the end of last year that people began to notice Jan Vertonghen was looking decidedly off the pace at Tottenham. He was slow off the mark, slow to the ball, slow to react. Occasionally entire passages of play seemed to pass him by. And so, naturally, as an underperforming player in a popular ball game, it felt only right that he should be subjected to the same pitch of ridicule and abuse as anyone else in his position.

I went back through social media during some of his poorer games last season and pulled out a few of the more representative comments from Spurs fans and others. “Legs gone.” “Sad, but hasn’t got a clue what day it is.” “Get this clown out of my club.” “Finished.” “Past it.” “Utter disgrace.” “Sell.” “Dead wood.” “Stealing a living.” “Happy if I never see him in the shirt again.”

Well, now we know what was really going on. Last week Vertonghen revealed that for most of last season he was enduring the after-effects of a concussion sustained against Ajax the previous April. “I suffered a lot from dizziness and headaches,” said Vertonghen, now at Benfica. “It affected me for eight or nine months. I still had a year left on my contract, and thought I had to play because I had to showcase myself to other clubs.”

On Monday a working group led by the Premier League and featuring the Football Association, the EFL, Professional Footballers’ Association, and Women’s Super League sat down to discuss whether there should be restrictions on heading the ball in adult football. It follows a 2019 study by the University of Glasgow that found professional footballers were three times more likely to die of neurodegenerative diseases than the rest of the population.

Meanwhile, the former England hooker Steve Thompson is one of a number of former players launching legal action against World Rugby, the Rugby Football Union, and Welsh Rugby Union for an alleged failure to protect them from repeated head traumas.

Thompson is 42 and has been diagnosed with dementia. He no longer remembers winning the World Cup in 2003. “Was it a massive love of my life?” he said of rugby union in an interview with this newspaper two weeks ago. “No, not really. But it was a job.”

A question to consider as you scroll through all this: what does it make you feel? Sadness? Or sadness with a “but”? But: Vertonghen and Thompson knew what they were doing. But: they were handsomely paid for their trouble. But: you can’t ban heading in football, that’s just ridiculous.

But: any of us could get a traumatic brain injury simply by walking down the street and into the path of a falling piano. Life is risky. Sport is dangerous.

Perhaps this is a moment to consider what we owe the people risking their safety for our entertainment
There is a broad school of thought here that at its core, the debate over head injuries in elite sport – one that can easily be extended to other areas of player welfare – is simply a matter of personal choice. If athletes are prepared to embark on a career in professional sport, then as long as they do so fully apprised of the risks and in possession of the latest medical science, who are we to impede them?

Occasionally you will even see this idea expressed in terms of liberation, self-actualization, even gratification: the notion that danger is not only part of the basic thrill of sport, but also the very point. That the essence of sport is bound up in sacrifice. That on some level we are all animalistically addicted to testing ourselves, pushing ourselves, breaking ourselves. Or at the very least, watching with a beer while others do.

If we can no longer pay teenagers ridiculous money to give themselves brain damage for our gratification, then frankly are we even still free as a species? And ultimately, this is a question that cuts to the very core of what sport means, and who it serves. After all, choices are not made in a vacuum: they are influenced, impelled, incentivized.

Vertonghen played on because he felt his livelihood was on the line. Thompson played on because it was his job to do so. No scientific paper or well‑intentioned press release will ever override the profit motive. And so to focus on personal autonomy is to ignore the extent to which athletes, like all labor, are co-opted into an economy that they did not choose and over which they have little to no influence.

This is, of course, how sporting capitalism works: I get entertained, you get paid, and everything else is window dressing. Sporting capitalism simply buys off your fatigue, your mental health issues, your insecurities, your quality of life, your memory loss, your pain. If you tear a ligament, then it’s financially counterproductive for your club to make you play.

But a concussion? Well, we didn’t see anything, and obviously you can’t, so … how about we keep this one to ourselves? Partly this is a critique of a system that essentially regards the athlete as industrial plant: a part, a tool, a resource from which to extract performance value. But partly, too, this is a process in which we all participate. And for those of us who take pleasure from sport, perhaps this is a moment to consider what we owe the people risking their safety for our entertainment. To remember that welfare does not begin and end with a wage.

To bear in mind, above all, that within every superhuman athlete there is a human who bends and breaks like everyone else.

(The Guardian)



Nagelsmann Says Germany Has Higher Ambitions Than Advancing to Knockout Stage

Julian Nagelsmann, head coach of Germany, is seen before the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group E match between Germany and Cote D'Ivoire at Toronto Stadium on June 20, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario. (Getty Images/AFP)
Julian Nagelsmann, head coach of Germany, is seen before the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group E match between Germany and Cote D'Ivoire at Toronto Stadium on June 20, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Nagelsmann Says Germany Has Higher Ambitions Than Advancing to Knockout Stage

Julian Nagelsmann, head coach of Germany, is seen before the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group E match between Germany and Cote D'Ivoire at Toronto Stadium on June 20, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario. (Getty Images/AFP)
Julian Nagelsmann, head coach of Germany, is seen before the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group E match between Germany and Cote D'Ivoire at Toronto Stadium on June 20, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario. (Getty Images/AFP)

Coach Julian Nagelsmann was thrilled by Germany's comeback victory against Ivory Coast on Saturday, but stopped short of celebrating his side advancing to the World Cup knockout stage for the first time since 2014.

"We have high ambitions," Nagelsmann said when asked by AFP if booking a place in the next round was something to celebrate.

"The most important topic for us is to focus on the next step," he said.

Germany failed to get out of the group stage both at Russia 2018 and four years ago in Qatar.

Saturday's dramatic win, secured in extra time with a second goal from substitute Deniz Undav, guarantees the Germans will advance and snaps a streak of bitter World Cup disappointment for the four-time winners.

"This is exactly what we hoped for and I'm very happy for me team," Nagelsmann said.

He said that after his two-goal performance, Undav could make the starting 11 in Germany's third group stage match against Ecuador, but also stressed that the Stuttgart forward was thriving as a substitute.

"I could have him in the starting lineup," Nagelsmann said. "I think that every player would love to be in the starting lineup, but I think he's very happy as it is right now."

Franck Kessie put Ivory Coast ahead in the first half but the African side was largely on the defensive in the second half, ultimately unable to withstand the relentless German pressure.

But the Elephants remain in a strong position to advance and could book Ivory Coast's first ever ticket to the World Cup knockout with a decisive win over Curacao next week.

"We still have everything to play for," said Ivorian coach Emerse Fae.

"I'm really happy with the performance of my players during these 90 minutes... I think we had two teams that deserve to win," he added.

"Our primary objective is to get out of the group phase."


Ivory Coast Looks to Put Germany Loss at World Cup in Rearview Mirror

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group E - Germany v Ivory Coast - Toronto Stadium, Toronto, Canada - June 20, 2026 Ivory Coast's Amad Diallo in action. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group E - Germany v Ivory Coast - Toronto Stadium, Toronto, Canada - June 20, 2026 Ivory Coast's Amad Diallo in action. (Reuters)
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Ivory Coast Looks to Put Germany Loss at World Cup in Rearview Mirror

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group E - Germany v Ivory Coast - Toronto Stadium, Toronto, Canada - June 20, 2026 Ivory Coast's Amad Diallo in action. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group E - Germany v Ivory Coast - Toronto Stadium, Toronto, Canada - June 20, 2026 Ivory Coast's Amad Diallo in action. (Reuters)

If Ivory Coast wins its next match, Saturday's loss won’t matter.

After surrendering two second-half goals to Germany and missing the chance to clinch a knockout stage berth for the first time in its four World Cup appearances, Ivory Coast turns its attention to its last group stage match against Curacao on Thursday.

Win, and the Elephants are in.

Forward Amad Diallo said he and his teammates will get over the Germany loss. They have to.

“We (have) respect for ourselves, but we want to make history for Côte d’Ivoire, and we (are) going to go there with good mentality and try to live again,” he said.

Ivory Coast seemed one step ahead of Germany throughout the first half Saturday and a chunk of the second, with midfielder Franck Kessié’s first-half goal silencing German fans for a long stretch.

But the German side of the sold-out crowd erupted when Deniz Undav scored the winning goal, his second of the match, leaving Ivory Coast fans hanging their heads.

The team seemed a little shocked as well, and players spoke about the pain of losing a match they felt they should have won.

Still, the good news for Ivory Coast is that its next opponent, Curacao, is No. 83 in FIFA’s international team rankings, well down the list from the 31st-ranked Ivory Coast. The Caribbean nation also lost its first match to Germany, 7-1.

“It’s going to be a big moment for everyone, for this new generation, because we know we have quality in the team,” Diallo said. “But the priority now is we are really focused on ourselves. It’s going to be a very hard game.”


Hydration Breaks at World Cup Add Nothing but Take Away a Lot, Says Bielsa

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group H - Saudi Arabia v Uruguay - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - June 15, 2026 Uruguay coach Marcelo Bielsa speaks to his players during the second half hydration break. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group H - Saudi Arabia v Uruguay - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - June 15, 2026 Uruguay coach Marcelo Bielsa speaks to his players during the second half hydration break. (Reuters)
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Hydration Breaks at World Cup Add Nothing but Take Away a Lot, Says Bielsa

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group H - Saudi Arabia v Uruguay - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - June 15, 2026 Uruguay coach Marcelo Bielsa speaks to his players during the second half hydration break. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group H - Saudi Arabia v Uruguay - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - June 15, 2026 Uruguay coach Marcelo Bielsa speaks to his players during the second half hydration break. (Reuters)

Uruguay coach Marcelo Bielsa said ‌the hydration breaks introduced in each half of matches at the World Cup add nothing to football while destroying the sport's cultural essence.

FIFA introduced three-minute hydration breaks in each half at the halfway mark due to sweltering temperatures across host cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico but the breaks have split opinions between players and coaches.

Critics say the breaks, which essentially break the game down into four quarters, simply allow broadcasters to benefit from commercial breaks for over two minutes and it has been a bone of contention among the sport's purists.

"Playing four times instead of two alters the conception of what had been culturally built ‌to interpret ‌football," Bielsa told reporters.

"This change of culture does not add ‌anything ⁠and takes away ⁠a lot. I will just say that before this decision, football had a characteristic, now it has another. People fall in love with the game because of its characteristics.

"Of course technology like VAR, we commend it and value it. Technology offers more opportunities. There is another intention for the breaks and the conclusions I'm making here are not really my own. I also echo what I hear as ⁠well."

Uruguay play Cape Verde in their second game on ‌Sunday with the tightly contested group finely poised ‌with all four teams on one point each.

Cape Verde held European champions Spain to ‌a 0-0 draw with a defensive masterclass and Bielsa said Uruguay would learn ‌their lessons from the low defensive block they came up against in the 1-1 draw with Saudi Arabia.

"We did have a lot of possession and very few chances created in the first half," Bielsa explained, adding that the team already knows the formation ‌they need to play.

"In the second half, it was agile and offensive possession, dynamic in nature with a high level ⁠of mobility."

Uruguay's Darwin ⁠Nunez was largely neutralized by Saudi Arabia, with the striker taking only one shot before he was taken off at halftime, earning criticism for his performance.

The 26-year-old looks set to be dropped having not scored in his last 14 appearances for Uruguay but Bielsa said it was not an issue with confidence.

"Any footballer who is taking part at the World Cup doesn't need any motivation," Bielsa said.

"The consequences, the scope, the magnificence of such a high-caliber tournament - anyone taking part makes them highly driven and justifiably so."

On a lighter note, Bielsa brushed off the suggestion that his players might emulate Spain's Marc Cucurella, who has vowed to get a tattoo of coach Luis de la Fuente if they win the World Cup.

"This is not going to happen," he said emphatically, prompting laughter.