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Globe drops warfare for soccer. 3/4 population will watch World Cup

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  • Globe drops warfare for soccer. 3/4 population will watch World Cup

    Langley Times, Canada
    June 9 2006

    Globe drops warfare for soccer Three-quarters of population will
    watch World Cup

    By johngordon
    Jun 09 2006


    As you read this column, the World Cup host nation Germany will have
    made schnitzel of underdogs Costa Rica. In the other opening game,
    Poland will have polished off Ecuador in the first round.

    >From villagers in Kenya huddling around a single TV set, to farmers
    in Iran, executives in Japan and fishermen in Peru, the World Cup
    audience is a truly global one. How global?

    In 1978, I found myself in Istanbul, Turkey. Arriving in the city
    centre from the international airport, I found the streets completely
    deserted. There was a very eerie silence. Suddenly, a huge roar
    erupted from a nearby restaurant.

    Inside fanatical Turk and Armenian soccer fans were watching a game
    on a 12-inch black and white TV set. At the time, Armenians and Turks
    seldom socialized, unless of course there was a soccer game to be
    watched.

    Starting today (June 9) through to July 9, the top 32 teams from
    around the world will compete for arguably the world's greatest
    sporting prize, the Federation International de Football Association
    (FIFA) World Cup.

    An estimated three-quarters of the earth's population will tune in to
    one or more of the 64 games being played. More astounding though, is
    that the interest in the games will halt, for at least the duration
    of the tournament, a number of simmering civil wars and tribal
    in-fighting, something that the United Nations has been unable to do.


    One of this year's World Cup contestants in Germany is the Ivory
    Coast. At present the country is calm, anticipating their team's
    first game against Argentina on Saturday morning.

    In the years leading up to the World Cup, civil war has been rampant,
    taking needless lives as tribal hostilities fester. Sadly, after the
    World Cup is over, the civil war will most probably break out again
    and even more lives will be needlessly lost.

    For Canadians, whose national team failed to make this year's
    tournament, all 64 games will televised live on Sportsnet,TSN and
    CTV.

    Canada did go to the World Cup once, in 1986, bowing out in the first
    round without scoring a goal. Despite our lack of national team
    representation, Canada's unique mosaic or `Culture of Cultures' will
    ensure a World Cup party that will be both colourful and exciting.

    As Canadians, we can all enjoy the World Cup, using the occasion to
    bond and perhaps forget for a short time at least the simmering
    maelstrom that unfolded with the arrest of 17 terrorists in Toronto
    last week.

    And how about the World Cup trophy itself?

    Prior to England's win in the 1966 tournament, the diminutive Jules
    Rime trophy, barely 12 inches high, was stolen. It was found just
    prior to the tournament's opening.

    The thief, perhaps finding it impossible to sell, threw it over a
    wall into a suburban garden where the owner's dog found it wrapped in
    newspaper. Meanwhile, the English FA had a replica made just in case
    the original was never found. It is rumoured that the cup presented
    to eventual winners, England, was switched for the facsimile right
    after the presentation.
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