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Archive for the 'Latin America' Category

Tim Vickery on Brazilian Soccer

Monday, November 12th, 2007

When Tim Vickery went to Brazil in 1994 he was, like many people traveling to a new land, overwhelmed by a sense of “straight off the boat surprise.” Everything was new, and he loved the feeling of being immersed in it. Vickery, who had never left England until he was 23, quickly came to realize that “discovery is the best thing in life.”

Since 1994, Vickery has been discovering more and more about South American soccer and writing about it for the BBC, The World Game, Sports Illustrated, and World Soccer magazine. He was kind enough to take the time to speak with me recently about soccer in Brazil, the country where he is based.

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Tim Vickery (photo: Tim Vickery)

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From Soccer to Politics

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

President of Liberia was a position for which George Weah was eminently unqualified when he ran for election in 2005. He never completed high school and had no political experience. Liberia was mired in a state of despair, coming off of years of civil war which had divided the country and crippled the economy of the west African nation. Yet despite all of this, Weah finished a respectable second in the run-off election (after winning the first round). George Weah had something that no other candidate could match: a glowing career in soccer.

Surprisingly, George Weah is one of the few former soccer players to use their fame to move into a career in politics. Former players are some of the most prominent people in society and were they to move into politics, they would begin their new careers with higher name recognition than many politicians in office for years. But, for whatever reason, few players attempt to make this transition. A few of those who have (along with some former coaches, officials, and referees) are listed below. I’m limiting this list to those who have played at the professional level. Many politicians played soccer as kids (though few are as bad as Tony Blair).

Blair attempts to at least make contact

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Soccer in the Atacama Desert

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

My brother Scott is currently spending a quarter abroad in Chile. While traveling in the Atacama Desert, the driest place on earth, he came across a couple soccer fields, one of which had a game going on at the time. The scenery is striking and I asked him to give me permission (heck, I told him, he’s my younger brother) to post them here. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did.

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Eddie Carvacho: Building a Hispanic Fan Base for The Columbus Crew

Sunday, October 14th, 2007

For years, businesses have tested new products in the city of Columbus, Ohio. The capital city is known as a good test market because its population largely resembles that of the United States as a whole. So perhaps it’s not surprising that in the past few years, like many places that did not traditionally have much of a Hispanic population, Columbus has been an ever more popular destination for immigrants from Latin America (the city’s Festival Latino last year drew 300,000 people).

The local MLS team, the Columbus Crew, has taken note of the growing Hispanic population in the area. This year, they appointed Eddie Carvacho, the team’s former goalkeeper coach, as their Director of Hispanic Development. Upon his appointment, Carvacho said, “My objective is very simple. I am the connector within our organization between the growing Hispanic community…” While his objective may be simple, achieving it is anything but. Carvacho spoke with me recently about the challenges of attracting Hispanic fans to the Crew.

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Eddie Carvacho (photo: Columbus Crew)

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Power to the Players: Labor Policies and Soccer

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

The Spanish Federation’s announcement last week that Africans would no longer count as non-EU players passed with little notice (but I thank Joseph for bringing it to my attention). The decision was made to keep La Liga in line with the Cotonou agreement, ratified last year by the Spanish parliament, which treats workers from 77 African, Caribbean, and Pacific nations as EU workers. Thus, players already playing in Spain from such countries – the most notable being Barcelona’s Samuel Eto’o and Real Madrid’s Mahmadou Diarra – will no longer take up one of the three non-EU roster spots per match that teams are permitted, nor will future signings.

This agreement is the latest example of labor policies having a particularly marked effect in the world of soccer. Soccer often seems disconnected from the real world; the effect of labor policies on the sport is one of the ways in which we are reminded that soccer is very much a part of the world we have created.

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Photo Essay of the Garden City, Kansas High School Soccer Team

Sunday, September 23rd, 2007

Note: This is the eighth part of my American Soccer Road Trip, which will involve me traveling across the country, finding stories that exemplify the diversity that exists in American soccer. Check back soon for further updates.

The final chapter in Sam Quinones’s book Antonio’s Gun and Delfino’s Dream is titled “A Soccer Season in Southwest Kansas.” The book is a study of contemporary Mexican migration, and the last chapter is set in a place that most people don’t associate with immigration. But as immigration patterns are shifting, Mexicans and other Hispanics are settling in places like Garden City, Kansas, far from the communities where such immigrants have typically settled.

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Hispanic immigrants are bringing many new things to these communities. Soccer is often a new sport in these areas in which American football, basketball, and baseball have traditionally reigned supreme. Even while soccer has made inroads in American suburbs and cities, its penetration into rural areas has been minimal. As Sam Quinones describes Southwest Kansas, “out here on the High Plains [soccer] was as foreign to the native white residents as the immigrants who played it” (222).

Quinones covers and writes about a season with the Garden City High School soccer team. The team’s success that season has a profound impact on a town struggling to adapt to new demographic realities. Like in Paul Cuadros’s book A Home on the Field, Sam Quinones uses soccer as an avenue to explore social issues relating to the immigrants who play the game. It is a book that soccer fans might not be aware of, but is worth a read at the very least for its chapter on Garden City High School’s team.

After reading this chapter in Sam Quinones’s book, I got in touch with the author and he was kind enough to put me in touch with people in Garden City. I was able to stop in the town as part of my American Soccer Road Trip and talk with them about the team today. Quinones’s book does an excellent job of describing the team and the role of soccer in Garden City, so I chose not to repeat this task, but instead to compile a photo essay of the team. I hope this will add to Quinones’s book and prove interesting to readers of this blog. (more…)

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