28 August 2009

RAMADAN & FOOTBALL : FROM THE WESTERN POINT OF VIEW

From time to time, I republished a specific articles that interest me. This one is related to Ramadan, Muslim players and how they are perceived by the Non-Muslims management. Read it all. I extracted it from the TIME magazine. - Jo


Sulley Muntari could be said as successful during his spell in Pompey. If not, Jose Mourinho wouldn't want to sign him, right?



Soccer Star Benched for Fasting During Ramadan
By Jeff Israely
Thursday, Aug. 27, 2009

  1. The Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which falls on different dates of the Western calendar each year, began on Aug. 21 in 2009, just in time for another event in Europe with near religious significance: the kickoff of soccer season. But the timing has sparked controversy in Italy, where in the past four days both a prominent coach and a team owner in the top Serie A league have linked the rigors of Ramadan's sunrise-to-sunset fasting to Muslim players' poor performance on the pitch.

  2. Just 30 minutes into his team's disappointing 1-1 tie Sunday with Bari, Inter Milan's Portuguese-born coach Jose Mourinho pulled midfielder Sulley Muntari, a practicing Muslim, out of his home debut. "He was clearly struggling," Mourinho said of the 25-year-old Ghanaian player during the postgame press conference. "It's the month of Ramadan, and that's what affected his performance, which is why I took him out."

  3. A top Muslim leader in Italy, Mohamed Nour Dachan, lashed out at the coach of the defending Serie A champions. "I think Mourinho should talk a little bit less," Dachan, president of the Italian Union of Islamic Organizations, told Sky Italia television. "We know from sports medicine that the mental stability of an athlete lets him give so much more on the field, and a player observant in Christianity, Judaism or Islam definitely has a very tranquil psychology."

  4. On Tuesday evening, Aug. 25, the outspoken owner of the Rome-based Lazio club added to the polemics, saying he makes a point of avoiding the "problem" of Ramadan. "I respect religious freedom and the ways that it is expressed," Claudio Lotito told reporters after a meeting of Serie A officials in Milan. "But I try to prevent things that can slow down training and the playing of matches. I've never bought players that have this problem."

  5. Italy's sports pages duly took note of other Muslim players who observe Ramadan with varying degrees of strictness, including Siena's Abdel Kader Ghezzal, an Algerian who scored a goal against AC Milan on Saturday. Though a practicing Muslim, Ghezzal says he does not fast on training and game days during Ramadan. Inter's Muntari is more observant, though he reportedly ate pasta at lunch on Sunday, while refusing water before the match.

  6. Most imams say there are just a few groups of people exempted from the daytime fast, including pregnant women, the sick and the elderly. Though the Koran doesn't cite any excuses based on profession, as with all other religions there are Muslims who are more and less observant of the letter of the law, with the requirements of their jobs sometimes playing a role.

  7. Stefano Tirelli, the Milan-based personal trainer for Muntari and several other top soccer stars from Africa and the Middle East, says that depending on the playing conditions and the individual, lack of food and water can limit performance. He recalls his experience working for the United Arab Emirates and Qatar national teams, which featured less robust players in 100°F (40°C) heat, saying their speed and stamina were indeed affected by the Ramadan fast. But Tirelli, a professor of integrated sports technique at Milan's Catholic University, warns against reducing athletic performance to a series of statistical charts. "It's right that we respect the values of science," he says. ""But mental strength, determination and, yes, religious force, for one month's time, can easily overcome the deficit in proper nutrition."

  8. Italian journalist Massimo Donaddio noted in the daily Il Sole 24 Ore that Saudi Arabia's coach, at the recent World Athletics Championships in Berlin, declared that his athletes would strictly follow the Ramadan fast during the competition. The Saudis won exactly zero medals, writes Donaddio — but then, so did the Italians.

    or click here :
    http//www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1919106,00.html

4 comments:

Khan said...

The Saudis won exactly zero medals, writes Donaddio — but then, so did the Italians.

hahaha! I like that one very very much! Donaddio is ten times the coach Josephine is.

Going by the argument, we should all stop working while fasting or do not fast since our bosses require us to work or employers should not employ devoted muslims..geez..

tombiruo said...

Maurinho was misquoted, should blame the newspaper that twisted his statement.

z i z o u said...

haha

Mauriho misquoted??
Tink its alwiz Utusan's work!

Reds should get Robben instead of Lucas or Riera

utusanlfc (Johardy Ibrahim) said...

hahaha zizou... ko pun layan THE-ONE-&-ONLY Man.U fan kat sini?

Click on the link & you can see it was published by the TIME magazine.

And SRK Herry? Is SRK stands for SHAH RUKH KHAN? yoooo!
Welcome Herry!
I'll visit your site as soon as I posted this reply.

EVA MENDEZ IS A KOP?

EVA MENDEZ IS A KOP?

The GOLDEN Team of Kenny Daglish

The GOLDEN Team of Kenny Daglish
If we have them now, say farewell to Arsenal, Man.U and Chelsea... if...