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World Cup Soccer Ball Flaws Acknowledged By FIFA, No Action Till After Tournament

ANDREW DAMPF   06/26/10 12:51 PM ET   AP

World Cup Soccer Ball

JOHANNESBURG — FIFA acknowledges there might be something wrong with the Jabulani World Cup ball, but won't act on any problems until after the tournament.

Many players have likened the Jabulani to a "supermarket ball," saying it is too unpredictable and flies through the air too easily.

"We're not deaf," FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke said Saturday. "FIFA is not unreceptive about what has been said about the ball."

Valcke said FIFA will discuss the matter with coaches and teams after the World Cup, then meet with manufacturer Adidas.

"There are rules for size and weight. ... But the ball has to be perfect," he added.

Goalkeepers have complained about the ball at every recent World Cup, although this time forwards and even coaches have added their laments.

Brazil coach Dunga got into a verbal spat with Valcke over the Jabulani before the tournament, challenging the FIFA executive to come out onto the pitch and attempt controlling it.

Denmark defender Daniel Agger said the ball made some outfielders look like "drunken sailors."

The Jabulani could create even more problems in the knockout phase beginning Saturday, when games could be decided by penalty kick shootouts.

"The balls have changed over the last couple of years. They have become a lot faster, and in addition to that in Johannesburg we are playing at an altitude of 1,700 meters, which makes the ball even faster," former Germany goalkeeper Oliver Kahn said. "Thus, the goalkeepers work even harder, but I don't think that we can take the ball or the altitude as excuses."

Scoring was down by 16 goals in the first round compared to 2006: 117-101. However, teams played a more defensive style in the opening group stage in South Africa, so whether the ball is a major factor is difficult to measure.

At this rate, the World Cup would set a low for average goals. In 1990, when teams again played defensively – even in the latter stages of the tournament – 2.21 goals were scored per game.

Adidas has made the World Cup ball since 1970 and is contracted through 2014. The German company has defended the Jabulani, saying it doesn't know what the fuss is about because all the qualified teams were given the ball before the tournament to test it.

"There's a lot of talk about stadiums, infrastructure and TV and that's nice and all, but first we've got to worry about balls, spikes and jerseys," Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon said. "I don't see why we can't just go back to the old black-and-white checkered version we all played with as kids."

As for the aesthetics, Valcke said the ball had been criticized in the past as too colorful, and that's why this version is more white.

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JOHANNESBURG — FIFA acknowledges there might be something wrong with the Jabulani World Cup ball, but won't act on any problems until after the tournament. Many players have likened the Jabulan...
JOHANNESBURG — FIFA acknowledges there might be something wrong with the Jabulani World Cup ball, but won't act on any problems until after the tournament. Many players have likened the Jabulan...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
05:03 PM on 06/27/2010
This just in : Linda and Vince McMahon to be consulted on possible FIFA changes for next World Cup.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
02:43 PM on 06/27/2010
Any young person who kicks a ball around will tell you that if you change where the seams are you dramatically change the behavior of the ball. A soccer ball does not behave as would a perfectly round ball... Changing it _at_all_ necessarily changes its characteristics. Shame on the officials for forgetting or overlooking basic physics...
07:54 AM on 06/27/2010
Now, could we talk about the refs?
04:38 AM on 06/27/2010
the ball is too round
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FebM
08:52 AM on 06/27/2010
Lol!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Raymond Soltysek
04:01 AM on 06/27/2010
Except that lots of South American players seem to be managing to score fantastic goals with it...

These are the cries of pampered, overpaid European players who are too lazy to get on with their jobs. Bad workmen always blame their tools, they say...
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atcrossroads
10:00 AM on 06/27/2010
'Brazil coach Dunga got into a verbal spat with Valcke over the Jabulani before the tournament, challenging the FIFA executive to come out onto the pitch and attempt controlling it.'
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Raymond Soltysek
05:15 PM on 06/27/2010
But Dunga was a defender - totally different mindset.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:32 AM on 06/27/2010
Yeah, We all know,..
01:01 AM on 06/27/2010
a more apt headline might have read " FIFA Flaws Acknowledged By World Cup Soccer Ball, No Action Till After Tournament"
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jesuswazasocialist
12:52 AM on 06/27/2010
FIFA might not be deaf but sure as he ll some of their Refs are blind.
09:34 PM on 06/27/2010
:D:D:D:D:D:D:D:D
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Antifascist-08
12:40 AM on 06/27/2010
Walmart balls.
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Manly Pointer
12:19 AM on 06/27/2010
"I don't see why we can't just go back to the old black-and-white checkered version we all played with as kids." I wonder this too. I seem to recall there was controversy with the WC ball back in 2006.
05:26 AM on 06/27/2010
why not the old style black football boots? or the baggy jerseys with those huge shorts? personally, i can see how the 70's hair would make the game better.. again... the players are tehnologied up head to toe (still trying to figure out why many of the jerseys had the "X" men style cross front and back). if one goalie can save a spinning slippery unpredicatble shot, or one striker curve it or keep it bellow the top post, so can they all.
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kwapiv
Twitter @kwapiv | www.facebook.com/kwapivengesayi
11:52 PM on 06/26/2010
You know. Everyone keeps on forgetting that this Ball was already in use prior to the World Cup Kick off. They didn't just pull it out of the wrapping 5 minutes before South Africa and Mexico kicked off. I personally have no bias for or against the ball. As long as everyone is using then its fair. Sometime teams are at a disadvantage but I doubt there is a ball out there that will make ALL teams feel like they are on the same level. I haven't been following this story much but why is it the top flight teams that are complaining about this ball? I haven't heard any of the smaller African or Asian teams complain or whine; maybe they are just happy to be playing or just have more common sense.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
02:46 PM on 06/27/2010
There should be a standard and they shouldn't change it.
11:06 PM on 06/26/2010
The Ball does matter because it gives an advantage to teams that are more offensive which is what FIFA wants increased scoring. Watch the Uruguay vs. S Korea game if you don't believe me.
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Les Kern
Tech Director
10:08 PM on 06/26/2010
then practice more.
reminds me of golfers complaining they should be -100 instead of even par becasue the course was too tough.
Suck it up, everyone is using the same damn ball.
09:56 PM on 06/26/2010
no wonder "team u.s.a." lost. it was a plot between fifa and the rest of the world. but don't they know we now have a president who loves them all.
11:06 AM on 06/27/2010
I would point out all the ways in which your comment doesn't make sense (ex. The article quotes a ton of foreign players and coaches, but you somehow drew from that the conclusion that the world conspired against the USA), but I honestly don't think you're smart enough to learn from your mistakes, so I'll stop right now and let you continue living your pathetic life.
09:23 PM on 06/26/2010
The soccer ball has been around for over 100 years. Why did they feel the need to change it in the last couple of years?
12:46 AM on 06/27/2010
I don't know, but consider the difference in soccer fields today versus just 10 years ago. The turf is completely different and is refined all the time, sometimes with great success and sometimes not so much. But you don't see the mudpits anymore that you used to see in every game.
The players shoes have certainly changed significantly, and I am certain they aren't any longer those old-style all leather sneakers.

All of those things are evolving to level the playing field (and make a ton of money for some corporations.) Some reasons are probably very valid, most of them a money grab.
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esp2001
01:11 AM on 06/27/2010
Oh please....