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French Parliament Demanding Answers About World Cup Loss

ALFRED de MONTESQUIOU   06/30/10 02:01 PM ET   AP

France World Cup

PARIS — French legislators huddled behind closed doors to investigate an issue of national importance – not terrorism or recession, but the French football team's meltdown at the World Cup.

From taxi drivers to President Nicolas Sarkozy, France is taking the fiasco very close to heart and demanding answers. Wednesday's extraordinary parliamentary session defied a warning by football's governing body that political power shouldn't meddle with sport.

For the French, this is about more than sports. It's a blow to the national honor at a time when the country is already worried about its decline in the world. Football-proud England and Italy, too, are wondering whether their World Cup failures are glitches or a sign of a broader malaise.

The way France, winner of the 1998 World Cup and runner-up in 2006, left this year's Cup hurt the French as much as the losing itself.

They finished the first round without a single victory, after players went on strike and refused to train because forward Nicolas Anelka was sent home for insulting the coach. Then there was coach Raymond Domenech's last gesture at the Cup: refusing to shake hands with the rival coach after France's final loss to South Africa.

Dubbed an "Affair of State" across front-page headlines for the past week, the debacle drove Sarkozy to summon an emergency meeting on French football, and Sports Minister Roselyne Bachelot to trash the French team in parliament. Sarkozy has also announced a national symposium next October to rethink how national football is run.

On Wednesday, French lawmakers summoned Domenech and Federation president Jean-Pierre Escalettes for a grilling on how it all went so spectacularly wrong.

All of the political involvement has led FIFA President Sepp Blatter to warn that the French team risks suspension from global tournaments if authorities intervene in the running of the national soccer federation.

Parliament doesn't see it that way.

"It isn't FIFA's role to threaten French lawmakers; we're in a democracy and parliamentarians have the right to hear anyone they want," said lawmaker Eric Ciotti after Wednesday's hearing.

"This isn't just about football, it's about France: It's our honor that's at stake," added lawmaker Jacques Remiller. The exceptionally large turnout of journalists outside the hearing underscores what a national issue the team's fiasco has become, Remiller pointed out as some 200 reporters haggled with lawmakers for news from the session.

Lawmakers insist they're not investigating France's poor sports showing or the coach's dubious tactical decisions, but the team's attitude and the incompetence of federation managers.

French voters are "asking us about it, not about the actual athletic defeat but about the moral defeat," said Michel Herbillon, vice president of the Parliamentary Commission of Cultural and Educational Affairs, which held the hearing.

Domenech retires next month, Escalettes has announced he is resigning. But many French people are still angry at the team, and football talk is everywhere on the streets.

"More heads have to roll, it's the whole system that's rotten," said Paris taxi driver Jean-Paul Poupin. He slammed Domenech's "lack of fair play," but most of his dismay was aimed at the once-cherished national team.

"With the money they earn, it's outrageous that they go on strike," said the cabbie, echoing widespread grumbling on the general state of French society.

The World Cup routing of England and Italy has also triggered soul-searching.

England's 4-1 second-round defeat to old rival Germany sparked a fevered and doom-laden debate about the future of English football and its Italian coach, Fabio Capello.

A motion in the House of Commons called for an urgent inquiry to be held into the state of the national game and voiced "great disappointment at England's pathetic exit." The motion, signed by two lawmakers, says it firmly believes that "many Premier League players are grossly overpaid and under-perform."

Fans and media also criticized Capello, turning their attention to the Football Association, which is to decide whether Capello is to retain his job as the most highly paid manager in the international game.

One potential candidate to replace Capello injected a slight tone of nationalism into the debate.

"Surely we have to find a manager from England, an English manager," storied coach Harry Rednapp was quoted as saying in British media reports.

"I'm not talking about a Scottish manager or an Irish manager, I'm talking about an English manager because this is where we're from, this is our country."

The England players haven't escaped censure, with most lamenting the stars' inability to reproduce their English Premier League form at international level. They also came under criticism for ignoring fans after returning home from the tournament.

In Italy, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's has kept a low profile amid the team's disastrous campaign.

But members of the right-wing Northern League party in his coalition have said Italy's football failure is a sign that the country's top-tier league is opening up too much to foreigners.

"By filling up our teams with foreigners, our football players have become useless," Davide Cavallotto of the Northern League was quoted as saying in Corriere della Sera after Italy's elimination.

Other Italian politicians said the players were often too old, with little room left for younger generations.

In Paris, after Wednesday's hearing, Domenech and Espalettes left the National Assembly through a side door, carefully avoiding reporters.

Lawmakers said Domenech blamed L'Equipe newspaper, which printed details of Anelka's expletive-laden tirade, for the disarray. Domenech also said the paper misquoted the player.

Lawmaker Lionel Tardy, reporting on the closed-door hearing live on Twitter, quoted Escalettes as voicing his "shame" at the "rotten, spoiled brats" on the French team.

___

Associated Press writers Alessandra Rizzo in Rome and Steve Wood in London contributed to this report.

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PARIS — French legislators huddled behind closed doors to investigate an issue of national importance – not terrorism or recession, but the French football team's meltdown at the World Cup...
PARIS — French legislators huddled behind closed doors to investigate an issue of national importance – not terrorism or recession, but the French football team's meltdown at the World Cup...
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jubo
Celestianish
09:16 AM on 07/05/2010
Worry none, the French Parliament is as credible as the team...
10:54 PM on 07/03/2010
I hope the French Parliament reads up on the concept of Karma, because, really, all they have to do is watch the tape of France's last qualifying game against Ireland when the referees allowed Thierry Henry's hand ball goal. This, as they will certainly remember, qualified France on aggregate goals, and, had it not been allowed, Ireland would have been in the World Cup instead of France.

Don't think the players didn't have all this in the back of their minds as they played their group games, either, as so many of them play on club teams with the Irish players they cheated out of a World Cup berth. Guilt and shame can certainly show themselves on the pitch.
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Christophe
03:03 AM on 07/04/2010
Ireland suffered from the same bad Karma for beating Georgia on a bad ref decision.
What comes around...
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Chhana Hen
03:44 AM on 07/02/2010
I wonder why this team can not win at first match.And can tell about problem to all fans to know about it ?
02:39 AM on 07/02/2010
The french government should rename french fries to freedom fries in honor of their teams performance.
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Christophe
09:13 PM on 07/03/2010
French fries have been invented in Belgium.
They should be called Belgian fries...
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jubo
Celestianish
09:12 AM on 07/05/2010
What do you call the french language then...

The freedom language?
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apessano
Darwin Loves You
01:03 AM on 07/02/2010
I'm sad that my team (Uruguay) wasn't able to beat them. I wish the Celestes had played more offensively, but whatever, it was the first game of the WC so you don't want to throw it all away after game 1. Sorry, France, but your overall performance was pretty... umm... sad.
01:25 AM on 07/02/2010
Must be a good time to be a Uruguayo .. good luck tomorrow.
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Christophe
02:12 PM on 07/05/2010
Uruguay was not even able to beat a completely dysfunctional French team....really sad.
09:39 PM on 07/01/2010
You see, what happened was that the French went out and played like a bunch of showboats and divas, didn't interact with each other on the field like an actual team, made sloppy passes and tried to take shots on the goal instead of making assists, and then were eliminated from the cup. Their only show of solidarity was in the locker room when they cut off their nose to spite their face. Case closed. You're welcome, French parliament.
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Christophe
10:21 PM on 07/01/2010
Impressive Bernie.
You should consider a career in journalism.
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climbing panda
there's a log in my cabin
08:08 PM on 07/01/2010
europe is out of its collectivist mind. the day i see congress holding hearings because the dream team loses at basketball or american baseball players can't compete i will know that america has followed the democrats down the path to socialist democracy.

do the french soccer dudes have the same limited work week like the working people do? do they get the same days off?
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Christophe
09:52 PM on 07/01/2010
Hey Comrad,

The French Soccer Federation receives subsidies from the Government so they are held accountable not for a bad performance but a dysfunctional team at the WC.
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Jennifer Hagan
Expat Mother of two living in France.
03:02 AM on 07/02/2010
Limited work week. 35 hours isn't limited. It is just five hours shy of the American work week which means that you work one hour less a day. I don't see that is that much. Plus, if you are a cadre, like my husband, you work until the job is finished. Most people who aren't working at McDonalds aren't working a 35 hour work week. At least the people i know.
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Christophe
09:16 PM on 07/03/2010
French worked are more productive than US workers.
http://www.businessinsider.com/are-the-french-the-most-productive-people-in-the-world-2009-8
06:14 PM on 07/01/2010
What the article fails to address, is the significant racist undertones football discourse has been in France as well as consequent to France's failure at this World cup. Anelka is black, additionally a couple of deservedly French players of North African origins were excluded etc..One of the issues Sarkosy seemed to worry about is that the racist undertones of many newspaper articles a well as the public discourse will go out of hand, so he is trying to put a lid on the racial/ethnic babble.
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Christophe
07:02 PM on 07/01/2010
No need to put a lid on the racial/ethnic babble because there none.
01:13 AM on 07/02/2010
yeah sure, France is a model of ethnic coexistence!! be real in your defensiveness, you look silly!!
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Jennifer Hagan
Expat Mother of two living in France.
03:04 AM on 07/02/2010
I don't think this was the case here. I live in France and I've heard zero about it being racial. It is about a player disrespecting his coach and a coach that can't coach his team. That is what it is about. Remember, most of the line up were in the last world cup team. If Domneck felt that way, then he would have excluded the other players in the world cup several times over. These aren't new players man
07:44 AM on 07/02/2010
I was referring on the general discourse of the media and the street regarding the 'national character" of the french team. Le pen, was upset about the composition of the team in the past EVEN when the team was a winning one. Le Pen is not a fringe, he represents a fair amount of the french populace. Besides the French coach has really no choice BUT to include players of color, they are simply better.
05:29 PM on 07/01/2010
Remember, Warren Buffet freely admits that he stood to lose some $30 million if France won the World Cup.
Assuming, absurdly, that Buffet is the only billionaire, derivatives salesman, hedge fund leader who made a big 'insurance' wager on the cup, that still means Buffet's minions could spend something like $20 million on bribes to get player mistakes and bad calls that would eliminate the French.
If I were offered that kind of money in a super-secret Swiss bank account in exchange for a few not-perfect passes or shots, or to make one lethal 'controversial' call, I'd jump at it. And I'm a virtual saint.
When just one man brags that he bet $30 million on one team's defeat, you know Big Money is in up its horns trying to prove who's the biggest broker of power in the world.
Egotism is all those guys have, and since the money usually belongs to someone else, why shouldn't they make all those little people dance to their atonal tune?
So how much did Buffet actually make in commission for buying the derivative that banked on a French defeat? Did he do it for free? What do you think?
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Christophe
07:23 PM on 07/01/2010
Interesting theory although unlikely.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Catch 22
Plan for Mid to Long Term.
01:56 PM on 07/01/2010
The bottom line is this. The French played lousy football. So did England and so dis Italy. They deserved to be home. The appeared to have lead in their boots. Now there might be all kinds of valid reasons for this. I have heard, they are too old, the mix of experienced and younger players were bad, the season playing in Europe is too hard, and so on. But Spain and Germany seem to be doing quite well. So they have to go back to the drawing board and work it out. This is not about bad officials, or anything else. It was just bad football. No excuses.
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Christophe
02:38 PM on 07/01/2010
Th French government is NOT focusing on the performance on the field but on the behavior off the field. The French Soccer Federation is an old organization which probably needs to be re-structured to better address the needs of top modern level soccer. France is a thought leader in terms of educating youngsters into soccer but it looks like the pro level requires special attention. That is what the French government in partnership with the Soccer Federation is looking at.
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Catch 22
Plan for Mid to Long Term.
02:49 PM on 07/01/2010
Thanks for your insight Christophe. I don know how much influence the Government has over the French Soccer Federation, but I know such organizations tend to be a bit stodgy, and resistant to change. Let us see how that partnership works. The team did look awful. Good luck rebuilding.
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Jennifer Hagan
Expat Mother of two living in France.
03:06 AM on 07/02/2010
Well, wasn't it the Ministre de Sport the one who actually is in parliament investigating this? That is what i've been seeing on the news. However, the government isn't focusing on the performance, you are right. Their behavior is ridiculous.
12:29 PM on 07/01/2010
This is a ridiculous thing to do. What possible "sanctions" are they going to bring against the players and coaches? Why hold an investigation now rather than in 2002 when they entered the tournament as favourites, but exited it in the first round.

FIFA is serious about govermental non-interference, they will suspend France (which means not just the French national team being excluded from the WC and Euro 2012, but also French club sides being barred from the Champions League) Being suspended from continental events can be a huge problem, it took English clubs a decade in the 90s to recover from their five year suspension for crowd violence. Just as French teams finally showing their potential in the Champions League.
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01:44 PM on 07/01/2010
there is more to that just Football, it is about representing your country or in this case being an embarrassment on and off the field. Even though the USA got eliminated we can feel that we earned some respect as a Footballing/soccer nation around the world. And off the field our players were great envoys of America. That is what is expected when you play for your nation.
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Christophe
02:42 PM on 07/01/2010
Absolutely correct.
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LatteLiberals
03:00 PM on 07/01/2010
I understand that a national pride is at stake at the World Cup, but really what can the French, English, Italian or Nigerian governments really do about it? You can't go back in time and change the outcome.

This is not place for the government involvement. Its a waste of tax payer money to have elected officials spending time discussing a national soccer team. Tax payers do not pay any of these European players salaries. I don't know much about the Nigerian team.

Governments blowing things out of proportion, just adds more embarrassment to the situation. Its a game, not life or death.

The longer the World Cup goes on the better the better I feel about how Team USA played and how Americans react to sport in general.
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Christophe
02:41 PM on 07/01/2010
Please see my previous comment.
This process has nothing to do with sanctions but with fixing a system which failed.
12:03 PM on 07/01/2010
Sneaking in a little work before summer vacation.
11:45 AM on 07/01/2010
Too often, America is compared unfavorably to European nations and culture. When Congress held hearings on baseball steroids, it was (rightfully) widely lampooned as a pr stunt. But it turns out the French parliament is little different.
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LatteLiberals
03:08 PM on 07/01/2010
Baseball is an American industry (for lack of a better term). Its regulated by US laws. Congress has a right to ask questions of any American industry, particularly when something illegal is happening.

The situation with FIFA is different according to the article. FIFA regulates not any one government.
10:47 AM on 07/01/2010
HAHA

France SUCKS!!!!!!!!
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Christophe
11:26 AM on 07/01/2010
HAHA

You SUCK!!!!!!!!
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jymfrancais
Judge a Man by his questions, not by his answers
12:57 PM on 07/01/2010
Double that
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diverssant
"I wanna go outside, in the rain..."
10:29 AM on 07/01/2010
It is probably the overwhelming infusion of foreign players into the top European leagues (oh, this is so not politically correct), that are hurting national sides' performance.

Their clubs are successful, giving the illusion of grandeur but many have few native players, like Inter Milan, the current Champion's League holder, which had not a one Italian player in its starting lineup... A bit of a no brainer, really...
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fruitblender
11:04 AM on 07/01/2010
@diverssant the German team is also filled with lots of nonnative Germans, what explains their overwhelming success?
graciesgra
retired h.s. teacher from NY
12:55 PM on 07/01/2010
So, if the natives aren't playing for these teams, who is?
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diverssant
"I wanna go outside, in the rain..."
04:51 PM on 07/01/2010
Actually Germany is far from the powerhouse it once was... not the disaster like France or Italy but still: their run ends at the quarter finals with Argentina!

The German national stars like Klose, Gomez, and Podolski all sat on the bench of Bayern Munich, (Podolski was just transferred to FCKoeln), proof of what I am saying that native stars take second place in highly paid clubs. Also, some "stars" play much harder for their clubs than for their countries since mainly that's where their salaries come from...
PKMKII
My micro-bio is empty
12:16 PM on 07/01/2010
The explanation I've heard is that because the euro league teams pick and choose the best from around the world, they spend less time and money trying to develop native talent. Then when national competition comes up, such as the World Cup, they have a team that's half superstars and half semi-amateurs.

As far as why Germany has seemingly avoided that problem, I don't know. Maybe it's something to do with the organization of the national team, maybe they just have a particularly good squad this year. But I do think it's telling that of the 4 European nations that have won the World Cup before, they're the only ones who've made it to the quarterfinals. Obviously, something is not right with the European powerhouses.
12:24 PM on 07/01/2010
On the other hand the last WC was dominated by European teams. A glance at the WC history suggests that it may be geographic. No European country has ever won the WC outside Europe, while only once has a WC held in Europe been won by a non-European team (Brazil in 1958). As the next WC is being held in S. America they may have to wait until at least 2018 for another win.