Thursday, July 13, 2006
Zidane "Flunked" Mind Game of
"Trash Talk"
The ANNOTICO Report
Below
is one of the "whiny" articles that sympathizes
with Zidane. What Planet do these people live on?
I have
Great respect for Zidane's Talent. You would have to
be retard Not to.
But as
his History shows, He is Not the Master of his Emotions, BUT the Victim.
Most
Professional, Collegiate, High School, Little League realize that to Excel at ANY Sport,
It is
as Much MIND as it is MUSCLE!!!
For
those who have played ANY Sport, "TRASH TALK" is a Part of getting
"into the Opponents Head"
And Use What Ever Subjects, and Mothers and Sisters Being
So Close to the Hearts of So Many Athletes is Naturally a REAL Effective
TOPIC.
If you
get the opponent "upset" or "distracted", they LOSE their
FOCUS, and Commit an Error or Foul!!!! GOTCHA!!!!
Strangely,
So Many people are NOT Aware of the Constant "Communication" that
Goes on between Players, on the Basket Ball court, but the one I love the Best
is the "dialogue" between Linemen in Football, because they are
poised in Close Proximity before "assuming the Position", and then
almost Nose to Nose during the count, giving one another
a REALLY GOOD chance to give each other a LOT of C*R*A*P* !! :)
Boxers are another Good Example of "Trash Talking".
On the
Other hand, when you are on the "Receiving End" of Monumentally
Scurrilous Slander, you have to Show enormous Self Discipline, and NOT be
EASILY thrown off your stride. Otherwise, you will do yourself, or your
Team incalculable Harm.
Zidane Met the Enemy, and the Bigger Enemy was Himself,
again.
Zidane's red
card was anything but unusual. He was sent off FOURTEEN TIMES in his career at
the club and international level.
At the 1998 World Cup, he STOMPED
on a Saudi Arabian opponent. Sitting out a two-match ban, he came back to score
two goals against
Five years ago with Juventus, he HEAD BUTTED an opponent in a Champions League
match against Hamburger SV after being tackled from behind.
The reaction to Sunday's
outburst was mixed in
"This morning, Zidane, what do we tell our children, and all those for
whom you were the living role model for all times?" French sports daily L'Equipe wrote.
"You can take the man out
of the rough neighborhood, but you can't take the rough neighborhood out of the
man," striker Thierry Henry said Sunday. (Zidane
grew up in the rough "Algerian" area of
WHY ZIDANE'S "DISGRACE EARNED MY RESPECT
New
Editor's Note:
As Zinedine Zidane finally
speaks about his head-butting of an Italian player that may have cost France
the World Cup, NAM commentator Mark Schurmann says it
was precisely that incident that made him and many other Americans begin to
root for France. Schurmann is a writer for New
"Would you let a punk talk to you like that?" a young
colleague asks me, in reference to the incident.
The World Cup finale was a one-sided affair for me for most of the game. I saw
it with! my oldest friend, an Italian-American, and
his family. I thought in a soccer match between French and Italian, I was
Italian by virtue of an old and strong friendship. But by game's end, it was
the red, white and blue of
Zinedane Zidane might have
disgraced himself in the eyes of seasoned soccer fans around the world, yet I
couldn't help but feel a surge of empathy for him and his team as I watched him
walk off the field after receiving a red card from the referee.
On the way home I called my brother and asked him what he thought of the game.
"I had been rooting for
As Americans, my brother and I are not veteran soccer fans. After the
In the end, however, it wasn't a team we identified with but an individual,
someone caught up in the heat of the moment and in his own raw emotions. I
don't know what was said between Zidane and Matterazzi, but there is a line that can be crossed and I
think the Italian must have crossed it.
Soon after talking to my brother, I received a call from a close friend. He,
too, had watched the game cheering for the Italians, but changed his mind as
soon Zidane received the red card.
"I wanted
I've lost jobs because of things I've done and said in the heat of the moment
and in response to verbal abuse. I'm never proud when I lose my cool, and I've
always regretted the loss of a job -- as all job seekers know, jobs can be
extremely difficult to come by. Yet in retrospect, I know that I protected
something in myself when I ignored the rules, ignored authority and gave as
good as I got, no matter the stakes.
The morning after a young co-worker was asked by one of our editors what he
thought of the game.
"I wanted
Is this an American reaction? How many other Americans out there feel the same
way? The sports media and chat rooms on the net are full of people weighing in
on Zidane's action, or reaction, depending on how one
sees it. Some support him, some don't and some are using the incident to spit
out the grossest of racial epithets.
Deep down, I think it is a quintessential American reaction to push back.
Discretion is the better part of valor, but memories last, and so does the
regret that can come when we turn our back on the people who disrespect us. It
is a sentiment that isn't always right, but one that we can relate to.
The
ANNOTICO Reports are Archived at:
Italia
Italia Mia: http://www.ItaliaMia.com
Annotico
Email: annotico@earthlink.net
http://news.ncmonline.com/news/
view_article.html?article_id
=69f2d88e1c9b34e917b5c59746146651