Sectarian strife seeps to soccer field, too
Posted: Thursday, January 25, 2007 8:03 AM
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Baghdad, Iraq
By Richard Engel, Middle East bureau chief
Missing a goal in Iraq has always come at a cost.
Saddam Hussein's psychopathic son Uday, at one time the national soccer team's overall manager, would order players whipped and beaten if they lost games; some were even forced to train barefoot, kicking a cement ball.
So much had changed by the summer of 2004. The underdog team clawed its way into the Olympic quarterfinals and became the darling of Athens and the pride of Iraq.
Now, the team once again reflects the prevailing political environment: sectarian mistrust. When the Iraqi team lost to Saudi Arabia Wednesday, commentators and fans cried civil war.
"This is a conspiracy, there is a clear sectarian motive here," one disheartened sports commentator announced on local television.
Here's the theory:
Most of the Iraqi soccer players are Shiites.
Most of the managers are Sunnis.
Saudi Arabia is a Sunni state.
The conspiracy theory is that the Sunni managers threw the game to give their Sunni Saudi brothers the victory.
"They were playing the weaker players on purpose, maybe they were bribed. It was a sectarian issue," a soccer fan told me, seeing the match, like most everything else in this country now, colored by a religious lens.