It’s been a rough seven days for Birmingham City defender, Martin Taylor, and Arsenal forward, Eduardo. The two men have taken a battering, one psychologically, the other physically. I sincerely hope that both men recover…they may not but they both know injuries are a part of football.
By now I’m sure you’ve all seen the horrific pictures of Eduardo’s left leg after Taylor mistimed his challenge at St. Andrews. Sights like that sicken the soul and stay imprinted on your mind for years to come.
Not surprisingly the response by players, fans and the media has run the full range. From sympathy to outright disgust both players have had their lives changed forever.
In the immediate aftermath, an emotional Arsenal boss, Arsene Wenger, called for Taylor to be banned for life saying, “people will say he is not the type of guy (Taylor) who does that. But it is like a guy who kills only once in his life. There is still a dead person.” Sensibly he later retracted that comment but a seed was planted amongst those less sophisticated. Death threats have since been made to the Birmingham defender while irate Croatian journalists tried to visit him at the clubs training facility .
In an interview with the English paper, The Independent, later in the week, Taylor gave his view of the events saying, “all I remember was him going deep into midfield, turning and taking a touch. I felt he showed me enough of the ball to win it. In my head I definitely thought I could get that ball. There was never any intention to hurt him. It is not in my mentality to be premeditated or hurt someone. I'm not even the type to be physical with an opponent to 'show him that I am there'. It was just a fact that I thought the ball was there to win and – as other people have said – Eduardo was too quick for me.”
This last statement ‘Eduardo was too quick from me’ seems to have fired up many people I’ve spoken to. Their argument being that if Taylor know that Eduardo was too quick, hacking him to pieces was the one sure fire way to slow him down.
Eduardo though has taken a more thoughtful view on his injury stating “I see this as a risk in professional football. Sometimes you go up, sometimes you go down.”
I can appreciate their comments having been on both sides of the coin they currently inhabit and this is my take.
Playing in the LA Municipal League eighteen years ago for boot money, my coach, told me to mark a very talented forward. The instructions were simple…‘don’t let him score’. In the opening minutes of the game what I thought was a 50/50 ball was up for grabs. My opponent, like Eduardo, was too quick for me though. Instead of playing the ball, I played his knee. The ‘pop’ was unmistakable. His ACL was torn. I’d gone in hard and aggressively - it looked from the sidelines like a terrible foul. It was a terrible ‘mistimed’ foul however there was absolutely no intent to injure this guy. I don’t know what happened to this kid – it was part of the game.
Ten years prior to this match I was a talented teenage midfield prodigy in England. I was playing youth football for a local club however I showed so much promise that the club I was affiliated with wanted to see me play with men. I was picked to play with the second eleven. I remember the day like it was yesterday.
It was cold, overcast and drizzling at Hackney Marshes otherwise known as the ‘Mecca’ of football as there are over 80 full size pitches. I was played through by a teammate and attempted to chip the goalkeeper with the outside of my left foot while running diagonally right. The keeper game through me hard and aggressively – he wasn’t going to let a kid beat him. I didn’t hear the snap but my captain later told me, matches three fields away stopped playing. He said it sounded like a pistol shot.
I looked down at my left leg and didn’t recognize it. Then the shock kicked in and I became a frightened, young boy in more pain than I’d ever known in my life. My fibula and tibia were broken. I never saw the goalkeeper who broke my leg again – it was part of the game.
I have no doubt in my mind that Birmingham manager, Alex McLeish, told his team to mix it up with Arsenal. ‘Don’t give them time on the ball’ he would’ve said. Wenger on the other hand would’ve have told his players to test the Birmingham defenders early ‘run at them and make them scared of you’.
Ultimately as bad as Taylor’s challenge was and as horrific as Eduardo’s injury is, it’s part of the game. The day you take the physical side of the game out of football is the day that football dies. You have to have the cloggers because they’re the guys that make the skill players look so great.
Boxer, Ricky Hatton eloquently stated recently that his sport “ain’t a tickling contest” after getting a beating from Floyd Mayweather – football ain’t a tickling contest either and hopefully it will never become one.
I like you Webster. I like your easy going take on things unlike the A.H., but you are wrong here.
So in American Football helmet to helmet hits are fine they are part of the game. And so are cut blocks b/c the blocker doesn't intend to cause injury.
Please wake up and understand that the talent in the Prem is the draw. The talent is what makes it so popular around the world. Everyone agrees that injuries are part of the game but Taylor launched his body off the ground, studs up, leg forcefully extended with his boot 1 foot in the air and presumably eyes closed. No slow replays will change that, nor will countless apologies and hospital visits. This challenge warranted 10 games end of story.
This is not about Arsenal or Eduardo but about a business protecting its assets.
My prediction: 5-10 years if your countrymen don't get their act together the Prem will be pushing the Bundesliga for the 4th best league. What fabulously skilled player will want to play in England with a bunch of unskilled hacks? Add to that several foreign investors not making the kind of money they expected and either pulling out, or b/c they can't recoup their purchase price, cutting costs.
I’d like to start by saying that I love your work with Fox Soccer and I particularly enjoy Fox Football Fone-in. I enjoy watching your broadcast shows on television and reading your blog. You are a pioneer for soccer in the United States and I applaud you. Keep up the good work.
Now that I have softened you up…in regards to your article, “Horrific injuries: just part of the game” I must say that you have lost the plot man! I am not going to pretend to educate you about the game. But I think that you might have reached your perspective regarding Martin Taylor’s tackle and other tackles like it without full consideration.
the complete letter to Nick is at http://blog.corvallissoccerblog.com /2008/03/my-open-letter-to-nick-web ster-of.html
Last edited by CorvallisSoccerBlog on March 4th at 1:53 PM.
Nick, I just heard you say something on fox football phone-in that was utterly absurd: "Arsenal are lucky to be top of the league". Please explain your reasoning behind this as its such a bold controversial statement which is completely unfounded. You cannot be top of the league after 28 games by being lucky. Get real. I'm an Arsenal fan and think they may not have the squad depth to quite hold on and win the league this year. But to say they have been lucky to be where they are is preposterous: they've had as many injuries as any other team and have had their best player and only match winner out injured since October - Robin Van Persie. They're top, and have been since August, bar about 2 weeks, because of thier immense hunger, hard work, team spirit, and class. Not "luck". Was Eduardo's injury lucky? If Wenger pulls this one off it will be one of the greatest achievements of any manager - to win the league with this style of football and young inexperienced squad. It wouuld be unfair to palm this achievement off as luck.
Now let me tell you why Arsenal fans are so touchy about this.
THIS IS THE CULMINATION OF THE SORT OF TACTIC AND TREATMENT ARSENAL
REGULARLY GET IN THE LEAGUE! Pure, simple, irrefutable.
Teams, usually of lower quality, have taken to kicking Arsenal and this sort of thing is going to happen.
WE DON'T GET PROTECTED. It is normal for Arsenal...and when we warn people someone
is really gonna get done...and they do....ALL YOU MUPPETS CAN SAY IS IT IS PART OF THE GAME?!
BOVINE SCATOLOGY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
NEXT- THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME!!!! JUST 2 SEASONS AGO ABU DIABY WAS
LUNGED AT BY ANOTHER UK #### LUNGING IN, STUDS UP, IN THE 3RD MINUTE OF STOPPAGE TIME
AT SUNDERLAND....WHO WERE DOWN 3-0!!!!!!!!!!!! HE BROKE DIABY'S LEG IN A SIMILAR WAY!
Arsenal....AGAIN...WERE CASTIGATED IN THE PRESS FOR THEIR "REACTION" TO THE "TACKLE".
IT IS A #### DISGRACE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!< br>
THAT IS 2 PLAYERS, SIMILAR TACKLES, 3 SEASONS!!!!!!!!!! Ah...but just coincidence right?????
REALLY? Think this happens in La Liga?
Arsenal have lost just once all year in the Premiership....and an incredible Lehman howler away from an extension of the lead they currently have...
ahh....but they are "lucky" according to Nick.
Lucky?! Van Persie, Kolo Toure, Rosicky, now Eduardo's horror...yet we're still top of the league and yet also somehow not deep enough?!
Those names could be the nucleus o####reat team and we have done without them and still are top of the league.
Lucky? With all the injuries to top shelf players, including one of the best forwards in Van Persie, and one of the best defenders in Toure, out, we can be called a thin squad while sitting atop the league. Ridiculous just doesn't quite cut it.
I just cannot see anything wrong with the tackle other than the fact it was mistimed, you have to give a player of his calibre the benefit of the doubt, the EPL is not filled with Sunday leaguers, these are all professionals players who get paid to play the game, now this guy gets death threats over a decision he had to make in .5 second???? seriously, tackling is part of football and if it wasnt taylor and eduardo it would have been someone else in this league or any other league that has professional athletes making last choices to go for the ball....
Only once in my 25 years of playing the game I still love, did I EVER intend to hurt another playing. After sidelining three of my players (yes three!) he decided to come after me. He's knee never recovered and he no longer played. After the game I thought his teammates would berate and villify me, instead they thanked me as they wouldn't have to worry about cutting the guy.
While the sport has to retain its edge, and physicality, there is NO room for goons. Injuries are part of the game, and timing is everything. I feel for both players as the recover both physical and emotional are going to be a long time in coming.
For those that disagree: The physical recovery is the easy part, the body heals. The mental ability to put aside the memory and continue to challenge and go into tackles from both sides of the ball will be harder to overcome.
Last edited by Crfrench2 on March 13th at 8:08 AM.
Who will break into the 'B4' and who will avoid the drop. So many questions will be answered over the next nine months because it's back - the greatest show on earth - The Barclays Premier League.