Close Menu
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    • العربية (Arabic)
    • English
    • Français (French)
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    Middle East Transparent
    • Home
    • Categories
      1. Headlines
      2. Features
      3. Commentary
      4. Magazine
      Featured
      Headlines POLITICO

      Leo is America’s first pope. His worldview appears at odds with ‘America First.’

      Recent
      13 May 2025

      The Pope and the Vatican: Divine Right or Male Monopoly? Elderly Men Excluding Women and Youth in the Name of Heaven

      11 May 2025

      Leo is America’s first pope. His worldview appears at odds with ‘America First.’

      5 May 2025

      Most U.S. Catholics Say They Want the Church To Be ‘More Inclusive’

    • Contact us
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • العربية (Arabic)
    • English
    • Français (French)
    Middle East Transparent
    You are at:Home»Categories»International Sports»It’s Not a Fix: Leicester City’s Dream Season

    It’s Not a Fix: Leicester City’s Dream Season

    0
    By Declan Hill on 30 April 2016 International Sports

    Returning from three-weeks away to an inbox of e-mails from around the world asking, ‘is the whole thing is a fix?’.  Is Leicester City’s triumphant surge simply a case of bunged envelopes, compliant defenders and compromised games?  The notes have poured in from across the world. Readers from New Zealand to South Africa to England to the US, and many countries in between,  have asked this question.

    The answer is no.

    If there were any fixing in the Premier League (which I doubt) it came from key Chelsea players who under-performed so woefully for/against Jose Mourinho.  What we are watching with Leicester City’s triumph is the underdog story of the ages. A priceless moment that occasionally sport, and life, gives us to enjoy.

    I will be back next week with the usual spirit lowering stories on corruption, hypocrisy and the Kobe Bryant “fix”. In the meantime, lets enjoy the good side of sport.  Here is an article published in theMinnesota Post from my Oxford and Karate chum James Densley. An expert in street gangs and a black-belt Densley is no push-over. However, he loves his sport, he is from Leicester and now he is jumping up and down with joy:

    **

    To Minnesota sports fans, from an Englishman: Don’t stop believing

    It’s hard out here for Minnesota sports fans. The Vikings fluffed their lines. Again. The Twins are bottom of the AL Central. Again. The Wild failed to cross the line. Again. The Timberwolves are a team full of promise but no playoffs. Again. It’s enough to make you swear off sports for a while. Give up on their transformative, transcendent power. But don’t touch that dial. Something is happening in the world of sports right now that is so unexpected, so miraculous, that it might just warm a frozen Minnesota heart. It might just make you believe again. In fairy tales. In rainbows and unicorns.

    Leicester City will win the Premier League.

    Most of you have no idea what this means. That’s OK. I’m as surprised to be writing this as you are to be reading it. As a criminologist, I usually only comment when bad things happen. Really bad things. Things like mass shootings. Gang violence. Acts of terrorism. Furthermore, I’m an Arsenal supporter, so technically this is an act of treason.

    I should probably explain this is a story about soccer. But I know Americans don’t really care for soccer so instead I’ll just call it a David and Goliath story. Rocky, with cleats. “The Miracle on Ice” meets the 1991 Minnesota Twins. It’s also a story about a little place called Leicester.

    It’s pronounced ‘Lester’

    Leicester is a city about the size of St. Paul (population 350,000) that lies 100 miles north of London, in the exact center of England. It’s pronounced “Lester,” not “lie-ses-ter” or “lie-kes-ter,” as my Minnesotan wife said. I was born there. And raised there. My family still lives there. And until this week it was famous for one thing: the discovery of a medieval king underneath a parking lot. Come Sunday, however, Leicester will be famous for one more thing: the greatest sporting achievement ever.

    Leicester’s soccer team is 132 years old and its greatest success to date is finishing second place in the top division, in 1929. In the domestic cup, Leicester City hold the record for the most defeats in the final without having won the competition. As recently as 2009, the team were in the third tier of English football.

    Leicester started this year in the top tier but as 5,000-1 outsiders for the title, having narrowly escaped relegation last season (literally demotion to another league for being so bad). In preseason, the manager who saved them from relegation was forced to resign after his son, a player, was caught racially abusing a Thai brothel worker. Career suicide when your club is owned by the Bangkok-based King Power International.

    Expectations sank lower when the club unveiled its new manager, Claudio Ranieri, 68, a man who had just been sacked because his Greece national team had lost at home to the Faroe Islands. That’s the soccer equivalent of missing a 27-yard field goal in dying seconds of a playoff game. Sorry, Vikings fans.

    Theatre of Dreams

    So, what happened next? Ranieri set the team a modest target of 40 points over 38 games, just enough to keep them afloat another year. Leicester unexpectedly hit that target after only 20 games. In doing so, one player — who only four years ago was playing non-league football and taking extra shifts in a factory to make ends meet — became the first to score in 11 consecutive Premier League matches. The critics were dumbfounded. To celebrate, Ranieri threw a pizza party. For professional athletes.

    In a league where big clubs trade marquee players like stocks and foreign investors routinely buy success — it’s fantasy football for billionaires — what happened next was ripped straight out of Hollywood. Leicester’s average Joes continued to defy the odds — and the math (Leicester’s squad cost about 10 times less than their peers to assemble) — winning game after game after game after game by playing with “one heart” and refusing to quit while ahead or behind.

    Which brings us to Sunday. Leicester will travel to Manchester United, needing just one more victory to clinch a most unlikely championship. It’s the perfect setup. With 20 league titles, Manchester United are the most successful club in English history. They are also the “most valuable football brand.” The ship that launched the faces of David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo. The monolith that plays in “The Theatre of Dreams.” Only this time it is Leicester, not United, proving dreams can come true.

    So there you have it Minnesota, a buoy of optimism in a sea of bad news. For those of you still not sold on the merits of soccer or of building an MLS franchise in St. Paul, please watch on Sunday. Last year, Leicester beat Manchester United 5-3 (or 35-15 if you subscribe to sports that award 7 points for every goal scored), hardly “low scoring,” the typical complaint of soccer skeptics.

    But more important, watch Leicester, in Ranieri’s words, “fight for each other on the pitch.” Watch them play, not for fame and fortune (although that will come), but for the love of their new manager, and the beautiful game. And watch a fan base drawn from one of the most ethnically diverse cities in England, united as one. Fans who can literally cause an earthquake with their goal celebrations.

    Minnesota’s failing sports franchises could learn a thing or two from the Leicester story. Let’s hope it doesn’t take 132 years to sink in. At the very least, Leicester give us a reason to be happy when happiness can seem so far away.

    James Densley, who holds a doctorate from the University of Oxford, is an assistant professor in the School of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice at Metropolitan State University. He is also a huge sports fan.

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp Copy Link
    Previous ArticleThe Divide Over Islam and National Laws in the Muslim World
    Next Article Women: A Benchmark of Saudi and Iranian Reform
    Subscribe
    Notify of
    guest

    guest

    0 Comments
    Newest
    Oldest Most Voted
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    RSS Recent post in french
    • Les premiers secrets de l’élection de Léon XIV 13 May 2025 Jean-Marie Guénois
    • Al-Charaa en visite à Paris : « Les Européens se laissent berner parce qu’ils prennent leurs rêves pour des réalités » 8 May 2025 Hughes Maillot
    • Au Yémen, la surprenante résilience des rebelles houthistes 6 May 2025 Georges Malbrunot
    • Walid Joumblatt, chef politique des Druzes du Liban : « Le pire des scénarios serait que les Druzes syriens soient poussés dans une enclave » 5 May 2025 Laure Stephan
    • Robert Ageneau, théologien : « Il est urgent de réformer, voire d’abolir, la papauté » 4 May 2025 Le Monde
    RSS Recent post in arabic
    • البابا والفاتيكان، حق إلهي أم احتكار ذكوري؟ رجال كهول يُقصون النساء والشباب باسم السماء 13 May 2025 رزكار عقراوي
    • ترمب… حقاً زيارة غير عادية 13 May 2025 عبد الرحمن الراشد
    • الأسرار “الأولى” لانتخاب البابا ليو الرابع عشر 12 May 2025 بيار عقل
    • موضوع الزَكاة والخُمس 12 May 2025 أحمد الصرّاف
    • زيارة ترامب.. جائزة “العبور” إلى طهران 12 May 2025 عمر حرقوص
    26 February 2011

    Metransparent Preliminary Black List of Qaddafi’s Financial Aides Outside Libya

    6 December 2008

    Interview with Prof Hafiz Mohammad Saeed

    7 July 2009

    The messy state of the Hindu temples in Pakistan

    27 July 2009

    Sayed Mahmoud El Qemany Apeal to the World Conscience

    8 March 2022

    Russian Orthodox priests call for immediate end to war in Ukraine

    Recent Comments
    • Edward Ziadeh on As Church awaits a Conclave, President Trump puts up picture of himself as next Pope
    • Victoria Perea on As Church awaits a Conclave, President Trump puts up picture of himself as next Pope
    • Victoria Perea on As Church awaits a Conclave, President Trump puts up picture of himself as next Pope
    • M sam on Kuwait: The Gulf state purging tens of thousands of its citizens
    • Aadam Peer on How important is the Dome of the Rock in Islam?
    Donate
    Donate
    © 2025 Middle East Transparent

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    wpDiscuz
    loader

    Inscrivez-vous à la newsletter

    En vous inscrivant, vous acceptez nos conditions et notre politique de confidentialité.

    loader

    Subscribe to updates

    By signing up, you agree to our terms privacy policy agreement.

    loader

    اشترك في التحديثات

    بالتسجيل، فإنك توافق على شروطنا واتفاقية سياسة الخصوصية الخاصة بنا.