Capello Makes A Case For Common Sense

Sport Editor
9th February 2012

Image Post #78203

Capello left because he was fed up. I am fed up. Why? Because there is an all-too-prevalent view amongst employers and the media that you are just one mistake away from getting kicked out.

As much as I dislike John Terry, he has not been found guilty. Because of that, the FA had no place superseding the wishes of Fabio: if Terry has lost the respect of the dressing room then his continued captaincy is a matter for Capello to decide on, not the bigwigs who rarely meet the team. Arguably Terry shouldn’t have been in the role anyway given the Wayne Bridge ‘affair’, but the fact was he was entrusted with the job and shouldn’t have been subject to such a knee-jerk reaction.

Capello said he felt ‘insulted’

The ‘resignation’ culture has spread throughout sport in the last year or two. Just look back to Lord Triesman, the former Chairman of both the FA and the unsuccessful 2018 World Cup bid. He accused Spain and Russia of plotting to bribe referees, but did it in private. The result? Resignation. In the end, FIFA saw it as enough of a possibility to warrant an investigation.

But it’s not just in the boardrooms of sporting institutions that common sense has apparently disappeared. In the last few weeks cabinet member Chris Huhne was subject to a vitriolic media storm in the wake of a driving charge that he vehemently denies. Again, resignation.

It’s not even confined to the UK. Remember Dominique Strauss-Kahn? Allegations flew in from various sources; allegations that never made it to court. I’m not saying he’s clean, but the furore whipped up around the case was so intense that he was effectively branded with his crimes. He lost his job as well.

Charges were dropped, but Strauss-Kahn still lost his job

As Capello now cuts all ties with English football, he is making a statement about the way things are. Capello made an error criticising the fact that the FA did not consult him, but everyone makes mistakes. Politics is one thing; we almost expect it to be like this. But football? Have some common sense.

13 Responses to “Capello Makes A Case For Common Sense”

  1. Dosanjh says:

    Shotgun coaching

  2. :-P says:

    "[...]E Capello la vittoria la fiuta
    Basta solo che la sorte ci aiuta[...]"

  3. birke says:

    shotgun second after i've finished dissertation

  4. Boromir says:

    One does not simply quite being England football manager…

  5. Diss Lexick says:

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  6. Poor comparison says:

    I take your point, but there's no comparison to DSK, Triesman or Huhne, who were all suspected of having made mistakes themselves, and Capello, who has resigned as a matter of principle over someone else's (the FA's) 'mistake'. The pedantic point that Capello made a mistake in not sacking Terry might complicate things, but I'd agree with you that Capello's well within his rights to have whoever he likes Captain England, regardless of whether their personal life makes them an insensitive / poor choice.

  7. Tom Tryon... says:

    …is the only decent columnist for the Tab

  8. Danny Kerrigan says:

    Read my blog at premfootballinsight.blogspot.com for more football analysis/opinion.
    Shameless I know.

  9. football fan says:

    Glad he's gone tbh, now we can bring in Redknapp who might be able to bring the team somewhere near its potential. At the very least the media will give him a chance.

  10. Personable Fellow says:

    Capello sacked Terry, Terry proceeded to undermine him in SA; he was then re-appointed, by Capello.Poor judgement by Capello. Poor judgement too by the FA in renewing Capello's contract prior to the last WC. History repeats itself.

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