Sunday 24 May 2015

Xavi has tarnished his name forever by selling his soul to Qatar

Xavi has tarnished his name forever by selling his soul to Qatar

The Spaniard has made the baffling decision to become an ambassador for the much-maligned Qatar World Cup bid, besmirching his previously glorious image.


Xavi has tarnished his name forever by selling his soul to Qatar 
 


‘Mes Que Un Club’ it says across the seats at Barcelona’s magnificent Camp Nou stadium. For a long time, the Catalans’ claim to being ‘more than a club’ had a certain amount of justification. And if it was true, then Xavi Hernandez could just as easily have been labelled ‘Mes Que Un Jugador’.

The metronomic midfielder has been more than just a player for the greatest version of Barcelona ever to take to the field. While Lionel Messi may be the poster boy for a team which is close to securing a fourth Champions League title in nine years, it is the club captain who has been the true face of the Blaugrana.
Xavi has spent 24 years of his life on Barcelona’s books having first arrived at La Masia as an 11-year-old, and he has provided the heartbeat for everything that has been achieved over the past decade. There are few superlatives that haven’t been used to describe his effect on the club, and every single positive review has been entirely justified.

But now, after Barcelona’s image has been muddied by a string of questionable actions, Xavi has scored a major own goal of his own. The club has been subjected to a transfer ban for illegally signing youngsters from across the world, faces a court battle over tens of millions of missing euros related to the signing of Neymar, and courted controversy by breaking its holier-than-thou anti-sponsorship stance to promote the state of Qatar on its shirts.

Fifa and Qatar  An alliance which has troubled the watching world

And it is with regards to the Arabic nation that the midfielder has scrubbed away the sheen of infallibility around himself. On Thursday, he announced that he will spend the next three years playing for Qatari side Al Sadd, working with the country’s Aspire Academy, and acting as an ambassador for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

This is the same hugely-controversial World Cup which has already led to the deaths of countless migrant workers in the appalling conditions laid before them during the construction of stadia. The same World Cup which, per extensive evidence presented by a Sunday Times investigation, was won by Qatar on the back of numerous back-handers to Fifa Executive Committee members from Qatari nationals. The same Qatar in which a news crew was recently followed and jailed for two days for having the temerity to investigate the living standards of construction workers.

Fifa has responded to Qatar’s obvious unsuitability as a host nation by digging in its heels. It has moved the tournament to the winter. It has insisted there is no hope of a re-vote. It has ignored much of a detailed anti-corruption report in favour of a points-scoring summary targeting the governing body’s biggest critics while gliding over all concerns relating to Qatar. It has done everything short of sticking its middle finger up to the entire football world.


What is needed for a sane and balanced argument regarding the 2022 tournament and lasting change in the region is for world football’s biggest names to demand recourse. It needs the greatest personalities – the star players whose every word is digested, repeated and analysed by football fanatics across the globe – to stand up for those who fear for the plight of migrant workers, to demand detailed inquiries into the apparent corruption.
Instead we have Xavi, who has looked at the extensive evidence of Qatar’s and Fifa’s ills in one hand and a contract worth €30 million in the other, and chosen personal gain over moral obligation. The Spaniard has shown a scandalous lack of principals by jumping into bed with those at the heart of one of the greatest issues ever to grace football.



The next time Fifa or the local organising committee in Qatar is questioned regarding one of the many problems related to 2022, they can send out their glamorous ambassador. They will call on a man with 133 caps for his country and 26 winners' medals of various shapes and sizes to attempt to woo the hecklers. Wheeling out one of the greatest players in recent history will be a lot more convincing to the floating voters and those in denial than just another rebuttal from Sepp Blatter.

In making this move, Xavi is justifying everything that shouldn’t have happened in Qatar but already has. He may think he can have some sort of positive effect, but he is kidding himself if he does. He cannot stop the death of construction workers at a rate of one every two days. He cannot order further probes into just how Qatar was awarded the World Cup in the first place. All he can do is smile in front of posters promoting the event that should never be but which we are now stuck with.

Is €30m really worth the moral bankruptcy? As part of the greatest Barcelona side there has ever been, Xavi has gained untold riches. He doesn’t need one cent of the money. This season alone he has raked in a salary of more than €9m. At this point, one could move the decimal point in his bank account and he would hardly notice.

If it is about extending his career, there are thousands of more worthy clubs across the world that would jump at the chance to employ him. Why Qatar? Why promote this World Cup? It is a frankly baffling decision.
Xavi should have exited Barcelona in the most memorable of fashions, being hailed as one of the greatest players of his time and an icon of which the football world could be proud. Instead, he heads off on the kind of self-serving mission it is impossible to justify.

Just as the great name of Barcelona has become tarnished, so now is Xavi’s. His defection is a crying shame.

Source: Goal.com

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