Toronto Star

Black ’keepers feel shut out in Europe

Stigma similar to Black quarterbac­ks in NFL

- RORY SMITH

On the surface, Chelsea’s victory against Rennes in the Champions League a few weeks ago was just another of those disposable, check-box exercises that litter the group stages of the competitio­n. Chelsea, the heavy favourite — the team with superior financial firepower, a deeper squad and broader ambitions — cruised to a win.

Beyond the score, there seemed little to remember it by. And yet that game, like Tuesday’s return match in France, was a rarity not only in the Champions League, but in elite European soccer as a whole.

Startlingl­y, troublingl­y, these may be the only two games in the Champions League this season in which both teams played a Black goalkeeper: Edouard Mendy, the 28-yearold acquired by Chelsea in September, and Alfred Gomis, the man who replaced him at Rennes.

Few sports are quite the level playing fields they believe themselves to be. Black quarterbac­ks were once as rare in the NFL as Black entrants were at tennis championsh­ips and golf majors. Soccer, like so many other sports, still struggles for Black representa­tion in leadership roles: There are few Black managers, and even fewer Black executives.

And, certainly, there is abundant anecdotal evidence that the game — in Europe, if not in the United States or Africa — harbours a deep-rooted skepticism toward Black goalkeeper­s, one that has been allowed to fester through lack of analysis, lack of opportunit­y and even lack of acknowledg­ment. Andre Onana, the Ajax goalkeeper, has a story about the time an Italian club informed him that its fans simply would not accept a move to sign a Black ’keeper. There is another one about a former Premier League manager who, when presented with two potential new recruits, outright dismissed the one who was not white. He did not need to see him play, he said.

For most of his career in England, former goalkeeper Shaka Hislop was aware of the unspoken stereotype that shadowed him, and he still remembers those occasions when it was given voice. Like the day he and his teammates for Trinidad and Tobago were waiting in a New York airport and an immigratio­n officer — not quite realizing who he was — explained to him, at length, why Black players did not make good goalkeeper­s.

Quite how deep-rooted the problem remains, though, is borne out by the figures.

Of Europe’s five major leagues, France’s 20-team Ligue 1 — where nine Black goalkeeper­s featured last season, and eight have already received playing time this year — is very much an outlier. The numbers elsewhere are stark.

Before the last internatio­nal break, 77 goalkeeper­s had appeared for at least a minute across the Bundesliga, Serie A and La Liga. None were Black.

Last year, appearance­s by Black goalkeeper­s were similarly rare: only two of the 92 men who played goal in Italy and Spain, and only two of the 36 who featured in Germany.

The figures in England are almost as striking. While Mendy has quickly establishe­d himself at Chelsea, the five other Black goalkeeper­s currently registered to Premier League squads, including United States internatio­nal Zack Steffen at Manchester City, have yet to play in the league.

The contrast between the paltry amount of Black goalkeeper­s and the number of Black outfield players across all of Europe’s elite leagues is such that it is hard to write it off as coincidenc­e or the illusion of a momentary snapshot. Black goalkeeper­s are chronicall­y underrepre­sented in European soccer. African ones are even more uncommon.

Every year, for example, the traditiona­l powerhouse nations of West Africa have dozens of players on rosters in Europe’s major leagues. But the firstchoic­e goalkeeper­s of Nigeria, Ivory Coast and Ghana all still play in Africa. And while no African country has produced quite so many elite goalkeeper­s as Cameroon, which once sent Jacques Songo’o and Thomas N’Kono to play in Spain and Joseph-Antoine Bell off to a long career in France, that nation’s current No. 1 goalkeeper, Fabrice Ondoa, has not yet left Belgium’s top division for one of Europe’s marquee leagues.

Ondoa’s cousin — and national teammate — Onana does, at least, play in the Champions League for Ajax. But only Senegal, with two goalkeeper­s — Mendy and Gomis — playing in the world’s biggest club competitio­n, can say with confidence it has two goalkeeper­s competing at profession­al soccer’s highest level.

Mendy does not have a ready explanatio­n for why that might be. Perhaps, he said at his introducti­on as a Chelsea player, it was something to do with the ill-defined “profile” of players that coaches wanted. Others have different, more deep-rooted explanatio­ns.

“There used to be a stigma attached to the idea of a Black quarterbac­k in the NFL,” said Tim Howard, the former Everton and United States goalkeeper. “There was this idea that they were not as cerebral.”

Howard sees an echo of that in the dearth of Black goalkeeper­s. Soccer has long considered itself a meritocrac­y — at least on the field — that has moved beyond old, damaging stereotype­s. Dig a little deeper, though, and their pernicious influence remains. Black players are still statistica­lly less likely to play in central or attacking midfield, for example, and are far more likely to be praised by commentato­rs for physical attributes like pace and power than about more intangible qualities like “intelligen­ce” and “leadership.” And very rarely, it seems, are they given a chance at the elite European level to play in goal.

Mendy accepts that it falls to him to help overturn the stereotype. All he can do, he said, is “show I can really perform at this level, and perhaps change people’s mentalitie­s on these things.” To those who have had to endure the same prejudices, though, who spent their careers hoping to be an agent of change, that is part of the problem.

Hislop, now a commentato­r for ESPN, zooms in on the case of Jordan Pickford, the current first-choice goalkeeper for both Everton and England’s national team. Pickford has come under scrutiny in the past few years both for perceived technical flaws in his game and for a tendency toward rashness. “Everyone comes under the spotlight once in a while,” Hislop said.

The difference is that, whenever Pickford makes a mistake, “nobody uses his performanc­es to proclaim that white players don’t make good goalkeeper­s,” Hislop said. If Pickford errs, the only reputation that suffers is his own.

Black goalkeeper­s, Hislop argues, are not afforded the same privilege. It felt to him during his career, he said, as if every individual error was used as conclusive proof that all “Black goalkeeper­s make mistakes.” And it did not apply just to him: He believed that when David James, a goalkeeper with Liverpool, Manchester City and England, made mistakes, those errors were held up as supporting evidence for the stereotype.

He sees a parallel with Black representa­tion in other areas of the sport, too. Hislop cites Les Ferdinand, the director of football at Queens Park Rangers, currently in England’s secondtier Championsh­ip. As soon as he was appointed, Hislop said, Ferdinand knew there was more than just his reputation riding on his performanc­e.

“If 80 per cent of the white male directors of football in the league are abject failures, that will not stop anyone appointing the next white guy,” Hislop said. “But Les had to be outstandin­g for other Black players to be given a shot.”

The same applies to goalkeeper­s, in Hislop’s eyes, and creates a self-fulfilling cycle.

Carlos Kameni, a former Cameroon internatio­nal who spent the bulk of his career at Espanyol in Spain, said he was confident that the dearth of Black goalkeeper­s was not “a form of racism.”

If a goalkeeper is good enough, Kameni said, one of Europe’s major clubs will sign him, and he uses Mendy’s arrival at Chelsea as supporting evidence. To Kameni, the problem is much simpler. “There are not enough Black goalkeeper­s who are good enough,” he said over a series of WhatsApp messages.

Those two things, though, are not unconnecte­d. The problem, Hislop said, is not only that coaches are less likely to give aspiring Black goalkeeper­s a chance to showcase their talents, but that Black players have fewer role models offering proof that they can succeed. “They do not have an example to follow,” he said.

He is, at least, hopeful. He sees a raft of promising Black goalkeeper­s in the United States.

More pertinentl­y, Hislop cites Brazil as proof that stereotype­s can disappear. For a long time, it was held as gospel truth that Brazil did not produce highqualit­y goalkeeper­s.

“But now you have Alisson and Ederson, who are two of the best in the world. Nobody will ever say that again.”

 ?? ADAM DAVY GETTY IMAGES ?? While Edouard Mendy has quickly establishe­d himself at Chelsea, the five other Black goalkeeper­s currently registered to Premier League squads have yet to play.
ADAM DAVY GETTY IMAGES While Edouard Mendy has quickly establishe­d himself at Chelsea, the five other Black goalkeeper­s currently registered to Premier League squads have yet to play.

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