Global Times

FA boss admits mistakes in Ozil affair

Grindel ‘firmly' rejects player's racism charge

-

The chief of the German Football Associatio­n (DFB) on Thursday rejected accusation­s of racism by Mesut Ozil, but admitted he should have done more to protect the midfielder against discrimina­tory abuse.

In a four-page statement announcing his decision to quit playing soccer for Germany on Sunday, Ozil singled out DFB boss Reinhard Grindel with harsh words.

“In the eyes of Grindel and his supporters, I am German when we win, but I am an immigrant when we lose,” Ozil, who has Turkish roots, wrote Sunday in his lengthy farewell statement that unleashed a racism storm in Germany.

But Grindel rejected the charge four days on and has not yielded to calls for him to quit.

“I say this openly that the personal criticism has affected me,” he said. “I am even more sorry for my colleagues, the many people working on a voluntary basis and the employees in the DFB, to be branded in connection with racism.

“For the federation as well as for me personally, I firmly reject this.”

But Grindel acknowledg­ed that he should have stepped in firmly to end the abuse against Ozil over a controvers­ial photograph with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, which led some to question the player's loyalty to Germany.

“On hindsight, I should have clearly said what is obvious to me personally and to all of us as a federation: Any form of racist hostility is unbearable, unacceptab­le and cannot be tolerated,” he said. “That's valid in the case of Jerome Boateng, that's valid for Mesut Ozil, and also valid for all players who have a migration background.”

In 2016, far-right leader Alexander Gauland took aim at defender Boateng, who was born in Berlin to a German mother and a Ghanaian father.

“People find him good as a footballer, but they don't want to have a Boateng as a neighbor,” Gauland said.

Words from Grindel's past have come back to haunt him. As a backbenche­r in 2004 in the Bundestag, the lower house of the German parliament, he said that “multicultu­ralism is in truth a mess.”

In Ozil's scathing critique of Grindel, the Arsenal star said he tried to explain his “heritage, ancestry and the reasoning” behind the Erdogan photo to the DFB boss.

But Grindel was “more interested in speaking about his own political views and belittling my opinion,” said Ozil.

The playmaker has walked away from internatio­nal soccer after a career that included a World Cup win in 92 appearance­s, 23 goals and 40 assists for Germany.

Meanwhile, Grindel has outlined how the DFB can move forward in the wake of the Ozil saga and the World Cup debacle after Germany crashed out following the group stages in Russia.

“First, we need to take the ongoing debate on integratio­n as an opportunit­y to develop our work in this area and to ask where and how we can give new impetus,” Grindel wrote.

“Second, as a consequenc­e of the disappoint­ing World Cup, there must be a sound analysis, from which the right conclusion­s are drawn in order to play enthusiast­ic, successful football again.

“Third, we all have the common goal of winning the bid for the hosting of the European Championsh­ip 2024.

“For all these projects, we must work together in the coming weeks and months with great commitment.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China