Business Standard

Blacked out

- KANIKA DATTA

Race was a simmering issue in the European Championsh­ips this past month with some teams choosing to adopt the practice of taking the knee ahead of matches to send out a message of racial solidarity and others not. But the pitch is not the hotbed of racism in the European footballin­g industry. That’s changed over the past 25 years with footballer­s from West and North Africa, and the Caribbean to South Korea, Turkey and even Bangladesh increasing­ly taking to the field in the colours of storied clubs or national teams. You only have to look at the French, Belgian, English, Austria, Dutch Portuguese and German national teams at the European Championsh­ips to spot the trend.

Look past the pitch and players’ bench to the management teams — coaches, assistant coaches and so on — and it’s a different story. The near-uniform white ethnic compositio­n would have been Hitler’s dream. That is why scenes such as Belgium coach Roberto Martinez bending his ear to advice from his assistant coach, the insanely talented French striker Thierry Henry, or England manager Gareth Southgate deep in tactical talk with assistant coach and industriou­s former left back Chris Powell were striking. Both Henry and Powell are of West Indian descent.

This anomaly reflects the hidden racism in the institutio­ns of European football.

Many of these players of noneuropea­n ethnicity become stars, worshipped by fans of all colours around the world. Once their playing days are over, most of them fade from public memory even as their white team-mates re-emerge as managers, coaches, assistant coaches and expert commentato­rs. The TV studios have noticeably been doing their bit to bridge the ethnic gap in recent years so that the studio discussion­s and analyses are a lot more colourful in every way.

Less so club management­s. As football journalist Maher Mezahi pointed out, “Across the first divisions of England, Spain, Germany, France and Italy, there are no African managers.” He means managers of African nationalit­y. But even non-ethnic European managers are hard to find in these leagues. Sure, we have Real Madrid appoint their divinely gifted star, the Algerian origin Frenchman Zinedine Zidane as manager but that’s as much a function of his abilities as the fact that he has worked at downplayin­g his north African roots.

Talent, as we know, has no colour so the big-money European footballin­g leagues teams cannot afford to be picky about race when it comes to selecting the best players. In management, wins and trophies count but it is possible to gloss over the correlatio­n between management, a far less specific business, and race. There are no overall numbers for the continenta­l leagues but the English Premier League, the richest of them, offers a handy gauge of embedded racism: Black footballer­s account for 30 per cent of the players but only one per cent of club management­s, according to Christian Unguhe and Sine Agergard , writing in The Conversati­on.

This points to a clear policy of exclusion because the English Football Associatio­n has actually tried to tackle the problem since 2016. In that year, it introduced a rule adapted from the US National Football League that made it compulsory for teams to interview at least one ethnic-minority candidate for a first team managerial or coaching role. As a 2019 study of this rule from Greenwich University glumly observed, “the under-representa­tion problem is simply dire and not improving”.

At least part of the problem, Mehazi said, is that the Confederat­ion of African Football has made no attempt to ensure that its managerial certificat­es are recognised by UEFA, which governs European football. But this can be easily remedied by UEFA itself, if it wanted to. It was okay about bending citizenshi­p rules to accommodat­e African players in clubs and national teams but does not seem to display the same ardour when it comes to utilising their management abilities. The problem is a circular one: Football club boardrooms remain closed user groups of white businesspe­ople, and as the English FA’S failed effort shows, likely to remain that way.

Luckily, times are a’changin’. Both Henry and Powell came into national coaching roles after coaching French and English clubs. The French star Patrick Vieira, of Trinidadia­n origin, has just been appointed manager of English Premier League club Crystal Palace. Some lesser known players are making modest waves in the Netherland­s and France. And there’s the sterling example of former Nigeria goalkeeper Ndubuisi Egbo, who guided K F Tirana, the Albanian club for which he played, to a league title and UEFA Champions League qualificat­ion in 2020. Euro 2024 will show if European football has crossed the colour bar for real.

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