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Tag: Association football

  • Twitch Streamer’s Soccer Team Pulls From $1M Tourney Over Racism Allegations

    Twitch Streamer’s Soccer Team Pulls From $1M Tourney Over Racism Allegations

    A soccer team owned by FIFA streamer Edwin Castro has withdrawn from an inaugural soccer tournament after a member of the team allegedly used a racial slur against an opposing player in a match.

    Dallas United was playing West Ham United F.C. in the inaugural The Soccer Tournament (or TST), a 7v7 tournament with a $1 million prize for the winning team taking place in Cary, North Carolina on June 1. The Dallas team, which is composed of “mostly amateur players from the Dallas area,” according to ESPN, was up 2-0 in the match against West Ham when the incident reportedly took place.

    Video clips on social media show West Ham players gathered around the match’s referee, with center back and former English Premier League player Anton Ferdinand at the center of it all. One clip appears to show Ferdinand telling the ref “I’m here to set a precedent now,” before the entire team decided to walk off the pitch. Though it’s unclear what was allegedly said, the chatter on social media and on sites like The Daily Mail suggest the n-word was hurled at Ferdinand by a Dallas United player.

    The official TST twitter account later shared an update, saying that it had “[conducted] an investigation into the final moments of the match between West Ham United and Dallas United” and “concluded that Dallas United violated TST’s code of conduct.”

    “We have been in dialogue with leadership from both clubs and we are all aligned that the best path forward is Dallas United withdrawing from competition,” the statement also reads.

    Though Castro’s Dallas squad initially shared a tweet stating that it had launched its own internal investigation into what took place during the match and was “cooperating fully” with TST’s investigation, a later tweet seemed to suggest the squad’s stance is that the “accusation” against them is false. “In light of the shadow cast by an opposing player’s accusation during tonight’s match, the Dallas United players unanimously decided to withdraw from the remainder of the competition,” read a tweet posted just a few hours after the initial one. Kotaku reached out to TST and Castro for comment.

    Castro has 3.5 million followers on his Twitch account and over 1.5 million on Twitter. He is best known for his FIFA streams. In a March 7 video posted to the Dallas United Twitter account, Castro likens owning the team to “[playing] FIFA in real life.”

    As reported by ABC 11, North Carolina’s branch of the news organization, Ferdinand spoke to reporters after West Ham’s final match on June 2, praising TST’s swift response to the allegations. “I need to go on record and say the topic of conversation that was laid bare yesterday is better than football. The way that TST dealt with it so swiftly, the no-nonsense action, a lot of people around the world, organizations around the world, can take note,” he said.

    West Ham and their opponents reportedly knelt in solidarity before Friday’s match, as Ferdinand’s team considered not continuing on in the tournament after the racially charged incident. “When somebody of white heritage hears somebody of my heritage speak of [such racism], it’s almost like it’s a broken record, we’ve heard it before. But when you hear it from somebody who looks like you, it makes you take note. So I think everybody needs to come together to fight as a collective. And if we do that, football can be the catalyst for change in society. But society is going to have to want to change with it,” Ferdinand said during the press conference.

    As reported by the BBC, Ferdinand isn’t the only former pro footballer competing in the tournament—Clint Dempsey, Landon Donovan, and Cesc Fabregas are a part of it, as well, and professional clubs Borussia Dortmund and Wrexham (owned by actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney) have teams representing them, as well.

    This is also, sadly, not the first time Ferdinand has faced racism as a Black man in football. According to the BBC, a former Chelsea player was fined and banned four matches back in 2011 for racially abusing him when he was a defender on Queens Park Rangers. Racism has no place in football, gaming, or otherwise.

    Alyssa Mercante

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  • Fans Dunk On FIFA Promising New Soccer ‘egame’

    Fans Dunk On FIFA Promising New Soccer ‘egame’

    This will be the first year since 1993 that there won’t be a new FIFA game after Electronic Arts abandoned the exclusive license once negotiations reportedly broke down over the renewal price. FIFA President Gianni Infantino swears the FIFA series will return, however, promising “FIFA 25, 26, 27 and so on – will always be the best egame.”

    The remarks came at a press conference following Infantino’s unopposed reelection to continue leading soccer’s embarrassing and allegation-ridden international governing body. “The new FIFA game – the FIFA 25, 26, 27 and so on – will always be the best egame for any girl or boy, we will have news on this very soon,” he said, according to Times reporter Martyn Ziegler. Fans immediately offered mock-ups of what this vaporware might look like:

    Today’s comments echoed a hollow commitment Infantino made after the original news of the split with EA first broke. “I can assure you that the only authentic, real game that has the FIFA name will be the best one available for gamers and football fans,” he said at the time, despite having nothing to do with the existing series which was solely developed by EA.

    Infantino has a long history of saying stuff that is nonsense, cringey, or offensive, and sometimes all three. Elsewhere during Thursday’s press conference, he reportedly said he was previously inspired to run for President of FIFA because of the Rwandan genocide, a comparison he apparently now disputes making.

    EA, which is now continuing its own soccer games under the new title EA Sports FC, apparently walked away from renewing its exclusivity deal with FIFA because the organization wanted $1 billion dollars, and to dilute the name by experimenting with junk like NFTs. The publisher’s hands aren’t clean either, having turned its sports franchises into live-service money makers that revolve around loot boxes while fans are left to deal with incomplete or buggy annual upgrades.

    Still, FIFA can’t even manage its own house. I have no idea how they expect to make a game from scratch, or who they could hope to farm it out to. Infantino oversaw a spectacular 2022 World Cup that took place amid incredibly grim human rights abuses. “Today I feel Qatari,” Infantino said before the start of the opening ceremony last November. “Today I feel Arabic. Today I feel African. Today I feel gay. Today I feel disabled. Today I feel [like] a migrant worker.”

    The Guardian previously reported that as many as 6,500 migrant workers died while helping Qatar prepare for the World Cup, and it is also illegal to be gay there. Of course, EA’s FIFA 23 was also only too happy to try to sportswash the event.

              

    Ethan Gach

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  • RIP John Motson, 1945-2023

    RIP John Motson, 1945-2023

    Photo: Laurence Griffiths (Getty Images)

    The world received some very sad news earlier today when we learned that legendary English football commentator John Motson, whose career spanned decades (and included very long stints in video games), had passed away at the age of 77.

    Even the most casual English-speaking football fan will know his work, regardless of whether they knew his name or not. Motson was one of the most endearing commentators in the sport, beginning his career on radio in the 1960s before moving to TV shortly after. He didn’t retire until 2018, having covered ten World Cups, ten European Championships and, incredibly, over 2500 games in total, on both TV and radio, domestically and internationally.

    As familiar as Motson’s work was to anyone catching a game on TV or the radio, he’ll be almost as familiar to a whole generation of gamers. Given his prominence in the actual commentary booth, Motson was chosen to be the first (English) voice of EA Sports’ FIFA series, beginning with its first foray into the world of CD-based games in FIFA 96. Which means he was also the main commentator for FIFA 98, which as we’ve covered here previously is the greatest sports video game ever made.

    John Motson Commentary | FIFA 98 | Goodbye To My Childhood

    Motson’s last FIFA game as the main commentator was FIFA 06, after a decade spent working alongside some of the greats of the business, like Ally McCoist. He did, however, make a nice little return over a decade after that, as part of FIFA 19’s singleplayer story campaign, which featured a flashback moment that only Motson’s iconic commentary could bring to life:

    FIFA 19 The Journey – Jim Hunter and the first 10 minutes

    Motson, who passed away “peacefully in his sleep”, is survived by his wife Anne and his son Frederick.

    John Motson, legendary football commentator, dies aged 77

    Luke Plunkett

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  • Streamer xQc Says He Put $500,000 On France To Win The World Cup, Womp

    Streamer xQc Says He Put $500,000 On France To Win The World Cup, Womp

    Lionel Messi

    Photo: Quality Sport Images (Getty Images)

    Like a lot of other people around the world, streamer xQc put a bet on the World Cup final earlier tonight. Unlike a lot of other people, however, he claims he threw down half a million dollars, then publicly bragged about it before kick-off.

    Here is the shot:

    (Note that xQc has been caught up in the controversy over Twitch’s decision to ban gambling on the site, brought on in large part down to partnerships like the one between xQc and Stake, the company involved in this bet)

    His bravado was understandable! I loved the Messi narrative as much as the next football fan, but seeing France put both my teams (Australia and England) to the sword without breaking a sweat—and while missing stars like Benzema, Pogba and Kante—made their march to a second successive World Cup win feel somewhat inevitable.

    But no! After one hell of a final, Argentina survived first a Kylian Mbappe-led comeback and then a nervy penalty shootout to emerge victorious, winning their third World Cup final, and first since 1986. Their side is full of great players, from wily veteran Angel Di Maria to beloved shithouser Emi Martinez, but the real star (and focus of the entire planet’s media) was of course on Lionel Messi. The best player in the world over the last 15 years, the one thing missing from his trophy cabinet—and for certain folks his place among the absolute all-time greats—had been a World Cup triumph, so it was wonderful to be able to see him close out what is surely his last campaign with a win.

    Anyway! I’m not here to give you a game recap, I’m just providing context as to why putting $500,000 down on France to win is called a bet, and not a sure thing.

    Here’s the chaser.

    At least he took it well! It was indeed a good game all around, and a fun watch. Especially for those of us who watched it for free. 

    Luke Plunkett

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  • ‘Wordle’ Is 2022’s Most-Googled Search Term

    ‘Wordle’ Is 2022’s Most-Googled Search Term

    “Wordle” was the most-searched term on Google in 2022, both in the United States and globally, beating out “Ukraine” and “Queen Elizabeth.” What do you think?

    “Just more proof that Americans aren’t watching enough porn.”

    Kate Rozenfeld, Package Resealer

    “I guess my fetish isn’t so niche after all.”

    Zidane Guddeman, Pen Repairman

    “I guess there just wasn’t much else going on this year.”

    Yusuf Faez, Sherpa Intern

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