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Team Europe ready to take sportswashing's poster boy on board for Ryder Cup

Team Europe ready to take sportswashing's poster boy on board for Ryder Cup

Irish Times4 hours ago
The elaborate dance to manoeuvre
Jon Rahm
on to Europe's team for the
Ryder Cup
has been going on for a long time, and it will end with all parties locked in an expedient embrace. It doesn't matter what he did, or what he said, or what he stands for, or what it might mean once the Ryder Cup is over: Team Europe will not countenance arriving in Bethpage next month without the poster boy for the biggest sportswashing project in history.
For the match in Rome, two years ago, it was much easier for Team Europe to take what might have seemed like a principled stance. Nobody on the European side cared about the former Ryder Cup players who had defected to
LIV Golf
and, in the process, disqualified themselves from selection. Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia,
Graeme McDowell
and others were all beaten dockets at that level of the game.
But once Rahm jumped the fence at the end of 2023, followed a couple of months later by Tyrrell Hatton, there was a back-channel stampede to keep the door open.
The problem for Team Europe was that Rahm was stubborn and insanely rich and answering to a different paymaster. The
DP World Tour
had rules around eligibility that they weren't prepared to compromise, and Rahm couldn't care less about their rules.
READ MORE
In September of last year, though, Rahm agreed to join the dance that would get him to Bethpage; not to conform or abide by the rules but to move to the music. Nobody can be considered for the Ryder Cup on the European side unless they are a member of the DP World Tour. The criterion for membership is to participate in a minimum of four DP World Tour events, outside of the Majors.
[
DP World Tour suspensions for Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton cast further doubt on Ryder Cup roles
Opens in new window
]
Rahm's original position was obstinance. The noises from his camp were that he had no plans to turn up at four events. The overriding issue was the fines and suspensions. Some of the early defectors to LIV wanted the option of playing on the DP World Tour during the frequent breaks in LIV's schedule, while also being free to play a LIV event – with impunity – in the case of a scheduling clash.
ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 26: Jon Rahm of Legion XIII tees off on the 12th hole during LIV Adelaide at The Grange Golf Club on April 26, 2024 in Adelaide, Australia. (Photo by)
This dispute ended up in the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which ruled in favour of the DP World Tour. Any player who wanted to maintain their membership of the DP World Tour would need permission to play in clashing events on the LIV schedule. Failure to secure that permission would lead to fines and suspensions.
Lodging an appeal, though, would pause the process. In August of last year, Hatton consented to play the game. Rahm made them sweat until just before entries closed for the Spanish Open. He also made it clear that he wasn't backing down. In a letter sent by his agent to Guy Kinnings, the chief executive of the DP World Tour, Rahm said he had 'no intention of paying any fines'.
Once Rahm and Hatton had entered the system, though, the appeals process was never going to be expedited. Nearly a year later, no hearing has been arranged, and none is planned before the Ryder Cup.
'The lawyers involved will dictate the legal process as to when it gets done,' said Kinnings last September. Rahm and Hatton have no chance of winning their appeals and that outcome would have excluded them from the Ryder Cup. Speed was not in anyone's interests.
It is now more than two years since the
PGA Tour
and LIV Golf announced a 'framework' arrangement, to restore some kind of unity to a splintered game. There is no sign of a resolution. LIV Golf events are still not included in the world rankings system, even though more LIV players have been filtering back into the Majors: 12 at the Masters this year, 15 at the US PGA, 14 at the US Open and 19 at The Open at Royal Portrush, the highest number since LIV started.
The presence of LIV players at the Majors is the kind of normalisation that sportswashing sets out to achieve. The general outrage about Saudi Arabia holding the game to ransom has dissipated. On the sports pages at least, the furious stories about human rights abuses in Saudi Arabia, its treatment of women, the LGBT+ community and migrant workers, have disappeared. At Newcastle United press conferences, Eddie Howe is no longer asked questions about Saudi Arabia.
Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe at a pre-match press conference in Seoul, South Korea, on August 2nd last ahead of a friendly between Newcastle and Tottenham Hotspur. Photograph: Jung Yeon-je/AFP/Getty
Sportswashing is a long game. Saudi Arabia has the resources to wear out everyone's anger. In the space of three days last week, 17 people were executed in Saudi Arabia, most of them for drugs offences. That takes the total this year to 239. At that rate they are on course to outstrip last year's total of 338, which was the highest tally since the early 1990s, according to AFP and France 24.
Rahm, Hatton and all the others made an open-eyed deal with a sportswashing project designed, in some way, to launder the reputation of that regime.
According to the Telegraph, LIV have been paying the fines of players on their tour who still want to compete in DP World Tour events. So far, that has amounted to more than €17 million. If, as expected, Rahm, Hatton and Adrian Meronk are unsuccessful in their appeals, their fines are estimated to reach €10 million.
As McDowell pointed out at The Open, however, LIV have told their players that they will stop paying fines on December 31st. Does that mean Rahm and Hatton will stump up in the future to protect their DP World Tour membership and their eligibility for the Ryder Cup?
Rahm says he won't pay a fine. He also said he wouldn't join LIV.
'The system is being twisted to the point where they can figure out how to get them on the team,' said McDowell. 'There's a certain element of hypocrisy about it.'
The PGA Tour, and by extension the DP World Tour, will eventually arrive at a deal with LIV that will be unpalatable to everyone who regards Saudi Arabia's involvement in sport as repulsive. In the meantime, the Ryder Cup, at least on the European side, had an opportunity to rise above the venality of golf's grubby power game and LIV's black heart.
That opportunity has been wilfully spurned. To win the Ryder Cup with Rahm and Hatton on the team would be worthless.
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Team Europe ready to take sportswashing's poster boy on board for Ryder Cup
Team Europe ready to take sportswashing's poster boy on board for Ryder Cup

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Team Europe ready to take sportswashing's poster boy on board for Ryder Cup

The elaborate dance to manoeuvre Jon Rahm on to Europe's team for the Ryder Cup has been going on for a long time, and it will end with all parties locked in an expedient embrace. It doesn't matter what he did, or what he said, or what he stands for, or what it might mean once the Ryder Cup is over: Team Europe will not countenance arriving in Bethpage next month without the poster boy for the biggest sportswashing project in history. For the match in Rome, two years ago, it was much easier for Team Europe to take what might have seemed like a principled stance. Nobody on the European side cared about the former Ryder Cup players who had defected to LIV Golf and, in the process, disqualified themselves from selection. Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia, Graeme McDowell and others were all beaten dockets at that level of the game. But once Rahm jumped the fence at the end of 2023, followed a couple of months later by Tyrrell Hatton, there was a back-channel stampede to keep the door open. The problem for Team Europe was that Rahm was stubborn and insanely rich and answering to a different paymaster. The DP World Tour had rules around eligibility that they weren't prepared to compromise, and Rahm couldn't care less about their rules. READ MORE In September of last year, though, Rahm agreed to join the dance that would get him to Bethpage; not to conform or abide by the rules but to move to the music. Nobody can be considered for the Ryder Cup on the European side unless they are a member of the DP World Tour. The criterion for membership is to participate in a minimum of four DP World Tour events, outside of the Majors. [ DP World Tour suspensions for Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton cast further doubt on Ryder Cup roles Opens in new window ] Rahm's original position was obstinance. The noises from his camp were that he had no plans to turn up at four events. The overriding issue was the fines and suspensions. Some of the early defectors to LIV wanted the option of playing on the DP World Tour during the frequent breaks in LIV's schedule, while also being free to play a LIV event – with impunity – in the case of a scheduling clash. ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 26: Jon Rahm of Legion XIII tees off on the 12th hole during LIV Adelaide at The Grange Golf Club on April 26, 2024 in Adelaide, Australia. (Photo by) This dispute ended up in the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which ruled in favour of the DP World Tour. Any player who wanted to maintain their membership of the DP World Tour would need permission to play in clashing events on the LIV schedule. Failure to secure that permission would lead to fines and suspensions. Lodging an appeal, though, would pause the process. In August of last year, Hatton consented to play the game. Rahm made them sweat until just before entries closed for the Spanish Open. He also made it clear that he wasn't backing down. In a letter sent by his agent to Guy Kinnings, the chief executive of the DP World Tour, Rahm said he had 'no intention of paying any fines'. Once Rahm and Hatton had entered the system, though, the appeals process was never going to be expedited. Nearly a year later, no hearing has been arranged, and none is planned before the Ryder Cup. 'The lawyers involved will dictate the legal process as to when it gets done,' said Kinnings last September. Rahm and Hatton have no chance of winning their appeals and that outcome would have excluded them from the Ryder Cup. Speed was not in anyone's interests. It is now more than two years since the PGA Tour and LIV Golf announced a 'framework' arrangement, to restore some kind of unity to a splintered game. There is no sign of a resolution. LIV Golf events are still not included in the world rankings system, even though more LIV players have been filtering back into the Majors: 12 at the Masters this year, 15 at the US PGA, 14 at the US Open and 19 at The Open at Royal Portrush, the highest number since LIV started. The presence of LIV players at the Majors is the kind of normalisation that sportswashing sets out to achieve. The general outrage about Saudi Arabia holding the game to ransom has dissipated. On the sports pages at least, the furious stories about human rights abuses in Saudi Arabia, its treatment of women, the LGBT+ community and migrant workers, have disappeared. At Newcastle United press conferences, Eddie Howe is no longer asked questions about Saudi Arabia. Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe at a pre-match press conference in Seoul, South Korea, on August 2nd last ahead of a friendly between Newcastle and Tottenham Hotspur. Photograph: Jung Yeon-je/AFP/Getty Sportswashing is a long game. Saudi Arabia has the resources to wear out everyone's anger. In the space of three days last week, 17 people were executed in Saudi Arabia, most of them for drugs offences. That takes the total this year to 239. At that rate they are on course to outstrip last year's total of 338, which was the highest tally since the early 1990s, according to AFP and France 24. Rahm, Hatton and all the others made an open-eyed deal with a sportswashing project designed, in some way, to launder the reputation of that regime. According to the Telegraph, LIV have been paying the fines of players on their tour who still want to compete in DP World Tour events. So far, that has amounted to more than €17 million. If, as expected, Rahm, Hatton and Adrian Meronk are unsuccessful in their appeals, their fines are estimated to reach €10 million. As McDowell pointed out at The Open, however, LIV have told their players that they will stop paying fines on December 31st. Does that mean Rahm and Hatton will stump up in the future to protect their DP World Tour membership and their eligibility for the Ryder Cup? Rahm says he won't pay a fine. He also said he wouldn't join LIV. 'The system is being twisted to the point where they can figure out how to get them on the team,' said McDowell. 'There's a certain element of hypocrisy about it.' The PGA Tour, and by extension the DP World Tour, will eventually arrive at a deal with LIV that will be unpalatable to everyone who regards Saudi Arabia's involvement in sport as repulsive. In the meantime, the Ryder Cup, at least on the European side, had an opportunity to rise above the venality of golf's grubby power game and LIV's black heart. That opportunity has been wilfully spurned. To win the Ryder Cup with Rahm and Hatton on the team would be worthless.

Skerries football club faces closure over insurance dispute
Skerries football club faces closure over insurance dispute

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Skerries football club faces closure over insurance dispute

A football club in Skerries is facing an uncertain future due to an ongoing dispute with its insurance provider over what has caused structural defects in its clubhouse. The club claims the deterioration is a result of subsidence and drainage issues which are covered under its policy while the insurer has said the damage has been caused as a result of mica being used in some of the blockwork and that is not covered. Karl Redmond is one of the volunteers who sits on the Skerries Town FC's management committee and he said that the club's 'long history in the local community' is under threat as a result of the stand-off. The club has around 750 members including senior men and women's teams as well as juvenile teams for boys and girls. READ MORE Mr Redmond described it as 'a vibrant club' but said the expansion of the club was 'not without its challenges [and] every new season we are trying to manage pitch availability for all our teams and meet the costs associated with running a sports club'. The main pitch and clubhouse are in the centre of the town and they cater for the majority of the club's activities. 'All possible revenue streams that include summer camps, kids parties, fundraising activities and our senior ladies and men's home games are played on our main pitch but unfortunately around two years ago we noted cracking to the side of the clubhouse. We immediately notified our Aviva our insurer of the structural damage and sought their advice.' [ How to save money on your home insurance Opens in new window ] Club members Maia Shiels, Hannah Dolan, Denis Hogan, Stephen Sherwin, Karl Redmond, Oscar Keating, Amelia Hogan, Liam Remond, Ethan O'Flaherty and Bob McKenna. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw/ The Irish Times The club was told to commission 'various expert reports in order for Aviva to consider our claim' which it did at 'great expense'. It collected several expert reports from two engineers, soil experts and a drainage expert which were submitted as part of the claim. He said the evidence 'confirmed the damage to the clubhouse was as a result of subsidence, effectively due to the deterioration in the drainage system and this was creating additional pressure to the structure of the clubhouse'. He said that Aviva 'eventually commissioned their own expert report which involved one engineer's report and concluded that certain blocks in the clubhouse are defective and contain mica'. [ What it's like to live in Skerries: 'It's not perfect but we know we're lucky' Opens in new window ] The club has around 750 members including senior men and women's teams as well as juvenile teams. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw/ The Irish Times He said the experts the club had commissioned 'dispute this finding' and added that Aviva 'have failed to engage with us. This has resulted in devastating consequences to the club financially and operationally'. He said it was difficult for the club to make plans for any future initiatives'. Mr Redmond, who described the club's financial situation as 'dire', said it was 'extraordinary that having always met our obligations as a club to have the necessary cover in place, we have simply been left in limbo'. He said that the insurance company had agreed to renew their policy this month while making it clear that there was no resolution to the outstanding claim. He warned that the management committee 'may have no option but to close the clubhouse [and] that will result in the likely scenario that the club will fold leaving approximately 750 footballers (mainly children) with no local club'. Aviva Insurance said it understood 'how distressing property damage can be'. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw/ The Irish Times Responding to The Irish Times on the matter, Aviva Insurance said its priority was 'always to support customers when they need us most'. 'While we do not comment on individual customer cases, we understand how distressing and disruptive property damage can be – particularly for community organisations that play such a vital role in local life. 'We assess each claim carefully and fairly, based on the terms and conditions of the policy and the evidence provided. In some cases, further information or expert input may be required to reach a conclusion. 'Insurance policies seek to provide cover for specified events that cause loss or damage to the property insured, and our obligation to make any payment under the policy is dependent on one of these insured perils occurring. Section 7.6 of the Consumer Protection Code obliges all insurers to endeavour to verify the validity of a claim before deciding on its outcome. This means that we must first be satisfied that any damages claimed occurred, and that the cause of the damage is covered by the policy.' Earlier this week Mr Redmond expressed dismay at the insurance company's refusal to engage with the club and said its offers to engage in a mediation process had to date not been accepted by Aviva.

Ken Early: After years of being the right man in the right place, Salah feels left outside
Ken Early: After years of being the right man in the right place, Salah feels left outside

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Ken Early: After years of being the right man in the right place, Salah feels left outside

Soon after kick-off in the Community Shield, the Crystal Palace fans unleashed a fiery demonstration against the evil football authorities. T-shirts reading 'UEFA MAFIA' denounced the European governing body which has demoted Palace from the Europa League to the Uefa Conference League for breaching multi-club ownership rules. Protesting that they have since resolved the alleged conflicts of interest, Palace have appealed the decision, and a verdict is expected today. On the basis of their showing at Wembley, Palace would be strong contenders to win the Europa League and favourites for the Conference League. Oliver Glasner named the same XI that beat Manchester City in the FA Cup final, while Arne Slot's team included four new signings costing close to €300 million. The new Liverpool players showed flashes of brilliance, but it was Palace who looked the more coherent and dangerous team. Palace's Adam Wharton showed why he is currently the highest-rated Premier League midfielder not already playing for one of the richest clubs. Liverpool also had an England international central midfielder in Curtis Jones, who completed 53 of 53 passes during his time on the pitch. Wharton, though, was trying much more ambitious passes, eventually fooling Virgil van Dijk with the pass that cracked open Liverpool's defence for Ismaila Sarr to score Palace's second equaliser. READ MORE Wharton actually endured a difficult middle third of the game, misplacing seven passes in a row between minutes 24 and 56. It's to his credit that he didn't let this run affect his confidence, and he got nearly everything right in the last 30 minutes of the game. The opening exchanges hadn't looked so positive for Palace, as Liverpool began with an intimidating air of superiority. Jeremie Frimpong's throw-in started a sequence of 46 passes which culminated with Hugo Ekitike scoring a superb debut goal. 'A good team goal,' Arne Slot said afterwards, suggesting the move showed the kind of creative combination play he wants Liverpool to evolve towards, compared to last season when their idea, in Slot's surprising description, was 'keep a clean sheet and create some chances in attack'. That worked well enough for them last season, but Slot believes opponents had figured Liverpool out by the end. Ekitike's goal came after some slick interplay with Florian Wirtz, who produced several dazzling touches during the first half. It felt as though Liverpool are not yet used to the possibilities that open up when their new No 7 receives the ball. Some team-mates seemed surprised at the speed and unexpected angles of his passes. Soon they will be making the runs, trusting that Wirtz will find a way to supply the ball. Mohamed Salah of Liverpool is challenged by Marc Guehi of Crystal Palace at Wembley Stadium on Sunday. Photograph:Palace had equalised through Jean-Philippe Mateta's penalty, sloppily conceded by Virgil van Dijk, by the time Frimpong showed the new qualities he will bring. The Dutch full back attacked Tyrick Mitchell down the right, got around the outside and chipped a cross that drifted unexpectedly inside Dean Henderson's far post: 20 minutes in, Liverpool's new signings were adjusting well. It was a rather more established figure who was struggling to get into the game. As the half wore on, a question began to form – where is Mohamed Salah ? Liverpool had dominated the ball, but their £400,000-a-week Footballer of the Year had barely been involved. Salah had only six touches before the 40-minute mark. He was so anonymous that he might have felt almost reassured when he was called offside – 'Okay, I'm not actually invisible'. He finished the half with 12 touches, thanks in part to seven minutes of additional time. You might have expected something to change after half-time, but surprisingly the second half was even worse, with only 11 touches in all, though he also managed one shot, drilled wastefully straight at Dean Henderson after being set up by Wirtz. Between minute 56 and minute 81, Salah's only direct involvement in the game was a foul on Will Hughes. Penalties offered a chance at redemption but he ballooned Liverpool's first penalty dreadfully over the bar to crown one of his worst performances and set his side on the way to shoot-out defeat. You can't drop a performance like this as one of the best-paid players in the league and expect not to be criticised. Since Salah turned 33 in the summer, people will spend the next week saying he's past it, that he has suddenly dropped off the performance cliff that lies in wait for all athletes somewhere in their 30s. Actually it looked more like he was struggling to understand how to fit into a team that is suddenly playing on the far side of the pitch after eight years of right-sided dominance. Liverpool's Jeremie Frimpong attempts a shot towards goal at Wembley Stadium on Sunday. Photograph: John Walton/PA Wire Throughout Salah's career at Liverpool the player behind him on the right flank was Trent Alexander-Arnold, one of the best passers in the game and who liked to occupy deeper positions where he generally had Salah in his field of vision. Liverpool's right back is now Frimpong, who might be the closest thing you can find to the complete opposite of Alexander-Arnold. Where Trent's game was about passing, Frimpong's is about running; where Trent liked to stay deep, Frimpong wants to run beyond; where Trent tried to build plays, Frimpong wants to finish them. At Leverkusen he played almost as a wide receiver, running on to raking diagonal passes from the likes of Wirtz and Granit Xhaka. Yesterday at Wembley, Wirtz displayed a clear preference for drifting to the left. It was immediately noticeable in the first half just how much of Liverpool's play was happening down their left, where Wirtz, Cody Gakpo, Ekitike, Milos Kerkez and Dominik Szoboszlai were all getting involved. Over on the right side hardly anything was happening, and when the ball did go out there it was usually Frimpong arriving on to it. The full back finished the game with more than twice as many touches as Salah. Salah is not used to this: since he joined in 2017, more of Liverpool's play has gone down the right. Jürgen Klopp liked to organise the attack in two triangles on either side: units comprising the respective full backs, No 8s and wingers. With Salah's unit including Alexander-Arnold and first Jordan Henderson, then Szoboszlai, Liverpool's right-sided triangle always saw a bit more of the play than the left side. Salah always had team-mates close by, giving him passes, offering options. The left winger for most of that time, Sadio Mané, used to fume that if he got to play surrounded by the same favourable conditions as Salah, he would score just as many goals. Mané was often comparatively left to fend for himself, but at least he had the strength and pace in those days to make things happen by himself. At 33, Salah needs team-mates around him to combine with. Only when Harvey Elliott came on in the last 10 minutes did Salah start to receive regular passes. The left-footed Elliott likes to drift to the right as much as Wirtz likes the left. Now Salah gets to see how Mané felt all those years but the King will not put up with this uncomplainingly. If Slot doesn't find a way to fix this, expect problems.

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