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    Football should be the beautiful game – but 2030 World Cup covering half the globe is an ugly kick in the teeth for fans

    FOOTBALL is supposed to be the people’s game.It’s supposed to be about the fans as well as the players.
    Nobody outside a chosen few inside Fifa headquarters in Zurich was celebrating the latest brainwave pulled off by world football boss Gianni InfantinoCredit: PA
    Lionel Messi lifts the World Cup trophy in Qatar – a tournament allegedly powered by giant solar fields in the desert that NOBODY has ever seenCredit: Getty
    And the World Cup, the pinnacle of the sport, is supposed to be a global party.
    But nobody outside a chosen few inside Fifa headquarters in Zurich was celebrating the latest brainwave pulled off by world football boss Gianni Infantino.
    A World Cup covering half the globe, spread over 39 days and involving 48 teams and 104 matches.
    Starting with three games in South America, before the rest of the tournament is split between the Iberian peninsula and North Africa.

    Yet what was inconceivable is now, overnight, a looming reality, coming our way in just seven years, in 2030.
    A kick in the teeth for fans around the planet, who still love the beautiful game, no matter how ugly it can seem.
    And further irrefutable proof that what counts in football now is not the sport, the emotion and the passion.
    That went out of the window long ago.
    Most read in Football
    The brutal truth is that it is now only about the money, the politics, the deals and the TV contracts.
    Who in their right mind would conceive of sending fans halfway around the world — then back — for ONE match?
    Fifa, of course.
    The blazers in their ivory towers, who know they get executive travel, first-class seats and the biggest suites in the swankiest hotels, all meals and match tickets included, for nothing — plus £400 a day in cash for spending money just to keep them sweet.
    No worries about saving up for the journey for these men and women.
    The same Fifa that trumpeted the green credentials of a £185BILLION World Cup in Qatar, allegedly powered by giant solar fields in the desert that NOBODY has ever seen.
    That’s before you even get into the other issues in the Gulf state — the treatment of migrant workers and legalised homophobia.
    Yet it’s as much about the sheer cost of the concept as well.
    Playing the opening three matches in Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay pays homage to the centenary of the tournament that was first played in Uruguayan capital Montevideo in 1930.
    Divide and rule
    There is a romantic element in that — although many real fans of the game will argue that the 2030 tournament should have been hosted entirely back where it all began.
    But Fifa is asking some fans to fork out thousands to fly 6,000-plus miles to see their team in action in South America and then back across the Atlantic for a tournament split between Morocco, Portugal and Spain.
    Where, of course, tickets will be at premium rates for travelling fans. Someone has to pay the bills. And it’s you.
    Does anybody in Zurich care about that? It doesn’t look that way, does it?
    For Fifa President Infantino, football’s version of The Hood from Thunderbirds, it is an ingenious, some would argue brilliant, solution.
    After all, he has handed six countries and three continents a piece of the action.
    That allows all the potential bidders to keep face at home and also ensures the maximum interest and pay cheques from the European TV companies who fund his global projects, pitches and training centres in countries that otherwise would not be able to afford them.
    Infantino may not have been a protege of former Fifa chief, disgraced Sepp Blatter.
    But he has learned from the Blatter play book of divide and rule — and brought it into the modern age.
    And seasoned, and cynical, Fifa watchers know what the real end game is here.
    It is less about 2030 — although that is what has captured immediate attention.
    Instead, it is more, far more, about 2034 — and giving Saudi Arabia and Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman what HE has craved for years.

    The door for the Saudis to walk through and host that tournament is not ajar. It is wide open.
    Nominally, Australia could bid as well.
    But it would be a forlorn and expensive waste of money. The die is cast.
    “All the fish is sold,” as they say in Fifa land.
    It does not matter that there will be another desert storm of protest, that fans will not be able to get a drink — to be fair, the absence of booze in the stadiums in Qatar made for a far less aggressive and hostile atmosphere.
    Nor that the Saudi record on human rights is pretty compatible with that in Qatar.
    Indeed, the Qataris do not, as far as we know, have a track record of dismembering critical journalists in any of their embassies.
    Doha 1, Riyadh 0.
    Effectively gifting Saudi the tournament means another winter World Cup in November and December of 2034 — and another enforced six-week break for the Premier League.
    And because the new 32-team Club World Cup — Chelsea, Manchester City and almost certainly Liverpool play in the first version in the USA in 2025 — is held in the same country as the next World Cup, the situation will be similar 12 months earlier, with players going to Saudi in 2033.
    Scant consolation
    Two successive European club seasons ruptured in half, just to ensure MBS gets what he wants.
    Have the fans, players or even the clubs been asked about that? Of course they haven’t. They never are.
    The good news, the only good news, is that Infantino will not be around to bask in the reflected “glory” of his masterplan when it comes to fruition.
    Even after dismissing his first three years in the job as not counting, he must give up his place as Fifa President in 2031.
    Canada’s Victor Montagliani is a potential successor.
    But that will be scant consolation to the fans forking out money they really can’t afford to follow their teams in 2030 or four years later.
    They are barely an afterthought.
    Scenery for the TV pictures.
    Read More on The Sun
    Willing victims who pay for the privilege.
    As Sir Alex Ferguson once said, in very different circumstances: “Football. Bloody hell.” More

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    The Sun launches Footie For All Fund to help protect kids’ clubs hit by the cost-of-living crisis

    THE Sun is today launching a landmark Footie For All Fund to help protect kids’ clubs hit hard by the cost-of-living crisis.We have teamed up with Tesco’s Stronger Starts programme to hand out £150,000 worth of grants to grass roots youth football clubs struggling with funds.
    The Sun is launching our landmark Footie For All Fund to help protect kids’ clubs hit hard by the cost-of-living crisisCredit: Oliver Dixon
    Harry Redknapp has backed The Sun’s Footie For All FundCredit: Louis Wood
    Gary Lineker has backed The Sun’s Footie For All FundCredit: Doug Seeburg
    The cash can be used in any way that encourages more children to take up the sport or improves access to the game.
    Perhaps you are a local team that wants to offer parents help with membership fees.
    Maybe you need new kits or more pitch space to play on.
    Grants can also be used to help with transport or general running costs.
    READ MORE ON FOOTBALL
    Earlier this year we launched our Footie For All campaign to shine a light on how financial struggles were forcing kids to give up football.
    Figures showed that 94 per cent of grass roots clubs were concerned about the impact soaring costs were having on their membership, according to charity Sported.
    In the wake of our probe we have been inundated with stories of local youth sides — who make a huge difference to their communities — struggling to cover their costs.
    Clubs across the country also told us how some kids are being forced to drop out altogether as families can not pay their membership subs or for kit and transport.
    Most read in Football
    So today we urge grass roots clubs to apply for one of our fantastic £1,000 Footie For All support grants.
    Launched in conjunction with Tesco’s Stronger Starts campaign — which funds healthy food and activities for children — we will dish out 150 grants in total to clubs across the country.
    Christine Heffernan, Tesco group communications director, said: “The Tesco Stronger Starts grant programme provides £5million of funding to get more children and their families access to healthy and nutritious food and physical activities.
    “We thought that The Footie For All programme would be a great extension to that to help kids to thrive.
    “Any child should be able to do physical activity they enjoy if they wish, taking away the worry about paying for subs or kit for example.”
    Our campaign is being backed by big names in the game.
    Match Of The Day host Gary Lineker said: “I think grass roots is vital.
    “That’s where everyone starts. Some of us finish at the top, some don’t, but we all enjoy it.”
    Sun columnist Harry Redknapp added: “Grass roots football is important, and we need to ensure there are facilities for kids.”
    Reality star Joey Essex is also keen to see kids keep playing.
    He said: “Football provides an escape for so many kids from whatever else is going on. The Sun is offering families a lifeline.”
    To apply for one of our grants, see tescostrongerstarts. org.uk/footiefund.
    Grants will be awarded by The Sun with charity Groundwork, which runs Tesco’s grant-giving programmes, on a rolling basis.
    Applications must be made by October 29.
    SOMERTON TOWN
    YOUTH football club Somerton Town, Somerset, kept its membership subs frozen for three years to help families cope through Covid and the cost-of-living crisis.
    But organisers had to raise them from £95 to £120 this season after rises of up to 30 per cent in costs.
    Somerton Town kept its membership subs frozen for three years to help families cope through Covid and the cost-of-living crisisCredit: Chris Balcombe
    Since it was founded in 2001, Somerton have played a unique social role for its 187 players, across 11 teams.
    Chairman Justin Davies, 40, says: “We have a huge catchment area that contains areas with large-scale social and economic deprivation.
    “Playing football teaches young people about teamwork, respect and fair play.
    “Little things like shaking hands before and after a match to show respect to the other team is important.
    “When we put the prices up, 21 players left, with 20 not going on to join another club. It was a financial decision.”
    Justin Davis said: ‘Playing football teaches young people about teamwork, respect and fair play’Credit: Chris Balcombe
    HACKNEY WICK FC
    AFTER leaving prison in 2019, Bobby Kasanga started Hackney Wick FC, in East London, to stop other children falling into a life of crime.
    It now has more than 180 children on its books and a waiting list of even more who want to be part of its teams.
    For many families, the club is a way to keep their children on the right path – and Bobby, 37, who spent eight years inside for armed robbery, never turns anyone away.
    He says: “We try to do as much as we can to alleviate financial stress and often let kids play without paying or offer discounts if a family has multiple kids with us.
    “We’ve seen it getting worse recently, but we know turning anyone away could see them get taken in by gangs.
    “If we can’t have them, the gangs certainly will.”
    To play a year at Hackney costs around £250.
    But Bobby and his team are writing off around £5,000 of unpaid subs because they know families can’t afford it.
    He says: “We rely on our sponsors and they’ve been amazing.
    Last year, one covered the cost of 20 kids for a year. But it’s hard to keep our heads above water.”
    The club’s relationships with local businesses provide more than just financial help.
    Bobby says: “We’ve had four of our players taken on by one of our sponsors.
    “It means they have a stable income and a potential career for life.
    “That’s so important for helping them stay out of danger.
    “But even if they end up going down a bad path, the club relationships across the whole of East London may help diffuse violent situations.
    “They may stop an attack because they know the other gang member from football.”
    Bobby adds: “I never want anyone to go through what I went through growing up.
    “We are a family and I won’t take football away from them over money.”
    BLACKBURN EAGLES
    LIKE other clubs, Blackburn Eagles have also seen more kids struggling to pay – but it never turns anyone away.
    The club, which is the biggest in its area with 650 players on its books, feels it is vital for all kids to have access to the beautiful game and tries to keep its fees low.
    Blackburn Eagles feels it is vital for all kids to have access to football and tries to keep its fees lowCredit: BLACKBURN EAGLES
    In fact, the academy’s vice-chairman, Chris Hughes, 39, says prices have not been put up in around eight years.
    He adds: “We don’t turn anyone away.
    “We just take more children, create new groups, create new training sessions and create new teams.”
    But the club has recently had to take teams out of the Junior Premier League due to the cost of the four-hour round trips to play other teams across the North West.
    Chris says: “Football gives kids a good focus and can be a massive part of certain children’s lives.
    “It might be the one thing they’ll look forward to all week, and sometimes it gets them out of situations where maybe they don’t want to be at home all the time.”
    HOW TO APPLY
    WE want to hear the story of your club and the huge difference you are making to kids and your community.
    If you are a not-for-profit grassroots football club in England, Wales or Scotland working with youngsters under the age of 18 you could be eligible for one of our 150 grants.
    Funds can be used for anything that encourages more children to take part in the sport.
    Perhaps your club needs help with pitch fees or wants to sponsor funded places for children who can not afford membership.
    To apply and for full T&Cs, see tescostrongerstarts.org.uk/footiefund.

    WHAT THE STARS SAY

    A young Phil FodenCredit: Instagram @philfoden
    Phil says football ‘brings happiness for so many people’Credit: Getty
    “GRASSROOTS football is where it began for all of us.
    “It brings happiness for so many people and it’s so important nothing gets in the way of everyone having that opportunity.”

    A young Harry MaguireCredit: Instagram
    Harry says ‘playing with a team gives kids an outlet and a chance to learn discipline’Credit: Getty
    “I SPENT my childhood with a ball at my feet.
    “Playing with a team gives kids an outlet and a chance to learn discipline and to make friends with people they might not have met.”

    A young Raheem Sterling
    Raheem said that as a kid he ‘fell in love’ with football and ‘made friends for life’Credit: Getty
    “MY mentor got me in to football to correct my behaviour.
    “I found something I wanted to put my energy in to.
    “I fell in love with it – and I made friends for life.”
    READ MORE SUN STORIES

    A young Jarrod Bowen
    Jarrod said ‘football is for everyone and it’s massively important it stays that way’Credit: Getty
    “WE can’t let kids see their dream die simply because Mum or Dad can’t afford to pay for the subs, kit and travel.
    “Football is for everyone and it’s massively important it stays that way.” More

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    Footie stars biggest fashion own goals from Haaland’s pyjama suit to Pogba’s cape – who do you think looks the worst?

    HE’S a self-styled king of fashion with a £10m Gucci deal but Jack Grealish has been labelled Man City’s worst dressed player.It appears the winger scored an own goal after last year rating his teammates’ fashion sense on the club’s YouTube channel – and now they’ve got their revenge.
    Manchester City winger Jack Grealish was labelled the worst dressed footballer in the squad by his teammatesCredit: Eroteme
    He gave himself an A for style while downgrading Ruben Dias to a D and giving Kevin De Bruyne a C.
    Now Spanish midfielder Rodri – whose style Grealish described as “awful, awful” – has kicked the winger’s ego into touch in an interview accusing Grealish of actually being the worst dressed.
    The stunned winger, who has a six figure deal with BoohooMAN as well as Gucci, posted the clip on his Instagram page with a shocked face emoji.
    With sportsmen scoring big as fashion idols, bagging deals worth millions with brands such as Burberry, Dior and Superdry, there’s everything to play for when it comes to power dressing.
    READ MORE JACK GREALISH
    But there have been plenty of footie fashion faux pas over the years… and Grealish isn’t alone.
    Would he make the worst dressed XI All Stars team?
    Here are the stars who would be kicked into touch by the fashion police.
    Raheem Sterling
    Chelsea and England winger Raheem Sterling may need some longer trousersCredit: sterling7/instagram
    A JACKET that hangs off the shoulders may become tyre-some for Raheem – whose puffed-up outfit could be a nod to the Michelin Man.
    Most read in Football
    And we won’t even ask about those breeches, which make him look like a jockey.
    Surely he’ll not keep this look up furlong!
    Tom Davies
    Sheffield United’s Tom Davies wearing a dressing gownCredit: Getty
    DRESSING down or dressing GOWN?
    Former Everton ace Tom loves to make a statement with his clothing, and this get-up is no exception.
    He may have been going for a casual vibe, but looks more like he’s in his pyjamas ready for bed.
    You snooze, you lose, Tom.
    Dani Alves
    Former Barcelona defender Dani Alves is one of the best of his generation, on the pitchCredit: PA
    BRAZILIAN defender Dani could give Hugh Jackman a run for his money in this Greatest Showman-style suit, which he wore to a party in Paris back in 2019.
    Erling Haaland
    Record setting Norwegian striker Erling Haaland is not afraid to stand outCredit: BackGrid
    MANCHESTER City player Haaland is a ray of sunshine in this bright yellow shirt and trouser set.
    They could be posh PJs – or even 1970s- inspired party gear.
    James Maddison
    Spurs midfielder James Maddison has been on fire so far this seasonCredit:
    THE Tottenham icon is perhaps hoping to get a-head in the fashion stakes in this bucket hat, shorts and t-shirt combo.
    He’d fit right in at Glastonbury festival.
    Paul Pogba
    Paul Pogba may have been trying to keep a low profile with this unusual outfitCredit: BackGrid
    FRENCH footballer Pogba is a hero on the pitch – and off it, too, so it seems.
    The Juventus star channelled his inner superhero in this wacky hooded cape.
    Hector Bellerin
    Former Arsenal defender Hector Bellerin is as well known for his wacky style as he is for his performancesCredit: Getty
    THERE’s nowhere to hide for the Spanish right-back in this striking black leather coat.
    His laidback look, complete with shades, echoes Keanu Reeves’ in The Matrix.
    Oli McBurnie
    Striker Oli McBurnie’s odd tracksuit looks like it belongs a few decades ago
    SHEFFIELD United icon McBurnie goes for man of the match in this red and brown tracksuit co-ord.
    Wonder if the knee-highs are for added socks appeal?
    READ MORE SUN STORIES
    Dominic Calvert-Lewin
    This outfit is actually a tame one compared to some of the outlandish styles Dominic Calvert-Lewin has tried outCredit: Getty
    Everton player Dominic channels the Man from Del Monte in this number at last year’s Emporio Armani fashion show.
    He’s quite partial to a pastel and has also been spotted in a pink suit. More

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    I’m David Ginola’s secret lovechild – we met for first time in 28 years, he said I was ‘a real Ginola’ then cut me out

    FOOTIE legend  David Ginola’s lovechild has revealed she met him for the first time after 28 years and he said “Yes, you are a real Ginola” — then cut her adrift again.Joy Pinquier wept as the former France international finally admitted he is her dad and hugged her during an emotional meeting in her home town of Marseille.
    Joy Pinquier wept as former France international footballer David Ginola embraced her after nearly three decades apartCredit: Louis Wood
    Joy now says dad David has cut her adrift ever since their emotional meetingCredit: Rex
    David had met mum Joelle Pinquier in France where he was playing his football at the time
    But now devastated Joy claims she feels abandoned all over again  as following their hour-long meeting he severed any further contact.
    In an exclusive interview Joy said: “He looked me up and down and said, ‘Yes, you are a real Ginola.’ I replied, ‘Why did you ever doubt it?’
    “He took me in his arms and embraced me and it was a very special moment.
    “I had tears in my eyes because it was the hug I had always dreamed of having with my dad.
    READ MORE DAVID GINOLA
    “We talked for about an hour and it felt like we were connecting.
    “He kept saying we would go to a restaurant to get to know each other better but, 18 months later, I still haven’t seen him.”
    Ginola, 56, agreed to meet Joy after appearing on I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here! in 2021.
    Joy, now 30, said: “Two years ago I wrote to him through his Instagram account and, much to my surprise, he replied.
    Most read in Football
    “I gave him my phone number and he called. We must have spoken on the phone for about two hours and after that we started exchanging messages on WhatsApp.
    “One day I saw he was going to Marseille, where I live, to play boules with his friends. I decided to head over to meet him.
    “I sent a text to let him know I was there and, as I walked over, I saw he had a big smile on his face. Now I realise that he never had any interest in being my father, he was just being polite.
    “It’s a horrible thing to say, but I feel like I have been abandoned a second time.”
    David with ex-wife Coraline, who is mum to his son Andrea and daughter CarlaCredit: Getty
    The meeting came despite Ginola refusing to have contact with her for the first 28 years of her life.
    He was married and already had his first son Andrea, now 31, with model wife Coraline, 54 — also mum to his 28-year-old daughter Carla — when Joy was conceived during a fling with Joy’s mum in 1991.
    A French court ordered Ginola to take a DNA test confirming paternity three times but he always refused.
    Under French law, he was then automatically declared the father.
    Ginola was ordered to pay €450 (£345) a month in child support until Joy turned 18.
    Her mum Joelle Pinquier, 56, was working as a secretary in Brest, where Ginola was playing for the local club, when they met.
    He went on to play for Paris Saint-Germain, Tottenham Hotspur, Newcastle United and Everton.
    He was also capped 17 times by France before retiring in 2002.
    Ginola continues to work as a commentator in England and France and was one of the biggest stars of the 21st series of I’m a Celebrity, where he finished fourth.
    Joy said: “Mum had no idea he was married — he must have hidden his wedding ring in his pocket. I found out that he was my dad when I was six years old.
    “I remember we were playing a child’s game with a sticker album and when I came to his photo, I drew a heart on it.
    “That’s when my mother said to me: ‘I have a secret to tell you about that man, but I will tell you about it when you are old enough to understand.’
    “I said, ‘Tell me now’ and kept insisting. Eventually, she admitted he was my father.
    “It was difficult to comprehend. I loved watching football and he was a magnificent player and such a big star in France.
    “I would watch him on television all the time and I was in awe of him. Not having him around, it felt like a huge hole in my life.
    “I couldn’t understand why he didn’t want to be my dad.
    “A father plays such a hugely important role for a little girl.
    “Anyone that misses that is going to have a hard time and my childhood was tough. I stayed with my grandparents in Paris a lot as my mother struggled to raise me alone and we didn’t have much money.
    “I missed my dad and I needed his love and his guidance, but he did not want to take responsibility or own up to his mistake.
    “He was told to have a DNA test by the court — the first time was when I was ten or 11 years old — but he refused.
    “He started paying child support when I turned 13, but still he refused to see me and I felt his absence more and more as I got older.”
    Joy laid eyes on her dad for the first time when she turned 15.
    She said: “He asked to meet me at a lawyer’s office in Marseille, to see if we looked alike, but at the last minute he changed his mind.
    “When I got to the lawyer’s office, he was already leaving.
    “We saw each other across a spiral staircase and he looked at me and smiled.
    “To me, it looked like a smirk. It was horrible. By the time I got home I was in floods of tears.”
    Joy’s next close encounter with her dad came in May 2016, when she was 22. Ginola, who had recently separated from Coraline, collapsed during a charity football game in the south of France that month.
    He had suffered a cardiac arrest and was clinically dead for eight minutes but survived because his friend and fellow footballer Frederic Mendy performed CPR.
    Ginola was airlifted to hospital in Monaco where surgeons performed a six-hour quadruple bypass.
    Joy drove 136 miles to the hospital from Marseille as soon as she heard the news.
    She said: “I didn’t want the first day I met my dad to be when he was dead.
    “I got as far as his room. The staff outside asked to see my ID then refused to let me in.
    “Later that year, I was watching one of the games at the Euros in France when David appeared as a commentator on the big screen. I immediately burst into tears.”
    It would be another five years before their next contact.
    Joy said: “After we first spoke on the phone, he would write to me on WhatsApp and say ‘Happy birthday’ and things like that.
    “It gave me hope, but he never ended his messages ‘Dad’, he always ended them ‘David’.
    “Also, he refused to apologise. He told me he was not sorry because he had told my mother that he did not want to have a child — he was very harsh about the situation. I now realise that I can’t force him to be my father.
    “I am not interested in his money and I never wanted to attack him publicly. I always felt it my responsibility to defend his reputation.
    READ MORE SUN STORIES
    “But it’s got to a point where I feel a terrible anger and resentment towards my dad.
    “More than anything, I want to finally look him in the eye and ask why he treated me like he did.”
    Ginola enjoyed a successful career in the Premier League with Tottenham Hotspur, Newcastle United and EvertonCredit: Getty
    He appeared on I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here! in 2021 and later agreed to meet JoyCredit: PA More

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    Finally disgraceful Luis Rubiales has resigned but he’s not a ‘good guy’ & it’s not up to him to decide if he assaulted

    FINALLY, Luis Rubiales has jumped. He says he did it because he was becoming a distraction, when in actual fact he became a disgrace.
    Ulrika Jonsson shares her thoughts on Luis Rubiales resigning after he shockingly planted a kiss on Jenni HermosoCredit: Getty
    Most of us had worked that out nearly three weeks ago.
    It’s not that I’m all for sacking people with immediate effect as soon as there is a hint of wrongful behaviour.
    We all make mistakes.
    But Rubiales’ suggestion that he is innocent and “a good guy” just doesn’t cut it, I’m afraid.
    READ MORE ON THE CONTROVERSY
    Of course, he would say that now, wouldn’t he?
    The kiss he planted on Jenni Hermoso’s lips made me audibly wince at the time and sent a shiver down my spine.
    It’s one thing getting caught up in the euphoria of the moment but quite another to actually forcibly land a smacker right on someone’s mouth.
    It was such an invasion of personal space – the grabbing hold of her – just moments after he’d ­grabbed his crotch while sitting alongside the Queen of Spain and her 16-year-old daughter.
    Most read in Football
    What Rubiales has failed to comprehend throughout this drawn-out tale is that it is not for him to decide whether there was any aggression – sexual or otherwise – associated with his actions.
    That is the job of the person on the receiving end.
    Perpetrators do not have the right to say what is and isn’t acceptable.
    Of course, we know football has a problem with women and needs a culture change to get rid of the sexism and misogyny.
    It needs a root-and-branch overhaul.
    Rubiales going is merely a snip at a bough.
    Wrong, but keep it in perspective
    By Laura Dodsworth
    I SYMPATHISE with Jenni Hermoso.
    When I was 21 my first male boss pinned me to a wall at a work do and tried to stick his tongue in my mouth.
    In the words of Hermoso, I did not enjoy it.
    Rubiales’ behaviour was inappropriate, even if it was a genuine expression of Latin exuberance.
    With the cameras rolling and in the face of his high spirits, Hermoso might have felt she had to go along with a kiss she would not have ordinarily consented to.
    But to get some perspective, it was just a second or two, happening after a hug and before a slap on the back.
    Kissing is more typical in some countries (such as Spain) and it is also a jubilant response to success.
    Do you remember Maradona and team-mate Claudio Caniggia sharing a kiss after a goal?
    Gary Neville even gave Paul Scholes a smacker.
    None of these celebratory kisses caused a scandal.
    While they didn’t share the same power imbalance, they could have caused a backlash of a different sort. But they didn’t.
    Rubiales should have reflected more humbly on the impact of this kiss and given an unequivocal apology.
    Yet he steadfastly refused to resign.
    And instead of being seen as a football heroine, Hermoso has been cast as a victim.
    Read More on The Sun
    One problem with the #MeToo scandals in the US was grouping together too wide a spectrum of sexual misbehaviour.
    This kiss has launched Spain’s #MeToo moment, but it shouldn’t ignite a Spanish Inquisition. More

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    How F1 legend Enzo Ferrari bedded factory workers, had secret love child & pushed drivers to brink

    THE creator of the world’s most desired sports cars was a daring racer who lived his life on the edge – in the bedroom and the boardroom.Now the story of how Enzo Ferrari pushed himself, his loved ones and his drivers to their limits is being told in a new biopic starring Adam Driver and ­Penelope Cruz.
    Enzo Ferrari’s enduring love affair with motor racing began in his early days as a young driverCredit: Alamy
    Ferrari pushed himself, his loved ones and his drivers to their limitsCredit: Imago
    Adam Driver, who plays Ferrari, said the film ‘seemed like a subject I didn’t know much about and seemed daunting and exciting’Credit: Alamy
    The film, titled Ferrari, received a seven-minute standing ovation following its world premiere at last week’s Venice Film Festival.
    The tale of how Enzo, the son of a metal shop owner, survived World War One and built the first Ferrari after his factory was flattened during the Second World War would be enough for one movie in itself.
    But the high octane film, which opens in the UK on Boxing Day, focuses on an even more turbulent period.
    In 1957, with his company on the verge of going bust, Enzo bet that he could win the 1,000-mile Mille Miglia road race through Italy.
    Read More on Ferrari
    It was a highly dangerous challenge which resulted in the deaths of two of his drivers and nine spectators.
    At the same time he was struggling to save his marriage following the death of his son and amid a long running affair with the mother of a secret love-child.
    The genius behind the Prancing Horse branding, who died at the age of 90 in 1988, was not content with just one mistress.
    Not only did the insatiable businessman have three serious relationships on the go at once, Enzo also had a reputation for bedding the female staff working at his Modena factory.
    Most read in Motorsport
    There is already talk of Oscar nominations for ­Penelope, who plays Enzo’s wife Laura, while Shailene Woodley is praised for her performance as mistress Lina Lardi.
    It was this personal drama that attracted Adam Driver to the role.
    He says: “This version of Ferrari, whose internal engine was very much driven by grief, and the difference in his relationship with Laura versus Lina Lardi, all seemed like a subject I didn’t know much about and was daunting and exciting.”
    Enzo first tasted the thrill of fast cars and fumes at the age of ten when his dad Alfredo took him to see a race in Bologna.
    From that moment on he was a devoted petrol-head, filled with the dream of getting behind the wheel himself.
    That hope, as for so many young men in Europe, was almost taken from him by the outbreak of war in 1914.
    He suffered from the serious lung condition pleurisy while working with mules as part of Italy’s mountain regiment three years into the conflict.
    Discharged from the military on health grounds, Enzo set about making a name for himself as a driver at the then-fledgling sports car firm Alfa Romeo.
    He won the first of 11 Grand Prix in 1923, but the death of his friend and team-mate Antonio Ascari on the track two years later left Enzo fearful of pushing his car to its limits.
    The birth of his first son Dino in 1932 convinced him to transfer his talents to the safety of design and manage- ment.
    Having set up his own manufact- urer — Auto Avio Costruzioni — eight years later, he was soon told to makeair-craft engines for Italy’s fascist ruler Benito Mussolini and his factory became a target for Allied bombers.
    Not wishing to be associated with the stain of the despised regime, Enzo changed the firm’s name to Ferrari at the end of the war, and in 1947 a gleaming red 125 model rolled off the production line.
    He was a tough taskmaster whose motto was “the best Ferrari that has ever been built is the next” and worked all week long, wearing his trademark shades, even in his office.
    The business was a distraction from his personal turmoil.
    ‘Beyond reasonable limits’
    In his memoirs, Enzo said: “One must keep working continuously — otherwise one thinks of death.’’
    His son Dino died aged 24 in 1956 after a long battle with a severe type of muscular dystrophy.
    His dad and brother were killed by the Italian flu epidemic in 1916, and eight of his drivers were killed in his cars between 1955 and 1971.
    Adam explains: “He is absolutely instinctive, he’s impulsive, he’s making decisions in a vacuum because he’s used to doing them alone.
    “He’s built a way of coping with that, of death, and especially with people that he’s cared for — not only by his son, but team-mates who have died because of the metal that he has made.”
    The demise of so many of his daring drivers was not down to mechanical failure, but often due to the demanding races Ferrari competed in.
    The most notorious of all was the Mille Miglia, which saw 56 people die in its 30-year history.
    It was so dangerous that the dashing Spanish aristocrat Alfonso de Portago, who had flown a plane under London’s Tower Bridge for a bet, was wary about competing on the twisting roads.
    Penelope Cruz plays Enzo’s wife Laura in the biopic
    The businessman also had multiplel lovers
    Enzo once said: ‘I am convinced that when a man tells a woman he loves her, he only means that he desires her’
    He was right to be worried.
    Shortly after stopping to share a kiss with his film star girlfriend Linda Christian, Alfonso’s third-placed Ferrari 335 S blew a tire and swathed through the crowd.
    It was a moment of pure horror.
    Five of the nine spectators killed were children; Alfonso, 28, was scythed in half and his American co-driver Edmund Nelson also died.
    The photo of Linda and Alfonso was dubbed the Kiss Of Death and Enzo was charged with manslaughter.
    Even though he was eventually cleared of responsibility for the fatal crash, critics have claimed that the Ferrari boss over-stretched his team.
    The late British Formula One driver Tony Brooks, who raced for Ferrari, said in a 2004 documentary: “He would expect a driver to go beyond reasonable limits.”
    Enzo pitted his drivers against each other, including Italian Luigi Musso, who was a fierce rival of his English team-mates Mike Hawthorn and Peter Collins, the latter played by Jack O’Connell in the new movie.
    Musso, 33, died after going flat out on a bend while pursuing Hawthorn in the French Grand Prix in July 1958 and, a month later Collins, 26, was killed when his Ferrari struck a tree during the German Grand Prix.
    Most disturbingly, Enzo pursued Luigi’s young girlfriend Fiamma Breschi following his driver’s fatal crash.
    Fiamma revealed in 2004: “He started to desire me. At first he hinted at it, and later he made it very clear. He told me that he couldn’t imagine his life without me.
    “I refused him, but he kept writing to me about a passion that he said was literally consuming him. This lasted for years.”
    She was, though, only one of many women in Enzo’s colourful life.
    He married Laura in 1923, had a son, Piero, with his mistress Lina in 1945, and kept them both in his life.
    There were other short-lived affairs in the province of Modena, which Enzo rarely left.
    He once said: “I am convinced that when a man tells a woman he loves her, he only means that he desires her.”
    But even after his wife died in 1978, Enzo went to visit her grave every morning, which was situated alongside those of his son and parents.
    Devoted Lina and Piero were by his bedside when he died.
    Piero, 78, was given a ten per cent share of the Ferrari company and has been vice chairman of the firm ever since his father’s death.
    He is now a billionaire thanks to massive demand for the glamorous sports cars, which have a starting price of £166,000.
    Classic Ferraris are even more sought after, partly because Enzo would let them rot at the back of his factory once they had been replaced by a newer model.
    A 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO fetched more than £50million at auction five years ago.
    Ironically, though, Enzo drove a modest Fiat to work.
    Read More on The Sun
    His interest was not in creating desirable machines for the public, but in being first past the chequered flag.
    As he once said: “Racing cars are neither beautiful nor ugly. They become beautiful when they win.”
    The one remaining AAC 815, the first car built by Enzo Ferrari, pictured in 1973Credit: Getty
    A 2003 Ferrari EnzoCredit: Rex More

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    Everything you need to know about Sidemen v Youtube Allstars football match – from most subscribers to richest player

    ENGLAND may be taking on Ukraine today, but the biggest football match will be between two teams you have probably never heard of.The Sidemen versus The YouTube Allstars will take place in front of a sold-out 62,000 crowd at West Ham’s London Stadium at 3pm — and will be watched by millions online.
    Social media-savvy youngsters will now YouTubers like KSI – but anyone over 40 may struggle to recognise the playersCredit: Alamy
    While anyone over 40 may struggle to recognise the players, to social media-savvy youngsters, they are the Tom Cruises, Brad Pitts and Will Smiths of their world.
    Online, the Sidemen are a group of top YouTube celebrities, including British phenomenon KSI, who is also known for his boxing bouts with YouTuber Logan Paul.
    With more than a billion social media followers among both sets of players, the charity match — which has been running annually since 2016 — is expected to pull in a global audience of more than 20million.
    Last year, the game, held at Charlton Athletic’s ground, raised £1million.
    READ MORE BEAUTIFUL GAME
    The match has since been streamed more than 34million times.
    Tickets for this year’s game, which cost from £8 upwards, sold out in less than 90 minutes and proceeds will go to charities Campaign Against Living Miserably (CALM), Teenage Cancer Trust and Rays Of Sunshine.
    PR and brands expert Ed Hopkins says: “I’ve been closely watching the incredible journey of Sidemen’s charity game, and it’s nothing short of a masterclass in how to capture the hearts and minds of young people while creating a formidable brand in the world of sports.
    “It’s not far-fetched to imagine Sidemen’s charity game gracing the hallowed grounds of Wembley Stadium in the future.”
    Most read in Football
    Here, we take a closer look at some of the stars aiming to give professional footballers a run for their money.
    THE SIDEMEN
    VIKKSTAR 123
    7.61million subscribers
    Vikram Singh Barn started out by posting gaming videos every day for four years straightCredit: Twitter
    VIKRAM Singh Barn, 28, is one of the most dedicated social media personalities in the world.
    When he first started out, he posted gaming videos every day for four years straight.
    It led to him gaining a combined 3.8billion views and more than 7.6million ­subscribers on YouTube.
    His hard work has also earned him a reported £8million fortune.
    Recently, he has been giving fans a glimpse into his dream home along with his side-hustle as a DJ.
    In April 2021, he proposed to girlfriend Ellie Harlow, 26, in front of Dubai’s gleaming Burj Al Arab hotel.
    KSI
    40.4million subscribers
    UNDOUBTEDLY the biggest name on the pitch will be YouTuber-turned-boxer KSI, who has firmly established himself as one of the world’s hottest internet personalities.
    He started out as a gamer with a focus on Fifa, but now posts everything from reaction videos to a look at a day in his life.
    The Sidemen FC skipper is also a rapper and co-founder of the Prime Hydration drink alongside American YouTuber Logan Paul.
    Real named Olajide Olayinka Williams, the 30-year-old also co-founded XIX Vodka and owns a restaurant chain called Sides.
    KSI, who has kept tight-lipped about who he is dating, has a reported net worth of £21million.
    W2S
    16.3million subscribers
    Harry Lewis, known as Wroetoshaw or W2S, is such a footie fanatic that he has his own football challenge clubCredit: Instagram
    HARRY LEWIS, known as Wroetoshaw (or W2S), is such a football fanatic that he has his own football challenge club,
    KickTown in London, where competitors take on ball-based skills exercises.
    Across his various YouTube channels and social media platforms, the 26-year-old has amassed 16.3million subscribers.
    He typically posts about gaming and real-life football content and is able to pull in tens of millions of views per video.
    He is also known for his real-life challenges with his family and friends, and has a reported net worth of more than £4million.
    ZERKAA
    4.69million subscribers
    Zerkaa began posting Call Of Duty gaming videos, but he expanded his career by covering football content tooCredit: Instagram
    AT 31, the oldest of the Sidemen began his career by posting Call Of Duty gaming videos, which he later expanded to cover football content.
    Since then, Zerkaa, whose real name is Joshua Bradley, has built up 4.69million followers on YouTube.
    Last year, he celebrated ten years of game play.
    He also has a podcast called Homegrown and is estimated to be worth £3million.
    Since 2010, he has been dating Freya Nightingale, 30, who has been dubbed the “merch Queen” due to her regularly wearing Sidemen clothing.
    MINIMINTER
    10.2million subscribers
    Miniminter says he narrowly missed out on becoming a professional footballerCredit: Instagram
    He married singer Talia Mar in a lavish Italian ceremony this yearCredit: Instagram
    HE was man of the match at last year’s game, and having just turned 31, he will be looking to cap off his birthday week with an even bigger impact this year.
    Born Simon Minter, he says he narrowly missed out on being a professional footballer when a clash in fixtures meant he was unable to meet a scout.
    He is another star who started as a Fifa gamer on YouTube, but nowadays he showcases more of his personal life.
    According to reports, he’s the second-richest member of Sidemen and has a net worth of £9million.
    Earlier this year, he married singer Talia Mar in a lavish Italian ceremony.
    YOUTUBE ALLSTARS
    ISHOWSPEED
    20.2million subscribers
    IShowSpeed is a Cristiano Ronaldo superfan who is worth a reported £9.6millionCredit: Rex Features
    IF you ever doubt the pull of YouTubers, just look at the huge crowd who chased a car carrying US sensation IShowSpeed this week in Edinburgh.
    The 18-year-old – real named Darren Watkins – is a Cristiano Ronaldo superfan, worth a reported £9.6million.
    He is one of the biggest streamers in the world and mainly live-streams himself playing games such as Fifa and Minecraft.
    He began dating girlfriend Ermony Renee after meeting her in an ice cream shop in 2021.
    At last year’s charity football match, he was given the yellow card after whipping the referee with his T-shirt.
    XQC
    2.32million subscribers
    xQc is one of the most controversial streamers and has faced several bans for showing explicit contentCredit: Rex Features
    THE 27-year-old Canadian is a former professional player of first-person shooter Overwatch who now mostly posts reaction videos.
    Real name Felix Lengyel, xQc is one of the most controversial streamers and has faced several bans for showing explicit content.
    It doesn’t appear to have hurt his fanbase too much, however.
    He was named the most-watched streamer on platform Twitch for three consecutive years from 2020.
    He will play in goal today, but team-mate IShowSpeed has called him a “skinny pip” and fears he will cost them the game.
    NIKO OMILANA
    7.15million subscribers
    Niko Omilana is best known for parody videos and daring pranks – but he also decided to run for Mayor of London in 2021Credit: Rex Features
    HE may be best known for his parody videos and daring pranks on YouTube, but it was no laughing matter when Niko decided to run for Mayor of London in 2021.
    After managing to rack up 50,000 votes and coming fifth with a campaign based on telling Boris Johnson to “shush”, the 25-year-old returned to his day job after the election.
    On YouTube, he has 7.15million subscribers as well as 2.3million followers on Instagram.
    In 2018, one of his pranks saw him sneak into the ring during fellow YouTuber KSI’s first boxing match against American Logan Paul in Manchester.
    DANNY AARONS
    1.49million subscribers
    Danny Aarons has been rising up the ranks of YouTube with his videos of Fifa gameplayCredit: Rex Features
    ENGLISHMAN Danny has been rising up the ranks of YouTube with his videos of Fifa gameplay.
    His tips and advice have earned him many fans, but there was controversy on Boxing Day last year when he was banned from the game’s Transfer Market feature for allegedly breaking its rules – something that he denied.
    On his channel, which he launched in 2012 with Minecraft videos, he has more than 1.49million subscribers and hosts 1,200 videos.
    The 21-year-old also has a large following across Instagram, gaining around 80,000 views per video.
    MRBEAST
    181million subscribers
    MrBeast is miles ahead of everyone else in the game on YouTube with a whopping 181million subscribers – and is in a relationship with South African Thea BooysenCredit: Instagram
    WHEN it comes to YouTube, MrBeast is miles ahead of everyone else in the game with a whopping 181million subscribers and 47billion combined views.
    He is also a big hit on Instagram, where he has 40.8million followers.Worth a massive £88.2million, the American, real name Jimmy Donaldson, is also one of the most charitable content creators and showcases himself on YouTube gifting fans everything from a private island to hundreds of cars.
    The 25-year-old Kansas native gave a fan $1million in one video and walked around his city giving out $1,000 to a series of homeless people.
    Thanks to MrBeast’s ­lucrative brand endorsement deals, he is able to host several such giveaways without his personal fortune taking a significant hit.
    Read More on The Sun
    He is known for pioneering the genre of videos based on expensive stunts and challenges.
    And he has been in a relationship with South African YouTuber Thea Booysen, 25, since late last year. More

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    Spain’s women won the World Cup, then a man managed to ruin everything

    WHAT kind of twisted world are we living in when the victim of a clear case of sexual harassment, witnessed by millions, has to go into hiding?Meanwhile, the guilty man struts his stuff on the world stage, refusing to accept he has done anything wrong.
    It is awful Jenni Hermoso has been forced into hiding, through no fault of her ownCredit: AP
    There is something obscene about “kiss-gate” Spanish football ace Jenni Hermoso feeling so overwhelmed she has to retreat from public view.
    The World Cup-winning striker has come under sustained attack because the career of Spain’s FA President Luis Rubiales is now on the line thanks to his own sexist stupidity.
    Hermoso’s crime? Having the temerity to confirm what we could all see: The kiss Rubiales planted on her lips, while yanking her head towards him in a vice-like grip, was not consensual.
    But never mind the evidence. From the get-go, Rubiales has strenuously denied any wrongdoing, claiming she consented and whining that he is the victim of a “social assassination” by “false feminists”.
    READ MORE KARREN BRADY
    So that includes the Fifa bosses, who suspended him for 90 days, the prosecutors investigating him and members of the Spanish women’s team and its coaching staff — bar the deeply unpopular head coach Jorge Vilda — some of whom have resigned in protest?
    DEPRESSING STANDARD
    Leaving aside Rubiales’s family — and even they are divided — only the overwhelmingly male Spanish football federation continues to back him, circling the wagons to protect their own, as is so often the case when a man is under attack for bad behaviour towards a woman.
    Instead of stopping him from trying to gaslight Hermoso, they too questioned her account and threatened her with legal action for lying.
    Set aside for a moment that the kiss was filmed from almost every angle and witnessed around the world.
    Most read in Football
    Hermoso herself has stated there was no consent, that it was an “impulse-driven, sexist, out-of-place act”, and that she was put under “continuous pressure” to exonerate Rubiales.
    The whole world witnessed Rubiales plant a big kiss on Hermoso, seemingly without her invitationCredit: Pixel8000
    Why would she lie? It was clear from the outset that by telling the truth she was making herself a target for every macho misogynist in football.
    And there’s no shortage of those. Why would she consent to a kiss from a middle-aged man who had just been filmed grabbing his crotch while standing near Queen Letizia of Spain and her 16-year-old daughter Infanta Sofia?
    Also, when did this consent take place? Did he get it from Hermoso in writing before the match?
    It certainly didn’t appear to be under discussion in the heat of the moment before he firmly planted his lips on hers.
    So far, so depressingly standard. It’s a lesson in why women often don’t report sexual harassment or abuse.
    They know that what happens next will probably make things much, much worse.
    Unfortunately for Rubiales and his buddies in the Spanish football federation, Hermoso and her teammates are made of sterner stuff than most victims.
    Hermoso has steadfastly stuck by her story. In a show of solidarity, 23 players of Spain’s World Cup-winning squad, as well as 32 other squad members, insist they will not play for their country again while Rubiales remains in post.
    And when the Spanish FA tried to pressure the team’s backroom staff into supporting their boss, they resigned too.
    Sarina Wiegman has even dedicated her Uefa Coach of the Year award to the Spanish team that pipped her England Women’s team in the final, saying they “deserve to be celebrated and listened to”.
    She’s right. The real story here is Spain’s brilliant performance in the World Cup.
    And that is why Jenni Hermoso did not complain instantly about that kiss.
    She had no desire to take the shine off her teammates’ triumph.
    Which is more than can be said for Rubiales, a sad, posturing, middle-aged mummy’s boy, who is putting his own survival above his country’s glory. Time to kiss him goodbye.
    Teens plan is a winner
    National Service proposals are a clever way for teenagers to give back to their communityCredit: The Mega Agency
    THOSE getting in a tizz about plans for a new National Service scheme, championed by Penny Mordaunt, need to calm down.
    It’s not about square-bashing or uniform drills. It’s purely a plan for every 16-year-old to take part in a two-week “civic exploration” trip, which will see them travel away from home to do voluntary work.
    Then they would build on what they have achieved by doing more volunteering in their own community. It wouldn’t even be compulsory.
    Teenagers would have the ability to opt out before they are assigned to a programme.
    I can’t think of a better idea to boost the confidence and self-worth of the UK’s young people, many of whom are still struggling after Covid lockdowns and are preoccupied with social media.
    The Commons leader said last week it would foster “goodwill and community spirit, energy and imagination” and promote “good mental health and resilience”.
    I’m 100 per cent behind her. We should expect more of our young people.
    By showing them how to give something back to their world, we can equip them to play a fulfilling part in it.
    Plane sense
    SOME parents are worried that the Turkish airline Corendon’s plan to launch adults-only sections on its flights will catch on.
    The company promises passengers “a shielded environment” that will contribute “to a calm and relaxed flight”.
    I suspect the mums and dads complaining about this are exactly the sort who ignore their children while they scream non-stop, kick the back of other passengers’ seats and run up and down the aisle while harassed cabin crew try not to run them down with the drinks trolley.
    Why is this controversial? If people want to pay more to avoid putting up with that, then let them. Sounds like a good business decision to me.
    Amanda turns the other cheek
    Amanda Holden had the perfect response to taunts from Andrew TateCredit: Instagram
    THERE is something undeniably satisfying about crafting the perfect response.
    So hats off to Amanda Holden, who managed to resist putting Andrew Tate in his place.
    When the controversial influencer claimed she was too old to pose in a bikini – er, as if – the BGT judge came close to hitting back with a racy picture.
    “I had another shot of me in a bikini with just a close-up of my bum and I was tempted to post it with the caption, ‘Kiss my 52-year-old a***’,” Amanda said.
    “But you just know something like that’s going to go on and on – and in the end, why give him the oxygen?”
    Too right. This failed reality TV star, who is to stand trial on allegations of human trafficking, does not need any more publicity.
    Better to leave him festering in his sad little bunker – or, if guilty, in jail.
    Get ’em in dock
    Cowardly criminals like Lucy Letby will no longer be allowed to skip their own sentencingCredit: PA
    AT last, convicted criminals will be forced to attend sentencing hearings.
    And those who still resist the “reasonable force” permitted by the new law could get an extra two years’ jail time added to their sentences.
    If you commit a crime as vile as child killers like nurse Lucy Letby or gunman Thomas Cashman, you should be forced to face up to the consequences – and left in no doubt about what the world thinks of you.
    Daddy dodge
    THE study that revealed it takes first-time dads two years to feel happy in their relationships again after the birth of their child made me think.
    I don’t doubt that it is hard for men to see their lives completely change overnight.
    Read More on The Sun
    They have to cope with sleepless nights, a grumpy, exhausted partner and hardly any social life. It’s tough.
    But just factor in hormone overload, sore nipples and a body you no longer recognise, and count yourself lucky. More