Rod Liddle
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An uplifting tale, this one : Fat Frankie Lampard has signed a new contract for Chelsea because of the way the club rallied around him when his dear old mum passed away. “When you sit down and weigh everything up,” said Frankie, “you realise that people feel strongly for you and show you so much at a difficult time in my life.”
How true, how very true that is. Human contact and loyalty - the important things in life. And it makes it perfectly clear that it wasn’t the money after all. Frankie may have been offered a humungous contract which will pull him in £34m, with him earning almost as much in one week as our prime minister earns in a year - but these base, material considerations did not remotely impinge upon Lampard’s mind. Go on, reader, wipe those tears away, have a cup of tea.
It is easy to see why Lampard is so singularly unlikeable, why neutrals such as myself suffered a slipped disc jumping for joy when he was quite unjustly sent off against West Ham United last season. His new manager, Luiz Felipe Scolari, summed it up when he said that Frankie was “a symbol of Chelsea”. Yes, that would be about right, Phil. The odd thing is, though, I think Scolari meant it in a good way.
And even more than that, you might argue that Lampard is a symbol of the Premier League itself; its extraordinary, almost surreal, self-regard, its vanities and its hubris. Its limitless greed, its assumption that we are all in thrall to its brilliance. We armchair Premier League viewers remember Frankie when he played for England - the lethargy, the witlessness, the shots from 20 yards out dispatched somewhere towards the T-shirt sellers 500 yards from the ground, the refusal to take the remotest responsibility when England had lost to the Turks and Caicos Islands, or whoever. The notion that embedded itself in our minds: actually, he’s not that good, is he? If we were being kind we might argue that it is not Lampard’s fault - or Ashley Cole’s - but the inevitable consequence of the culture in which he is immersed.
Lampard’s quoted reasons for staying at Chelsea brought to mind the comments of his occasional England colleague, Shaun Wright-Phillips, when he went there a couple of years ago. Having told the Manchester City faithful that he would remain a true blue forever, a week or so later Wright-Phillips became a Chelsea player - again, not for the money, but in order, he said, to improve his prospects of playing for England. How would that plan go, then, Shaun? Still, the money will be a consolation in both cases, one supposes.
Most of us will still watch from time to time, I suppose - not in the “stadia”, of course (heaven forbid) but from the comfort of our sofas. But you do detect the glimmerings of a disaffection with the league, with the financially-imposed inevitability of who wins and who loses - the antithesis of competitive sport. The most interesting match on day one was the relegation six-pointer between Hull City and Fulham; looking in from outside, that is the only game that really piqued the interest.
Last week, when asked to choose who would finish in the top six and who would go down, pure wishful thinking made me include Fulham along with Stoke and Hull - not out of any inveterate dislike of Fulham, you understand (although, obviously, I hate them, soft west London arriviste ok-yah monkeys that they are), but because hope springs eternal in the human breast and one simply cannot, in all good conscience, predict unrelieved boredom for people for the next nine months; top four same as ever, bottom three consisting of the teams that came up last year.
Competition is at its keenest in mid-table of course: will Blackburn finish higher than Manchester City by a point or two? Will Spurs, Pompey or Aston Villa finish fifth? Will Stoke manage to secure even fewer points than the hapless Derby gained? Watch this space!
The credit crunch may ensure that this season, the disaffection is reflected on the terraces even more than last year, although I don’t suppose that the administrators will care two hoots, as the bulk of the money now comes from TV and merchandise. An empty terrace for the home game against Wigan will not unduly trouble the bank balance of any Premier League team – except maybe Hull and Stoke, who will, in nine months’ time, sink back into the comforting embrace of the Championship where things are still agreeably, finely, poised.
The cost of taking the kids to a Premier League game now, in most cases, easily exceeds that which you might spend flying them to Spain for a week or so in the sun; the rewards, you might argue, do not. And then you hear the disingenuous rubbish from Lampard and compare it to the good-natured, unalloyed joy of a truly successful British swimmer (rather than an overremunerated also-ran), Rebecca Adlington, and you wonder what it is you are supporting, what it is to which you affix your loyalty - when no such loyalty is ever returned, unless buttressed by huge sums of cash.
China sets new thuggery record
ANOTHER gold medal for Britain, one less remarked upon than others, was won by a chap called John Ray in the exciting new Olympic sport of synchronised oppression. Mr Ray is ITN’s Beijing correspondent and he was assaulted by Chinese security goons and arrested by the police for doing his job, which on this occasion involved reporting from a “Free Tibet” rally near Beijing's main TV studios. Note: he was not actually protesting himself, simply reporting on a protest that was taking place. Seven other people were arrested, mostly foreign nationals.
Some grizzled old Chinese Communist Party thug said, when asked about the protest, that the west should “look the other way”. These things happen, he added - the world has “dark and evil” things in it, as well as good things, he explained. No kidding. China’s intention, in staging the games, was to present to the world a clean new image - it was this notion that worried the many campaigning groups who have sought to draw attention to the country’s continued appalling human rights record, lack of respect for freedom of speech, detention of political opponents and the bullying and brutality towards Tibet and other dissident provinces. They shouldn’t have worried, though - with almost every day that passes, the foul regime in Beijing betrays itself with acts that are immediately redolent of totalitarianism and a disrespect for the individual. Fireworks that were not fireworks but computer-generated graphics, for example - a deliberate deception that may have been harmless, but was a deception nonetheless.
Then there’s the case of little Yang Peiyi, aged seven, who sang at the opening ceremony so beautifully, but was not allowed to be seen because the government considered her “too ugly”, and so the more cosmetically agreeable Lin Miako mimed in her place. What a repulsive state it is.
And it all somehow undermines the joy we extract from the brilliant Rebecca Adlington’s two unexpected gold medals and smashing of the world record - an astonishing achievement from a palpably likeable and unaffected young woman. The hug and kiss she received from her teammate Kylie Palmer wasa truly affecting moment; but somewhere beyond the handsome Olympic pool, somewhere beyond the edge of our eyesight, the Chinese government was going about its business as usual.
Accent on idiocy
A MATE of mine, an Arsenal fan, rang in midweek in high excitement, during his side’s game again FC Twente. I wasn’t watching the match- I’d just done the washing up and I was sitting watching the plates dry on the draining board - but I caught the reason for his excitement later, on YouTube . It’s that genius with the expensive teeth, the FC Twente manager Steve McClaren, doing an interview with a Dutch journalist and speaking in the most ludicrous “Dutch” accent ever heard since Austin Powers’ Goldmember. McClaren even deliberately mangles his grammar so that he sounds like a Dutch person trying to speak English. A spokesman confirmed that he hadn’t been joking, either. Remember, the FA made this man the manager of our national team.

Rod Liddle is the most controversial commentator on sport in the British media. Previously the editor of BBC Radio 4’s Today programme and now a columnist with The Spectator, he brings an often outrageous and always provocative fan's view to The Sunday Times every week
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Of course frankie earns heaps more than GB , have you ever seen GB make a tackle.Mind you if he was paid for performance ,GB would propably earn more as a footballer than as substitute PM.
michael barnett, woodville, new zealand
Rod, sincere thanks for this. The McLaren interview is categorically the funniest thing I have seen this year.
Christian, Milan, Italy
There certainly won't be any "empty terraces" at the KC this season. Hull City have sold 20,000 season tickets. The capacity of the KC is just over 24,500. Given that we have to reserve 2,500 tickets for 'away' fans, that leaves some 2,000 tickets on sale for each home match. We're also debt-free.
Richard, Malvern, UK
Fulham? "...soft west London arriviste ok-yah monkeys"? Fulham??? The team of the great Johnny Haynes? Who were always around when I was a nipper in the 50's and 60's and well before that too?! Fulham are an old-school, dyed-in-the-wool football club who have watched the "arrivistes" come and go!
Roger, Milan, Italy
"most controversial commentator on sport in the British media" - i don't think controversial is the right word for R.L.
Hidden agenda, lack of other news, narrow view, feels the need to justify his tag or just bored?
Congratulations to Rebecca Adlington - great achievement
Steve, Melbourne,
Don`t stop going to matches in protest, dump Sky sports it will have more effect and then lets see football redress the balance with more realistic wages and maybe a bit more competition at the top level of English footy
Paul, Lancashire,
Spot-on as ever, Rod, about Lamps the Lump and the Bloated Premier League.
Non-League football is where the true beating heart of football is at these days. Cheaper, more accessible, truer to football's roots and much more fun. Fancy joining Dover Athletic, Lamps? Nah, you wouldn't get in the team.
Andy Stevens, Deal, Kent, England
All top footballers get paid heavily and for them to be X million pounds richer is normal with every new contract. If you are good you'll get what you deserve. Frank is a consumate professional and doubting his integrity for England is wrong. And he is commited to the cuase at hand. Always.....
Amit S, Nottingham, UK
Talk about back to earth with a bang! A week of wonderful achievement by Britain's self effacing athletes and then it was over to the graceless Rooney, Lampard and the rest of the premier league prima donnas. What a contrast.
Callan, Liverpool, Enland
Very well said. As a football fan since 1966 I am disgusted at the obsence level of selfishness, arrogance and greed that have ruined the modern game.
I don't deny any entertainer a good wage for a good job. C'mon £100k+ a week, Lampard & Co you're taking the mickey at our hard earned expense.
Vincent Powell, Guernsey, Channel Islands
And a Tory to boot, who'd have guessed!
Stuart, Manchester, England
Continuous moaning, but why single out football ?
THE WORLD MUST COME DOWN TO EARTH !
This will not come about whilst the GREBAFACAS are in control, because none of them wants to be the first to break ranks !
Will the Times start a campaign, to coax one of them into making this happen ?
Arthur Marson, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire
Er, stop supporting football teams then. Switch your allegiance to swimmers who are, by your own admission, more 'worthy' of your coveted support.
ian , reading, berks
Is it likely that a neutral would be so energised as to suffer 'a slipped disc jumping for joy'? As for Frank Lampard being 'singularly unlikeable': He probably doesn't think much of you either.
Rob Foster, Bishop Auckland, England
Totally obscene payments to totally obscene human beings!
Alan, Chigwell, UK
I do like the way you see it and say it Rod Liddle. Me, I'm all for outstanding talent being outstandingly rewarded; in which case most Premiership footballers would be on around five hundred pounds a week; including Fat Frank.
Oliver Sellen, Cambridge,
Sorry mate, but what a bitter, bitter man you are...If you had the sheer talent, and provided such great service to your employer to be able to command such salaries, what would YOU do?
Keep your jealousy to yourself, you want to insult a man who's "dear old mum" passed away.. you are disgrace.
Zia, London,
Ian Payne makes a good point. Why are so many people still paying throught the nose to go to matches?. Mad. Give it a break for a few weeks. Stand back from all the hype and rubbish surrounding football and content yourself with televised football. There's enough of it.
john, Hove, England
I'd wondered why everyone was asking if I'd seen Steve McClaren on YouTube this week - now I know why......
You just don't know whether to laugh or cry.
Rob, Ealing, UK
My Great Great Uncle was a co-founder of WBA & first Mayor & modern social architect of West Bromwich in the 1880's. He would be turning in his grave at footballers getting all this money in the C21st !!!!!! I hate the game, but if I were a football fan I would stop going to matches out of protest !
ian payne, walsall,
I'm a Man United Fan and am totally sickened by The Ronaldo, Frank Lampard, David Bentley, Emmanuel Adebayor etc etc etc etc stories. If they could all be more like Scholes and Giggs, faith would be restored. None of them can hold a candle or are fit to tie up the shoelaces of Adlington or Hoy.
GE, London,
I thought Frank's comment about the feeling he had towards Chelsea and the fans smacked of cow excrement. If did feel like that why not sign the first contract presented and try to play well enough to get an extra year on the contract rather than play it out with AC.
Fred, London,