Crime and punishment

Posted: January 16, 2014 in Uncategorized

I’m sure I’m not the only one who raised an eyebrow at today’s story about a soccer player being banned from the game for five years … for spitting at a referee.

I didn’t witness the incident and I don’t know anything about the player involved, 28-year-old Detroy Smith, a midfield player with St. David’s but really, FIVE YEARS? For an amateur player? For spitting? Liverpool’s Luis Suarez, one of the best professional players on the planet, only got 10 games for the far more heinous crime of biting an opponent during a game!

I’m certainly not condoning Smith’s anti-social behaviour but surely the punishment is way out of perspective. I understand that the Bermuda FA want to stamp out this sort of behaviour (Bermuda referees get enough abuse as it is) but surely such an excessive ban is not only sending the wrong message but could potentially have an unintentional knock-on effect socially.

This sort of draconian and heavy-handed reaction – a long-time feature of Bermuda’s soccer and cricket authorities – may drive Smith out of the game for good. Is that fair – given the humiliating publicity that such a ban receives in the press – or desirable? Surely it is far better to ban him for a number of games or to the end of the season than risk losing a player to the sport (or to another sport) altogether.

I have no idea whether Smith is a fine, upstanding citizen normally or a sociopathic threat to society but let’s say he was a younger man for whom soccer was a way of escaping the clutches of less positive influences in his life, perhaps even gang involvement? Idle hands (or feet), devil’s work and all that. Surely far better to make every effort to keep him open to those positive influences.

Through my son’s involvement with junior soccer, every week I see young boys from every background dedicate themselves to training three times a week plus a game on Saturdays. It’s unquestionably healthy and I’d like to think that the discipline, teamwork and social interaction they get from it will stand them in good stead in later life, not to mention the possibility of a career in the sport or a college scholarship. Sure, some of them will go off the rails regardless but I’d be willing to bet that number would be far greater without soccer.

Yes, sporting bodies should be commended for trying to promote good behaviour, sportsmanship and so on but perhaps their zeal to enforce it needs to be tempered for the good of the game too.

 

 

 

A very good year

Posted: December 31, 2013 in music

I don’t know about you, but I thought 2013 was one of the best years in music for a long time. Not least because so many of my favourite bands not only released albums after long hiatuses but burnished their legacy with work of real worth. Add to that a bunch of promising newcomers and more established artists hitting their creative stride, there was so much to enjoy that I chickened out of choosing my annual top ten and went for 15 instead (plus a couple of honourable mentions).

So for what it’s worth, here are my personal favourites. Enjoy – and let me know what your picks were. You might also want to check out my friend Mark Nash’s top FIFTY (!) list – he clearly listens to way more music than me!


 

Past lists:  2012 | 201120102009 |  2008

David L. White (1933-2013)

I was saddened to hear of the death of David L. White, former editor of The Royal Gazette, who passed away last night after a long illness.

While he and I did not always see eye to eye professionally during our time at Par-La-Ville Road, we enjoyed a far more cordial relationship after he retired and I came to respect his talents and generosity of spirit that weren’t always appreciated or valued in the chaotic and dysfunctional nature of a daily newsroom.

In fact, had it not been for David I would not have ended up in Bermuda at all, let alone call it my home for more than 30 years as it was he who interviewed me at the Berkeley Hotel in London in 1982 for a job on the sports desk of the Gazette.

It was the longest and most entertaining interview I’ve ever had, largely because by the time we’d finished, it was early evening and he insisted on buying dinner. As we sat down, he asked me what I would like to drink. Not knowing the protocol one should take with a prospective (and foreign) employer, I asked what he was having. “I’m having a f******g double vodka and tonic!” he declared loudly. “The single measures you Limeys serve are a joke!”

And so we proceeded to consume an absurd quantity of vodka and good wine. I have no idea what we talked about from then on but as I stood swaying on the Tube platform later that night waiting for the train home, I remember feeling confident that I would be leaving England for a tiny island in the Atlantic later that year.

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