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Sport

Bigots must find another stage to vent their anger

December 10, 2009 10:45

By

Danny Caro,

Danny Caro

2 min read

And here are the results: Football 1, antisemitism 0. Boxing 0, antisemitism 1. That has been the outcome of two major sporting events in the UK over the past two weeks.

It’s clear from this that sport and politics do not mix. Sport has been used as a platform by organisations and countries to protest and vent their anger towards political situations, but this reached new heights on Saturday night when Dmitriy Salita experience race hate walking into the ring.

The reason that Salita got into boxing in the first place was to be able to defend himself and stand up to bullying as an eight-year-old. Although I would’ve expected him to have been a bit more thick-skinned in the red-hot atmosphere of a boxing arena in Newcastle, the behaviour of part of the crowd was totally unacceptable and Salita deserves credit for the way he conducted himself before and after the fight. It’s clear to me that antisemitism, as well as racism, in sport continues to be an issue at all levels and must be met by the firmest of hands.

Although the headline on the bac page is dramatic, Maccabi Haifa are not the worst team to have played in the Champions League in my eyes. Priced at 500-1 in the Racing Post to win the competition before the group stages started, they looked in for a rough ride once the draw was made, paired up with former winners Bayern Munich, Jewventus and the defending French champions.

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