As a liberal lefty I have always struggled with the
notion of patriotism, which has traditionally left me with an uneasy
relationship with the English national team. However, as I edge ever closer to
my thirties, this relationship has become a lot easier. In fact I have come to
positively embrace the English national team whilst keeping to my liberal and
left wing beliefs. As Blackburn Rovers
(my team) for the first time in my memory do not have any players in any of the
squads I have been frantically trying to decide which teams I should get behind
if England were to go out. I have based my choices around my political beliefs
so even though I have a soft spot for Brazil they do not make the list. Please let me
know what you think.
Uruguay
Group: D
Key
Player: Luis Suarez (Liverpool)
Ghana
Group: G
Key
Player: Majeed Waris (Spartak Moscow)
Reason
for support: If
Ghana’s pride and passion shown in the 2010 World Cup was not enough to lend
your support there are several other reasons to support Ghana. The country has very low carbon emissions (Carbon emissions 2010
(metric tons per capita) – 0.4) as well as low military expenditure (Military
expenditure 2012 (% of GDP) – 0.3). They were also the first sub-Saharan
African nation to gain independence from Britain in 1957. The newly
self-governing nation changed its name from Gold Coast and adopted a flag that
featured the tri-colour banner of Ethiopia and a black star that recalled
Marcus Garvey’s philosophy of black self-sufficiency, race pride and
pan-African unity. Playing for Ghana and wearing the black star was seen by
many of the players as a sign of resistance to imperialism and African pride.
Cote D’Ivoire
Group: C
Key
Player: Yaya Toure (Manchester City)
Reason
for support: Ivory Coast have many of my favourite
players in world football, including Yaya Toure and Didier Drogba, and I am
excited to see them play together. There is also the story of how the national
team led by Drogba played a vital role in bringing peace to their country.
After the Ivory Coast qualified for the 2006 World Cup the team made a
desperate plea to the combatants, asking them to lay down their arms, a plea
which was answered with a cease fire after five years of civil war. Drogba
later helped move an African Cup of Nations qualifier to the rebel and
separatist stronghold of Bouake; a move that helped confirm the peace process
by bringing the country together as the area rallied around the national team
which they had previously felt isolated from. Ivory Coast also have the lowest
carbon emissions of all the countries in the World Cup (Carbon emissions 2010
(metric tons per capita) – 0.3).
Ecuador
Group: E
Key
Player: Antonio Valencia (Manchester United)
Reason
for support: Of all the teams in my five, this is the
team I know the least about (apart from what I have recently read and I am
currently watching the England Vs Ecuador team as I type). So why have I
included Ecuador in my list? Well, it is
mainly due to my admiration of their President Rafael Correa. In his previous
Presidential term (he was re-elected in 2013) his administration saw
unemployment fall to 4.1% – a record low for at least 25 years. Poverty fell by
27% since 2006. Public spending on education has more than doubled, in real
(inflation-adjusted) terms. Increased healthcare spending has expanded access
to medical care, and other social spending has also increased substantially,
including a vast expansion of government-subsidised housing credit.
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Group: F
Key
Players: Edin Dzeko (Manchester City)
Reason for support: Bosnia &
Herzegovina is definitely one of the most beautiful places I have had the joys
to visit. This will be Bosnia’s first World Cup finals since Bosnia became an
independent nation. Bosnia’s first XI would not be disgraced at any World Cup
finals either. Up front they have Manchester City’s Edin Džeko and Stuttgart’s
Vedad Ibišević to score the goals, Roma’s Miralem Pjanić provides the midfield
guile and, in defence, captain Emir Spahić and goalkeeper Asmir Begović have
raised a formidable barrier.
Bosnia is a country which has been divided by war but is now
being reunited by football. Back in 1992 Bosnia declared
independence. Bosnia was always a multi-ethnic nation within the Yugoslav
republic; half-Bosnian Muslim and the rest largely Serb and Croat. But during
the subsequent war it tore itself apart from the inside as communities turned
on each other.
As
many as 100,000 people died in two-and-a-half years, leaving behind familiar
names for ever associated with bloodshed. There was, of course, the siege of
Sarajevo, the longest in modern European warfare, and the massacre of
Srebrenica, where 8,000 Bosnian men, from boys to pensioners, were murdered by
a Serb militia. The team is a true
representative of the country as a whole with Asmir Begović’s family escaping whilst
Džeko stayed and lived through the tragedy. The team have come on leaps and
bounds as only fifteen years ago the players had to buy their own shirts. The
new found uniting positivity brought to the country by the football team, which
has had such a troubled past, is well worth supporting in my opinion.
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