More Than the Game
Every four years the football world goes a little nuts.
No, I’m not talking about the world cup and I’m not talking
about the Euro. I’m talking of course, about the Olympics.
Unlike other major football tournaments tactics and egos don’t
dominate discussions instead the validity of the tournament provides ample
talking points.
This got me thinking, why do we play football in the
Olympics?
Not only is the tournament not backed by FIFA but there are
a number of differences that work against traditional football norms.
For example England does not compete as a separate nation
opting instead to share their chance at glory with the other nations of the
British Isles under the banner of Great Brittan.
To add to the mayhem countries cannot select their strongest
squads, instead National teams comprise of under-23 players and are only
allowed to field a limited number of over age players.
At first glance Olympic football appears as though it is
merely a second rate, unofficial and therefore pointless exercise.
However, it wasn’t always this way.
Prior to the FIFA World Cup the Olympics were the pinnacle
of the footballing world, the only major global football competition that
allowed nations to field a full squad and unleash the very best of their
abilities, today the tournament is a shadow of its former self.
But is this actually bad?
Despite many football fans’ valid confusion about the
tournament those very fans are missing something.
Olympic football isn’t about the football.
The Olympics represent the very essence of sportsmanship, of
fair play and of never giving up.
The ‘Olympic Spirit’ is hard to put into words but it is a
universal concept that has a special, pure place in the minds and hearts of
sport fans around the world.
Football is the world’s most popular game and true fans
understand the raw emotion that only football can evoke.
Football at the Olympics is unlike football in any other
tournament.
It does not search for the World’s best team and it isn’t
really official but what it does do is bring the sport back to its roots,
playing for the fun of it and giving it your best shot.
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