20 November 2009 - 15H55  
- 2010 FIFA World Cup - FIFA - football - France - Ireland

FIFA rejects Ireland's call for France rematch
French footballer Thierry Henry said that he supported a rematch against Ireland, but hours after FIFA officially ruled out the possibility of a replay of the controversial World Cup playoff game.
By FRANCE 24 (text)
 

 

 

The football world’s ruling body FIFA officially turned down Friday a request from the Irish football authorities to stage a replay of their controversial November 18 World Cup playoff defeat against France. The match resulted in France qualifying for the 2010 World Cup, and Ireland not going to South Africa.

The controversy arose after a blatant handball from forward Thierry Henry led to France's decisive equaliser.

Henry himself surprised the sporting world Friday by saying in a media statement that "the fairest solution would be to replay the game", increasing pressure on the French football federation to call for a rematch.

The line taken by FIFA, as it said in a press statement, is: "As is clearly mentioned in the Laws of the Game, during matches, decisions are taken by the referee and these decisions are final."

Hervé Armoric, a Dublin-based journalist, told France 24 that though the Irish were not surprised by FIFA’s decision, they were hoping France would rise to the occasion and gallantly offer a rematch. “The Irish were hoping the French would feel so guilty they would play the match again, that Thierry Henry would want so badly for France and Europe to remember him as a hero and not a cheat that he would use all his influence to convince the decision makers to allow a replay.”

Amoric added that the Henry incident was regarded in Ireland as such an outrage that Irish bookmakers, out of “patriotic duty,” were “reimbursing those who bet on Ireland to win.”

The outcome of the match has become an international incident, with both countries heads of state getting involved, often against the counsel of their advisors. Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen on Thursday raised the issue with French President Nicolas Sarkozy at a Brussels summit, where football was in no way on the agenda. Sarkozy apologised to Cowen, but would not agree to a rematch.

The Internet is abuzz with anti-Thierry sentiment, including three Facebook sites dedicated to calling a boycott against Gillette, simply because they sponsor the French team.

A group called We Irish Hate Thierry Henry (the cheat) already has over 80,000 "fans". One anti-Thierrist created a video game in the “Pong” model, in which the player can take the role of Henry’s hand and swat a football into a goal.

 

Comments (4)

FRANCE MUST replay the match!

Unless we all want cheating and lying to suceed, unless we want all youth to think us adults hypocrites, the match must be replayed. Who cares if FIFA cannot decide to have the Ireland-France match replayed? FRANCE can decide this and arrange to do this with Ireland. France & people of France, please do the right thing. This is about more than just sport. (However, Thierry Henry should not be permitted to play, nor should he ever again be chosen as captain of the France side.)

Thanks to the honest people of France who also see it this way.

Henry's handball incident

If FIFA believes in Fair Play, they will insist on a replay between France and the Republic of Ireland. The 'beautiful game' deserves no less! Any world cup involving a team that did not qualify fairly will have long-lasting repercussions on the game. Or is it a matter of money with FIFA allowing a bigger country to qualify instead of playing by the rules. Football is not a matter of life and death. It's more important than that. The number of Irish children who held Henry as an icon! How have they been let down. Shame!

Rematch

help ireland get a rematch

Ireland-France football match

It seems like "Cheaters,Cheaters" do win sometimes. Shame on you France. It is high time that FIFA allows and uses Video replay technology in contested matches.

Post new comment

To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.

Related Content

SPORT - latest sports news report, from football to rugby. View sports video, get F1, tennis and cycling results
FOOTBALL
Manchester City beat Bolton to close in on top four
A characteristically erratic Manchester City laboured to defeat Bolton Wanderers (2-0) and move into fifth place in the Premier League, behind Liverpool on goal average but with a game in hand.
Close