Analysis: When mixing soccer and Israeli politics becomes Messi
“If Messi came, it would be Messianic. If he doesn’t come, it shows we have a country that’s messy.”
Argentina calls off friendly match against Israel, June 6, 2018 (Reuters)
ByGIL HOFFMANUpdated: Politicians from across the political spectrum pounced on the decision by the Argentinean soccer team late Tuesday night to cancel its participation in a game that was set to take place in Jerusalem’s Teddy Stadium, five days ahead of the opening of the World Cup.Some Knesset members called it a victory for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.Some blamed the international media for giving the team a false impression that Israel is unsafe.And many accused the government of losing the game due to its own mismanagement. The critics included leading Likud figures eager to see the shaming of Culture and Sport Minister Miri Regev.The politicians also used their share of soccer metaphors. The Joint List’s Haneen Zoabi said she was happy the Argentineans gave Israel a red card. Her faction colleague Ahmad Tibi said the Palestinians won 1-0 in the 90th minute of the game and that Regev scored an own-goal for the other team.Yesh Atid MK Haim Jelin mocked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for thinking he could save the game by calling Argentinean President Mauricio Macri, who told Netanyahu there was nothing he could do.“Netanyahu clearly doesn’t understand how it works in South America,” said Jelin, who was born in Buenos Aires. “In South America, soccer runs the politicians, and not the other way around.”