Football

Terry divides opinion again with England exit

Share Bookmark Print Rating
PHOTO | IAN KINGTON | FILE In a file picture taken on November 15, 2011 England's Captain John Terry gestures during the match against Sweden during their International friendly football match at Wembley Stadium in London.

PHOTO | IAN KINGTON | FILE In a file picture taken on November 15, 2011 England's Captain John Terry gestures during the match against Sweden during their International friendly football match at Wembley Stadium in London. Former England captain John Terry announced his retirement from international football on September 23, 2012, saying the Football Association had made his position "untenable".  AFP

By AFP
Posted  Monday, September 24  2012 at  05:57

In Summary

  • Terry made his England debut in 2003 and within three years became captain under coach Steve McClaren, a position he maintained when Fabio Capello took charge of the national side
  • However the Italian stripped Terry of a role he clearly coveted following lurid allegations the defender had had an affair with French model Vanessa Perroncel -- a former partner of team-mate Wayne Bridge
  • The panel who gave Liverpool striker Luiz Suarez an eight-match ban when finding him guilty of racially abusing Manchester United defender Patrice Evra last season said just using racist language was enough to constitute a breach of FA rules
SHARE THIS STORY

LONDON

For many Chelsea fans John Terry, who dramatically retired from England duty on Sunday, is a club legend fit to be spoken of in the same breath as Stamford Bridge greats such as Ron 'Chopper' Harris.

As far as they are concerned he is a man who has been let down by the 'blazers' and been hung out to dry by officials looking to cover themselves.

For them allegations of racially abusing Anton Ferdinand last October are a media-generated storm in a tea cup, all the more so as he was cleared of criminal charges by a London court in July.

Yet, judging by phone-ins following Sunday's announcement, there are plenty of other football fans who are far less enamoured of 'JT'.

Both groups would probably agree on Terry's merits as a tough-tackling centre-half who never gives up on the most desperate of goal-line clearances.

Someone in no doubt about Terry's worth as a footballer is current England manager Roy Hodgson, who had made it clear he wants the 31-year-old in his squad as the team try to qualify for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

This makes the timing of Terry's international retirement in one sense puzzling, although the fact a Football Association improper conduct hearing into the Ferdinand incident was due to start on Monday may provide an explanation.

"Representing and captaining my country is what I dreamed of as a boy and it has been a truly great honour," said Terry.

"I have always given my all and it breaks my heart to make this decision. I want to wish Roy and the team every success for the future.

"I am making this statement today in advance of the hearing of the FA disciplinary charge because I feel The FA, in pursuing charges against me where I have already been cleared in a court of law, have made my position with the national team untenable."

Terry made his England debut in 2003 and within three years became captain under coach Steve McClaren, a position he maintained when Fabio Capello took charge of the national side.

However the Italian stripped Terry of a role he clearly coveted following lurid allegations the defender had had an affair with French model Vanessa Perroncel -- a former partner of team-mate Wayne Bridge.

That happened shortly before England's disastrous 2010 World Cup campaign in South Africa where Terry, in what was an admirable display of common sense or a dereliction of duty depending on your view, challenged Italian boss Capello's authority by calling for the manager to relax his hardline regime.

However, Capello remained a fan and restored Terry to the England captaincy.

Yet after the furore involving QPR's Ferdinand in a Premier League match last October, FA officials felt they had no choice but to stand Terry down from the captaincy.

FA chairman David Bernstein did so without first consulting Capello, a move that prompted the Italian's resignation.

For Terry and his supporters the fact he has been acquitted in a court trial should be the end of any attempts to clear his name.

1 | 2 Next Page»

                   
 

IN PICTURES: Police thwart mechanics riot

The signatures of British Prime Minister David Cameron (L) and US President Barack Obama are pictured on a patchwork quilt made by students working on a school project about the G8 Summit during a visit by British Prime Minister David Cameron and US President Barack Obama (not shown) at the Enniskillen Integrated Primary School in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, on June 17, 2013. PHOTO | MATT DUNHAM | AFP

IN PICTURES: The G8 Summit

IN PICTURES: Firearms recovered in terror suspect residence

President Uhuru Kenyatta having some fun with the rugby players after he handed them the national flag at State House, Nairobi on June 14, 2013. Photo/CHRIS OMOLLO

IN PICTURES: Uhuru roots for rugby