Beckenbauer calls for summit to stop play-acting (Reuters) Updated: 2006-07-07 09:44 Franz Beckenbauer has called
for a summit meeting of players, coaches and referees in a bid to stop the
increasing trend towards play-acting and feigning injury which has blighted
matches at the World Cup.
 German former national
soccer player and President of the World Cup 2006 Organising Committee
Franz Beckenbauer (L) kicks the official soccer ball for the World Cup
2006 final, as German Chancellor Angela Merkel watches at the Chancellery
in Berlin July 6, 2006. [Reuters] | Beckenbauer,
president of the German organising committee who skippered West Germany to World
Cup victory in 1974 and coached them to success in 1990, said it was time for
players to stop cheating in a bid to gain an unfair advantage.
"I think it is time to get the players, the coaches and the referees around
the table and try to find some sort of solution to this problem.
"None of us in the game wants these incidents. The players are seeking to
gain an unfair advantage and attempt to exploit every situation.
"The referees are there to correct this kind of misconduct, but the players
do not make it easy for the referees.
"If I was a referee I would also show the yellow card to any player who
signalled to the ref with an imaginary card to get an opponent booked. That is
also cheating."
World governing body FIFA and its European counterpart UEFA are planning a
technical convention with coaches, referees and players' representatives in
Berlin in September to discuss the World Cup with cheating and play-acting set
to be on the agenda.
Beckenbauer was also disappointed with the number of goal attempts at the
finals, adding, "as the old German coach Sepp Herberger used to show, if you
don't shoot, you won't score. Well there have not been enough shots on goal as
far as I am concerned."
Speaking six years to the day after Germany was awarded the right to stage
the finals by FIFA, Beckenbauer said the World Cup had been an astonishing
success and had brought people together in a way the organisers could only have
dreamed of.
"The Fan Miles have been a spectacular success and Germany has celebrated the
World Cup in a way few thought was possible."
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