THE GOVERNMENT intervened yesterday in the escalating row over France’s fiercely disputed win in the World Cup play-off against Ireland by calling for the match to be replayed.
Minister for Sport Martin Cullen wrote to Fifa president Sepp Blatter urging him to call a rematch in the interests of fair play.
Taoiseach Brian Cowen raised the issue with French president Nicolas Sarkozy on the fringes of last night’s EU summit. Mr Cowen said: “I think that he would understand the sense of disappointment that the Irish feel after the tremendous performance last night. And, as I say, this matter is going to be resolved by the sports organisations responsible for football, not in Brussels or anywhere else.”
Mr Sarkozy said: “I said to Brian Cowen, who is a friend of mine as you know, that I was sorry for them and how I was struck by the talent and vigour of the Irish team.”
The FAI’s hopes of winning what would be a remarkable reprieve appeared to rest with the French football federation last night, however, after officials of the game’s governing body dismissed the idea that the game might be replayed. “There is no way the game can be replayed,” said a source at Fifa headquarters in Switzerland. “To do so would cause absolute chaos for football. If it was replayed then every match in the future would also be subject to these calls for a replay any time a referee misses an incident.” The French Federation was keeping a low profile yesterday amid suggestions that Fifa was attempting behind the scenes to budge it into some sort of action.
Ireland manager Giovanni Trapattoni told reporters he believed a replay was an “impossible” hope, however.
French captain Thierry Henry has admitted handling the ball before setting up team-mate William Gallas for the late goal that denied the Republic a place at next year’s World Cup finals in South Africa. As the story filled airwaves around the world yesterday, online petitions sprung up in support of a rematch, with more than 100,000 people joining one of many Facebook groups making the demand. In France, where politicians, pundits and philosophers have been drawn into the intense debate over l’affaire Henry, prime minister François Fillon said “neither the French government nor the Irish Government should interfere in the functioning of the international federation” but added that Paris would respect Fifa’s decision.