PARIS – Lawmakers involved in a closed-door hearing about France’s World Cup fiasco grumbled that coach Raymond Domenech refused to take any responsibility for his team’s misbehaviour and offered no real explanations yesterday.
Lawmakers said Domenech, who was retiring, tried to pin blame on the press during the parliamentary hearing. Prominent lawmaker Jean-Francois Cope said his testimony ‘wasn’t very dignified.’ Many had kinder words for French Football Federation president Jean-Pierre Escalettes, who plans to resign this week, and who also testified at the hearing held by the National Assembly’s commission on culture and education.The hearing went ahead despite a warning from Fifa about French government meddling in football affairs. Fifa president Sepp Blatter said the national team risks suspension if President Nicolas Sarkozy or political leaders interfere in the running of the federation. Lawmakers replied that it wasn’t Blatter’s place to tell them how to do their jobs.’It isn’t Fifa’s role to threaten French lawmakers; we’re in a democracy and parliamentarians have the right to hear anyone they want,’ said lawmaker Eric Ciotti.’This isn’t just about football, it’s about France: It’s our honour that’s at stake,’ added lawmaker Jacques Remiller.Remiller said the whole hearing was ‘disappointing and not convincing at all.’’There will have to be more resignations at the federation, because the problems are deeply, deeply rooted,’ he said.France, which won the 1998 World Cup and was runner-up four years ago, failed to win a game. Worse than that, players went on strike at training after forward Nicolas Anelka was sent home for insulting Domenech. Domenech added yet more dismay by refusing to shake hands with rival coach Carlos Alberto Parreira after France’s 2-1 loss to host South Africa. Lawmakers said Domenech blamed L’Equipe newspaper, which printed details of Anelka’s expletive-laden tirade, for the disarray. Domenech also said the paper misquoted the comments.’All Domenech says is, ‘it’s the press, it’s the press’,’ complained lawmaker Bernard Debre.Domenech entered and left the hearing through a side door, carefully avoiding reporters. He told lawmakers he refused to shake hands with the South Africa coach because Parreira had reportedly made disparaging comments about the French team to reporters, Cope said.’You can find that a convincing argument, or not,’ he said, clearly indicating he didn’t.Cope added that lawmakers were planning to offer a series of measures to ‘modernise the governance of the French federation.’ – Nampa-AP
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