Teams focused on World Cup, not politics, had easier passage to the last 16: Wenger

With the Qatar World Cup seeing an unusual amount of political discussion from teams, former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said that team

December 05, 2022 05:41 pm | Updated December 06, 2022 06:14 pm IST - AL RAYYAN, Qatar

Former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger stands in the tribune before the World Cup group G match between Serbia and Switzerland, at the Stadium 974 in Doha, on December 2, 2022

Former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger stands in the tribune before the World Cup group G match between Serbia and Switzerland, at the Stadium 974 in Doha, on December 2, 2022 | Photo Credit: AP

The outcome of the World Cup group stages showed the teams that advanced without complication were those best prepared mentally and not distracted by political issues, according to former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger.

Referring to shock exits by Germany, Belgium, and Denmark, Wenger, speaking during a technical analysis of the group stages by the world governing body FIFA, said it was notable the teams that focused on football and started well, like Brazil, France, and England, had easier passage to the last 16.

"The teams who were not disappointing in their first game performance — because when you got to the World Cup you know you have not to lose the first game — are the teams with experience, they have results... they played well in first game," Wenger said on Sunday.

"The teams as well who were mentally ready and had the mindset to focus on the competition and not on political demonstrations."

Political discussion

The Qatar World Cup has seen an unusual amount of political discussion from teams, with some voicing concerns about the host's treatment of migrant labour, its approach to LGBT rights and FIFA's threats to penalise players for political statements.

Germany's federation was the most vocal in pressing for anti-discrimination "OneLove" armbands to be worn by players and said "extreme blackmail" led to Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Netherlands, Wales, England and Switzerland abandoning plans to wear them.

Before their surprise opening defeat by Japan, the German team posed for a pre-match photo with their hands on their mouths, alluding to them being silenced by FIFA.

Denmark also made a stand over the armbands and last month wanted to use training kit with slogans in support for human rights.

Speculation had swirled over a threat by Denmark to withdraw from FIFA over the armbands, which its federation dismissed as a media misunderstanding.

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