‘Honest’ Harry
The producer of
Match of The Day must have thought himself a very lucky man on Saturday night
when he saw the dismal performance of Arsenal against Norwich. Not only had he got himself a match that
people would want to watch – small club upsets one of the big-time Charlies –
but he had already booked ‘Honest’ Harry Redknapp as a guest pundit for the
show. What a stroke of luck to have
'Honest' Harry there on the day that his old foes at Arsenal gave such a feeble
and embarrassing display against the mighty Norwich.
Notwithstanding the
rave reviews Arsenal had received on previous MOTD programmes earlier in the
season, ‘Honest’ Harry let us all know that the resentment and personal hurt are
still as strong as ever they were during the period he failed miserably
to move his Tottenham side above Arsenal for the first time since Noah set
sail. Paraphrasing, he said that Arsenal were rubbish and a weak team and had
no chance of getting into the top 4 this season. Of course, still essentially
the same team that managed to rise from the floor of a 0-2 deficit against his
much-hyped Tottenham side the last time they met, so much so that Arsenal ended
up 5-2 victors that day. That must have
hurt.
Still, no sour
grapes on ‘Honest’ Harry’s part, I’m sure.
His comments on Saturday must have been entirely objective, in the best
traditions of a pundit with no axe to grind.
Andrew Mitchell – just a common yob?
So, after more time
in the news than is often accorded to major earthquakes or similar natural disasters,
Andrew Mitchell eventually succumbed to what he saw as the inevitable and
resigned from the Government. His crime? A cynic might say it was to commit an error
of judgement when there was not much else in the news to force the Opposition to
concentrate on more important matters.
I am as puzzled as
the next person as to where the truth lies between Andrew Mitchell’s very sketchy
account of his engagement with the forces of law, order and security at the
entrance to Downing Street a few weeks ago, and the apparent accounts of those
forces themselves. Mitchell denies the
words attributed to him by those forces, but still felt guilty enough to apologise
for whatever it was that he did say. I don’t suppose we’ll ever know the truth.
But what are we to
make of the Labour Party’s pursuit of this issue as though it was a matter of
the utmost importance? Could it be that
they knew if they kept on about it Mitchell would eventually have to resign –
thus handing them a ‘victory’? Even
though I imagine most people groaned out loud whenever Ed Miliband returned to
the theme at PM’s Questions.
And was Ed right to
suggest that Mitchell had been afforded treatment not granted to a common yob –
who would have spent a night in the cells for verbally abusing a policeman? That always seemed to me a slightly
ridiculous assertion – as a quick look at any of the many documentaries
currently on TV showing the police in action would demonstrate. These fly-on-the-wall documentaries charting
the forces of law and order’s everyday attempts to deal with drunken yobs
on a Friday night, or errant motorists,
or groups of young people intent on making life miserable for the communities in
which they live, all show that you can get away with a huge amount of abuse and
foul language towards the police without being arrested. I don’t agree with it, but it seems to be a
fact.
As with so many
things, the reality of life seems to be very different from the picture
painted, or imagined by our politicians.
How could this have been undetected – Part 1
I don’t wish to say
much about Jimmy Savile, partly because I know no more than you, since my only
sources of information are also available to you. I might wonder whether the level of ‘evidence’
apparently available today is very different from that which was available to
the various police forces who looked into allegations whilst he was still alive. I might wonder if the standard of evidence
required is now much lower since he is no longer with us, and since he can’t
answer back.
But my chief worry
in all this is how this could have failed to emerge whilst he was still alive,
given the apparent scale of what went on?
I know all about his good works for charity and how he was regarded as
beyond suspicion. But it also seems that
whilst many complaints were made, nobody made a connection between them and so a
broad picture never emerged. How could
this have happened? Surely some of those
allegations came to the attention of the marauding and insatiable investigative
reporters of the national media? Why was
it that they did not pursue their prey with the same vigour as they would
almost anyone else?
How could this have been undetected – Part 2
And on the same
track – although with a very different set of circumstances, how did the world
of cycling fail to find out the truth of the Lance Armstrong doping allegations
after so many investigations over so many years? It’s incredible that a sport so intimately
associated with drugs scandals over the years could have failed to spot the
Armstrong situation, given the amount of testing done generally and,
specifically, of the man himself.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments welcomed - although I reserve the right to behave grumpily when I read them