July 2006
S M T W T F S
« Jun   Aug »
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  











Earlier today, Zidane was interviewed in France (see the interview here [for all my readers who understand French]) and was finally asked about what provoked his attack.

Here is a translated excerpt of the interview (Courtesy of BBC News):

Interviewer: You know the Italian players well because you played in Italy for five years. Did you have any problem with any of them beforehand?

Zinedine Zidane: Not at all. You always have friction with certain players…that is the game, it has always been like that. But I never had any clashes with anyone.

Interviewer: Nor Materazzi?

Zinedine Zidane: No, never. There was nothing beforehand and nothing in the match until he started pulling my jersey.

He grabbed my shirt and I told him to stop. I told him if he wanted I’d swap it with him at the end of the match.

That is when he said some very hard words, which were harder than gestures. He repeated them several times. It all happened very quickly and he spoke about things which hurt me deep down.

Interviewer: Everyone wants to know exactly what he said…

Zinedine Zidane: They were very serious things, very personal things.

Interviewer: About your mother and your sister?

Zinedine Zidane: Yes. They were very hard words. You hear them once and you try to move away.

But then you hear them twice, and then a third time… I am a man and some words are harder to hear than actions. I would rather have taken a blow to the face than hear that.

Interviewer: He said these things about your mother and sister two or three times?

Zinedine Zidane: Yes. I reacted and of course it is not a gesture you should do. I must say that strongly.

It was seen by two or three billion people watching on television and millions and millions of children.

It was an inexcusable gesture and to them, and the people in education whose job it is to show children what they should and shouldn’t do, I want to apologise.

Interviewer: You apologise to them but do you really regret having done it?

Zinedine Zidane: I can’t regret it because if I do it would be like admitting that he was right to say all that. And above all, it was not right.

We always talk about the reaction, and inevitably it must be punished. But if there is no provocation, there is no reaction.

First of all you have to say there is provocation, and the guilty one is the one who does the provoking. The response is to always punish the reaction, but if I react, something has happened.

Do you imagine that in a World Cup final like that, with just 10 minutes to go to the end of my career, I am going to do something like that because it gives me pleasure?

Interviewer: No of course not. But at the moment you exploded…

Zinedine Zidane: There was provocation, and it was very serious, that is all. My action was inexcusable but you have to punish the real culprit, and the real culprit is the one who provoked it. Voila.


5 Responses to “Zidane explains why he headbutted Materazzi”

  1. 1 Salman from: United States usyour flag

    It’s understandable yes, but the action he took was a bit extream. Then again who knows what Materazzi said.

  2. 2 Yaser from: United States usyour flag

    Allahu A’lam, we can only assume the best for Zidane :), we were not in his shoes at the time.

  3. 3 Mohammed Abdelwahab from: Australia auyour flag

    Subhana Allah (SWT),
    When I saw that is was Zidane, I could not stop laughing. I believe justice was served to Materazzi but not to France.

    I am not Australian

  4. 4 Ali from: United States usyour flag

    I back him and his statement. I just hope they don’t take away his award.

  5. 5 salam from: United States usyour flag

    alhamdullah,
    he finally did it right, finally explained himself, he does’t look like a monster anymore he looks like a hero again…yaser your right, we just assume the best and stand by him….

Leave a Reply