Late US winner thrills Clinton
BILL Clinton, the former US President known for his eloquence and diplomacy, found himself rejoicing like any other fan after the United States scored its dramatic winner against Algeria in the World Cup.
Clinton was sitting in the stands with dignitaries at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria on Wednesday when forward Landon Donovan got a winner in added time to send the US into the last 16.
"I lost my voice yesterday. I was very diplomatic until we scored," Clinton said in an interview with a roundtable of journalists yesterday.
"When that sucker went in there, I said, 'Thank God for overtime'," he added, having joined in the celebrations after a pulsating 1-0 win over Algeria that left the US top of Group C above favorite England.
"Both the United States and Algeria played that game with both their minds and their hearts in the right place."
Clinton went to the US changing room after the match, where he said some players asked him to stay for a beer, or two. "In the locker room, all they talked about was how they played as a team. They were a happy crowd yesterday."
Clinton, who was introduced to soccer when he went to England as a Rhodes Scholar in the late 1960s, has been impressed with the way the US squad has overcome adversity, including having two goals disallowed. He plans to attend the next US match against Ghana in the second round on Saturday.
The former US leader said while the world's soccer powers do not see the United States as reaching their level, there is a grudging respect for the battling Americans.
"Argentina and Brazil think that we are better at this then we are," he said. "Others have been doing it longer. That is OK. I think they believe that we are serious about it now."
Clinton, president when the US hosted the World Cup in 1994, has been in South Africa campaigning to bring the event back to the US, where he said every team can find a home base of support among the various ethnic groups in the country. He has also pondered how the sport can be used as a proxy for peacefully battling over the ethnic and political issues that have persistently divided countries and peoples.
"The real trick is not to ask people to give up the particularities of their identities but to give them a place to put it that is not destructive," he said.
Clinton was sitting in the stands with dignitaries at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria on Wednesday when forward Landon Donovan got a winner in added time to send the US into the last 16.
"I lost my voice yesterday. I was very diplomatic until we scored," Clinton said in an interview with a roundtable of journalists yesterday.
"When that sucker went in there, I said, 'Thank God for overtime'," he added, having joined in the celebrations after a pulsating 1-0 win over Algeria that left the US top of Group C above favorite England.
"Both the United States and Algeria played that game with both their minds and their hearts in the right place."
Clinton went to the US changing room after the match, where he said some players asked him to stay for a beer, or two. "In the locker room, all they talked about was how they played as a team. They were a happy crowd yesterday."
Clinton, who was introduced to soccer when he went to England as a Rhodes Scholar in the late 1960s, has been impressed with the way the US squad has overcome adversity, including having two goals disallowed. He plans to attend the next US match against Ghana in the second round on Saturday.
The former US leader said while the world's soccer powers do not see the United States as reaching their level, there is a grudging respect for the battling Americans.
"Argentina and Brazil think that we are better at this then we are," he said. "Others have been doing it longer. That is OK. I think they believe that we are serious about it now."
Clinton, president when the US hosted the World Cup in 1994, has been in South Africa campaigning to bring the event back to the US, where he said every team can find a home base of support among the various ethnic groups in the country. He has also pondered how the sport can be used as a proxy for peacefully battling over the ethnic and political issues that have persistently divided countries and peoples.
"The real trick is not to ask people to give up the particularities of their identities but to give them a place to put it that is not destructive," he said.
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