Re: Benjamin Massing R.I.P
Posted: Sun Dec 10, 2017 11:13 pm
bepanda wrote:Gone too soon. R.I.P. brother. You gave us unforgettable moments,
R.I.P
The Undisputed Number One Home for All Super Eagles Fans
https://forum.cybereagles.com/
bepanda wrote:Gone too soon. R.I.P. brother. You gave us unforgettable moments,
The Massing tackle is a thing of debauched beauty.
Benjamin Massing's foul on Cannigia is the greatest ever World Cup moment.
The first's a late tackle, the second's a professional foul, the third is just an attempt to stop Caniggia - he might live, he might die, Massing doesn't care, he's just decided he isn't going any further. It's the sort of single-minded determination people got Victoria Crosses for in the first World War, with the slightly different context of it being a group game at the World Cup rather than, y'know, a world war.
I can still vividly remember Claudio Cannigia's fabulous run, and the assorted assaults he was subject to while a queue of assorted would-be assassins lined up to cripple him. Had this display been perpetrated by a European or S. American team it would simply have been labeled a disgrace, and had it been perpetrated on rather than by Cameroon, you'd be talking about it as another example of colonial crime.
I remember directly after that game, my firends and I went into the street. One side was Cameroon the other Argentina. I still feel sorry for my friend who was nominated to be Caniggia, as all we wanted to do was recreate the moment he was horribly assaulted by th Cameroon team. The moment where Benjamin Massing's boot flies off as he sythes Caniggia down lasted long in the memory and forever on my friends shins.
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/ ... t-footballI loved that at the time - still do now. Horiffic, intimidatory behaviour, and less red mist than a premeditated assault on a stylish and skilful player. However, given what Argentina had done in 1986, and given the way they went on to play in the rest of that world cup, you can't think of it as anything other than frontier justice.
I also loved how the commentators and pundits afterwards, clearly sharing the same view and loving every second, described the fouls as "naive", coming as they did from an African team.
why did he get red, followed by a yellow ?wiseone wrote:Benjamin Massing deserves his own statue for his coldly executed "contract hit" on Cannigia at the 1990 World Cup.
English fans absolutely loved it:
The Massing tackle is a thing of debauched beauty.Benjamin Massing's foul on Cannigia is the greatest ever World Cup moment.The first's a late tackle, the second's a professional foul, the third is just an attempt to stop Caniggia - he might live, he might die, Massing doesn't care, he's just decided he isn't going any further. It's the sort of single-minded determination people got Victoria Crosses for in the first World War, with the slightly different context of it being a group game at the World Cup rather than, y'know, a world war.
I can still vividly remember Claudio Cannigia's fabulous run, and the assorted assaults he was subject to while a queue of assorted would-be assassins lined up to cripple him. Had this display been perpetrated by a European or S. American team it would simply have been labeled a disgrace, and had it been perpetrated on rather than by Cameroon, you'd be talking about it as another example of colonial crime.I remember directly after that game, my firends and I went into the street. One side was Cameroon the other Argentina. I still feel sorry for my friend who was nominated to be Caniggia, as all we wanted to do was recreate the moment he was horribly assaulted by th Cameroon team. The moment where Benjamin Massing's boot flies off as he sythes Caniggia down lasted long in the memory and forever on my friends shins.https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/ ... t-footballI loved that at the time - still do now. Horiffic, intimidatory behaviour, and less red mist than a premeditated assault on a stylish and skilful player. However, given what Argentina had done in 1986, and given the way they went on to play in the rest of that world cup, you can't think of it as anything other than frontier justice.
I also loved how the commentators and pundits afterwards, clearly sharing the same view and loving every second, described the fouls as "naive", coming as they did from an African team.
Chief Ogbunigwe wrote: why did he get red, followed by a yellow ?
wiseone wrote:The whole incident was (unintentionally) hilarious. Hidden highlights and events of tragi-comedy include:
1) Did you see (at 0:40secs) the Argentine number 7 (Valdano?) sneakily stamp on Massing's bare foot as Massing went to retrieve his boot which had flown loose after his attempted murder of Canniggia. Massing then retaliates by aiming a kick at the Argentine who (wisely) runs away to hide behind the ref in fear.
2) The buffoonery of the ref who showed a red card, followed by a yellow card to Massing. Then again on second thoughts, 1 red card was not punishment enough for what Massing did. 1.5 red cards at least.
Chief Ogbunigwe wrote: why did he get red, followed by a yellow ?
Rip to a legendChimurenga Rebel wrote:One of the original Indomitable Lion enforcers. RIP to a Cameroonian and African legend.
Classy tribute from MaradonaAyo Akinfe wrote:Maradona pays tribute to Massing: http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/y=201 ... 24558.html