Jamie Carragher points apology over AFCON feedback after Mohamed Salah Ballon d’Or declare
Jamie Carragher has issued an apology for his comments about the Africa Cup of Nations and claimed he was ‘clumsy’ with his language in his assessment of Mohamed Salah’s Ballon d’Or chances
Liverpool icon Jamie Carragher has come clean about his controversial remarks on the Africa Cup of Nations.
The former defender had downplayed the significance of the tournament while weighing up Mohamed Salah’s Ballon d’Or prospects, commenting: “I think the problem is the fact he’s with Egypt.
“And he’s probably not playing in the major tournament as such, or maybe got a great chance of winning, I think it’s either the Champions League or the major tournament. Normally, the player who excels in that [wins it].”
His words didn’t sit well, with Rio Ferdinand slamming Carragher’s opinion as “ignorant”.
Clearing the air on CBS Sports during his Champions League punditry stint, Carragher sought to set things right, saying: “What I would say is you know me better than anybody on this show.
“I’ve got very strong opinions on the game, I love debate and that will never change but what I would never want to be described at is ignorant or disrespectful.
“So that was never my aim and whether that’s to a player, a club, a country, a continent, an international tournament, whatever that may be.
“What I would say is, where I got it wrong was, I was clumsy with my language in describing AFCON as ‘not a major tournament’,” reports the Liverpool Echo.
“I was trying to explain the merits of Mo Salah winning the Ballon d’Or as you’ve just said and I feel that, not just AFCON, I would say the Asia Games, the Gold Cup, not so much the Copa America.
“But there’s five major tournaments out there besides the World Cup that are for their continents and are obviously a major tournament, but some of them don’t resonate with the people who vote for the Ballon d’Or.”
Carragher continued: “That for me was not an opinion, that was like a fact in terms of looking at who has won the Ballon d’Or over the last 40/50 years.
“So, yes, I have been banging the drum for Mo Salah to become the first African player to win the Ballon d’Or since George Weah in the mid-nineties and as I said, I should have been a lot tidier with my language around that so, yes, that is something I will look at.
“You do look at the Euros, where it’s at right now and other competitions, and some of them resonate with Ballon d’Or voters who are journalists, national coaches, national captains.
“One of the reasons, I think, is sometimes we forget the Ballon d’Or was the European Footballer of the Year so maybe there may be a bias towards the Euros or European football in the past.
“It was definitely not my aim to offend anybody, I know I’ve done that a lot in the past in different guises, about different players or teams, that was certainly not the case. But, yes, hopefully that’s addressed it.”