Nigerian footballer Balogun speaks out on participant abuse

“I have this feeling that this constant access to the real me as a player has lowered the threshold for fans in the stadium to a point where some think they are entitled to do things which they really aren’t,” Leon Balogun mentioned throughout a FIFPRO on-line dialogue in early March.

FIFPRO, the worldwide soccer gamers’ union, says the numbers from its current examine bear him out.

Three-quarters of the gamers’ unions it contacted for its males’s soccer office security report mentioned that office security is a rising concern for skilled footballers. Two-thirds mentioned in recent times that elements of fan tradition have “become increasingly more violent and abusive.”

‘Get away with something’

Balogun, a member of FIFPRO’s Global Player Council, was certainly one of many gamers surveyed for the examine launched in January however was one of many few keen to have his identify used. So many others had responded anonymously, fearing retribution within the type of abuse on the stadium, on the way in which to or from the workforce bus, or on social media.

“Some people, not the majority, feel because they have paid for a ticket to come to the stadium, that it somehow automatically gives them the right to abuse you. There are people who just want to voice their frustration at you in a very inappropriate way,” Balogun mentioned.

“It’s naive to think everything is going to be super positive, but it’s reached the point that people will do and write anything because they can get away with it,” continued the 35-year-old defender, who has performed within the Bundesliga, Premier League, and for Nigeria. Balogun is now at Rangers within the Scottish Premiership.

“Loads of people just say, well, ‘You are a football millionaire. You are in the public eye. You just have to deal with it.’ But to what extent do we allow things to happen? And the argument of how ever much a player earns doesn’t entitle anyone to write these horrible issues or say these horrible issues in public.”

West Berlin-born and raised 

Balogun’s ties to Nigeria come from his dad, who immigrated to Germany in 1966 and finally married a white German girl. Leon was born to the mixed-race couple in West Berlin in 1988, a yr earlier than the Wall fell. He was raised in Berlin and would finally play skilled soccer for the likes of Darmstadt, Mainz and Brighton earlier than becoming a member of Rangers in 2020.

“Even though Germany is a progressive country, there is that group of people, especially in sport, who still lurk around waiting to knock you down if you’re different,” Balogun wrote on the Players’ Tribune web site in 2018. He recalled being referred to as the n-word and different racial slurs whereas rising up and that his father spoke up for him in such situations. 

Activism for soccer gamers

Balogun has adopted a few of his father’s “love instead of hate” perspective in his present function as an activist for higher office security for gamers. The Nigerian worldwide is trying to assist everybody from the top-tier leagues all the way in which right down to the amateurs who might even see or really feel very private abuse, typically even geared toward relations. 

What cannot occur, Balogun says, is what occurred when he was 15 and a child from one other workforce shouted racial epithets at him after a match. 

“Nobody did anything,” he wrote within the Players’ Tribune. “There were people all around us, and nobody did anything.”

Leon Balogun believes social media has made abuse worse for footballersImage: Stuart Wallace/Shutterstock/IMAGO

During the FIFPRO on-line dialogue, different audio system pointed to the necessity for technology-fueled technique of catching and punishing perpetrators and for golf equipment to be extra proactive. Balogun mentioned safety efforts have to maneuver cautiously to keep away from affecting harmless followers cheering for his or her heroes.

 “We’re in a time when, in general, we need to look out for each other,” Balogun mentioned. “It doesn’t matter where you’re from, what you earn, or if you work in a public space or not.”

“Ultimately, we all need to get along and create an environment where everybody feels safe to express themselves and to voice their opinion without harming one another. If we can remind ourselves of that every now and then, I think a huge part will be done.”

Edited by Jonathan Harding