About the Moroccan national team – by / Badr Al-Din Al-Idrisi
We have never been one of those who fan the fire of sedition, nor one of those who throw ashes into people’s eyes to distract them from the facts, but what we saw in the Al-Ahly and Pyramids match on a deferred for the Egyptian championship, we came out like everyone whose eyes fell on a video that spread like wildfire showing Al-Shahat, the Al-Ahly player. He directs a slap to Moroccan Mohamed Al-Shaibi, defender of Pyramids, for our reservation, which we usually show to describe a “transient” abomination that may disturb our relationship with the Egyptian brothers.
It was definitely not necessary to remain silent about that bullying shown by Hussein Al-Shahat, at the end of the match that Al-Ahly lost while he was crowned with the Egyptian championship title, and he satiated Al-Shaibi with insults, censure, and verbal abuse, and added to him, with all obscenity, slapping the man in front of everyone, and Al-Shaibi was not at that moment while he kept With his calmness, he does not respond to foolishness with a more egregious request for retribution. He was neither negligent nor submissive, but he was gentle and polite, realizing that revenge is nothing but a meal eaten cold, as the French proverb says.
Of course, Al-Shahat, who needs re-education, realized the enormity and even barbarism of the act, and quickly searched for the instrument of forgiveness, so he went to the Pyramids clothing store and asked for Al-Shaibi, to design a miserable scene showing him apologizing to Al-Shaibi and kissing his head as if he had just left the “school of rioters.”
I do not ask how the Egyptian Football Association will take Shaibi his right, and he is responsible, according to our knowledge, for the game of football and not for the game of bullfighting, but I am saddened by the media fads that came from those who think they are taking advantage of the Egyptian media, and who represent the broken wing of Egyptian football, first. For the nonsense that they issue, and secondly for the false fatwas that they throw left and right, and thirdly for the fluidity that they spread in the Egyptian sports and media scene.
While the wise men of the Egyptian press, whom I am proud to associate with, denounced this clumsy act and called for harsher financial and sports penalties to discipline one of the fugitive players, which was what the legend Mahmoud Al-Khatib was wise in picking up and listening to, so the penalties were harsh due to the severity of the misdemeanor, while the wise men dealt with the despicable act, with rigor. What is needed to defend sporting values and cut off with such anomalies, there were semi-analysts, from the denials of Egyptian football, who made things worse, as some of them said that he had “adapted” to slap her, and some of them asked Al-Shaibi to be brave and confess With the words he said inside the stadium and ignited the fuse of anger, as if I were impersonating lawyers, covering the sun with a sieve, holding threads that are weaker than a spider’s web, and defending “the devil.”
You don’t remember Al-Shahat, and here I don’t want to manipulate the letters of his name. You don’t remember how he and all Al-Ahly players treated him with the Tangier fans, when the latter played the Club World Cup at Ibn Battuta Stadium. You don’t remember that this one who raised his hand to slap him is one of the sons of Morocco, who honored him and granted him Support and welcome that would not have crossed his mind, what this Shahat remembers, the deep message that the legend Mahmoud Al-Khatib sent to Morocco and specifically to the residents of the city of Tangier, thanking and grateful and acknowledging the credit to the people of credit, and about me you do not mention it or know its significance, because I am one of those who demand linking to the feelings, despite I reject insults and denounce the audacity, “harrassment” and empty pharaonicness of some players. There is no sane person in Egypt who accepts or accepts what al-Shahat brought. Heinous, their place is certainly the dustbin of history, not the analysis studios that have become defiled by “false analysts.”
It is right, but it is the duty of Muhammad al-Shaibi to plead everywhere for the sake of victory for his dignity, and it is his right to sue al-Shahat because he violated the sanctity of practice and tried to defile the honor of the man, and it is our right to ask the brothers in Egypt first to raise the degree of severity to punish such an act, so that no The Egyptian League becomes a quagmire in which corrupt whales swim, and it is our second right to demand that the guardians of the media in Egypt oppose narcissistic “analysts” who do not set the object or raise a subject, but rather subvert without inspiration all the rules of expression and the expression of the highness of sports ethics.