
Watching sport on television is a minority interest for me. A game or two of tennis during Wimbledon and a spot of snooker is the most of it; and dipping into football, although as a man without a team, I take no partisan interest in the game.
Cricket I know little about, except that when you attend a match the players are surprisingly far away and easy to mistake (the distant Yorkshire players at Scarborough last summer can be called in evidence).
Something strange has happened to me, though. I’ve watched all the England games in this World Cup, even though I pledged not to thanks to the polluting effects of Donald Trump.
Would you look at that gold-puke stain over there. Trump has just asked Fifa to review the one-match suspension of US striker Folarin Balogun. And Fifa did Trump’s bidding and instead suspended the red card for 12 months.
Then again, Trump cheats at everything – golf, life, politics, marriages – so what do you expect. He also hands out pardons to his favourites like a dodgy old man passing round a sticky tin of sweets.

But the thing is, the USA are playing better than expected, or so those in the know are saying. Now Trump has besmirched that success with his nudge-nudge fix, illustrating once again that everything Trump touches eventually falls apart. As he himself is doing as suggested in the unguarded, makeup-free moment captured above by a Getty photographer.
Uefa called Fifa’s decision on Balogun “unprecedented, incomprehensible and unjustifiable”. Pretty much what the rest of us said when Fifa gave Trump that pretend peace price.
Anyway, football.
The Mexico game was considered to be a tough challenge, again according to those in the know (not me, please excuse any sporting howlers hidden within this blog). The Azteca Stadium was considered to be tough, as was the altitude of Mexico City, as any idling purveyor of punditry with tell you.
The match was scheduled for 1am our time. Sitting in our local bar until dawn didn’t appeal. And neither did staying up at home. Instead, I went to bed at my usual latish hour, got up at 5.45am, made tea, and then watched the match on the BBC iPlayer, having managed to avoid hearing the score.
It was almost like watching in real time. Better, really, as you could whizz through the endless build-up (extended by an hour as kick-off was delayed). You could also speed past whatever it was that Wayne Rooney was trying to say while gargling his vowels.
And you could just watch the game. It was exciting, too. England were on top form and won 3-2. And unlike their other appearances in this World Cup, despair and boredom were kept to a minimum.
What with Wimbledon being on too, I am watching so much sport I’ll have to be careful not to become one of those people who go on about sport all the time. Mind you, I do know a few of those.

FEW of my friends have a kind word for Nigel Farage, the leader of Reform UK. Sadly, his friends in the media have more than made up for that, bigging up Farage at every possibility.
That seems at last to be changing. Assorted newspapers are actually reporting properly on Farage, examining his opaque sources of funding, and asking how come he managed to buy four or five houses.
The Guardian lit the fuse with its story that Farage had been given an undisclosed gift of £5m by the Thai-based crypto tycoon Christopher Harborne. And then lobbied the Bank of England to drop its plans for a crypto Brit coin seemingly in order to help his generous pal.
The latest of these mounting scandals concerns “Posh George” Cottrell, a convicted criminal who has been secretly funding Farage, according to the Sunday Times.
Farage is doing his Trumpian big baby sulk act about all this, chuntering on again that the ‘establishment’ has it in for him.
More, please. Funny, though, that craven Labour MPs wanted to depose Starmer partly because they feared he wasn’t up to fighting Farage and Reform. And now Farage is seemingly imploding even before Starmer has officially departed.
Anyway, I’m off. There’s bound to be some tennis on the television. Oh, look, Britain’s Arthur Fery has just won in a thrilling five-set comeback, if you’ll pardon the sporting lingo.
Incidentally, I expect any moment to hear from Walter Presents on Channel 4. Walter will be wondering where I’ve gone, as normally I am to be found hanging around the bloody touchlines of his foreign crime dramas.













