Soccer

Soccer fans ruffled after player kicks owl

Panama Defender Luis Moreno boots opposing team's mascot like a penalty kick to "see if it would fly"

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Soccer fans ruffled after player kicks owlLuis Moreno continues the game after kicking an owl, the mascot and lucky charm of the opposing team, off the field

Soccer fans are crying fowl over kicking an owl. In fact, they’re crying a lot worse.

An apologetic player is facing sanctions after he kicked an injured owl that landed on the field during a game in Colombia on Sunday. The owl was a mascot for the opposing team and was being treated Monday at a veterinary clinic in Barranquilla. The bird is expected to recover from a slight fracture of its right leg.

The owl had landed injured near the corner of the field when Panama defender Luis Moreno of the Colombian club Deportivo Pereira walked over and kicked it about three yards. Atletico Junior fans shouted “murderer, murderer.”

Moreno said he did not know the bird was a good-luck charm.

“I want to apologize to the fans,” he said after the game. “I was not trying to hurt the owl. I did it to see if it would fly.”

Pereira club president Francisco Javier Lopez said the player would be punished. Moreno also could be disciplined by soccer’s governing body in Colombia. Animal welfare officials said there are no animal cruelty laws in Colombia.

“It made me very angry that he kicked the little animal,” said Atletico Junior player Luia Paez, who scored a goal during Atletico’s 2-1 victory. “It was already injured by being struck by the ball. I said a bunch of awful things to him. I was really angry.”

 

Brazil’s Ronaldo retires from soccer

The great player's storied career was filled with successes on the field -- and scandals off of it

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Brazil's Ronaldo retires from soccerFILE - In this Dec. 3, 2002, file photo, European champion Real Madrid ace striker Ronaldo plants a jubilant kiss on the Intercontinental Cup trophy after winning the Toyota Cup against its South American counterpart Olimpia in Yokohama, southwest of Tokyo, Japan. Ronaldo said on Monday, Feb. 14, 2011, he is retiring from soccer because he can't stay fit anymore, ending a stellar 18-year career in which he thrived with Brazil and some of Europe's top clubs. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye, file)(Credit: Itsuo Inouye)

Ronaldo’s career was as exciting and scandalous on the field as it was off of it. As a player, he won two World Cup titles with Brazil — he scored 15 World Cup goals, a record, including both in the 2002 final against Germany. Ronaldo was also named the European Player of the Year twice — his first came at age 21. He even earned the FIFA World Player of the Year Award three times — an all-time record shared with Zinedine Zidane, maybe his biggest rival to the title of best player of his generation.

And there was controversy. In the 1998 World Cup final against host France, Ronaldo looked slow and disoriented and played poorly as Brazil lost. It later came out that Ronaldo had suffered a seizure the night before and should never have been on the field.

Off the field, he dated models, and more models, and more models while looking like this and this. And then there was the prostitution scandal, and the weight gain, and eventually, last fall, a threat to quit.

He finally did quit today, citing his weight and a disorder called hyperthyroidism that makes it difficult to manage his weight. It served as a perfect end to what was an unbelievable career. It was priceless and hysterical and sad and appropriate all at once, because at one time, there was Ronaldo and then there was everybody else.

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