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Nike's Pro Hijab: a great leap into modest sportswear, but they're not the first

Nike’s move to highlight the intensity and passion of veiled Muslim athletes speaks volumes in an age of renewed xenophobia, but it’s hardly groundbreakingTwo days before International Women’s Day, Nike unveiled its Pro Hijab and took a leap into modest sportswear. Nike, arguably the most influential sports company in the world, announced that the product, available in three colors, would be on sale in spring 2018.The Pro Hijab is a collaboration between Muslim athletes in the Middle East – and the timing of Nike highlighting diversity in sport is impeccable. In an era where xenophobia seems to ring out as a norm, highlighting the intensity and passion of veiled Muslim athletes speaks volumes. But the modest sportswear industry is not...

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Fifa and Donald Trump would be a self-regarding match made in heaven | Barry Glendenning

The 45th president of the United States could be asked to back the 2026 World Cup bid – perfect for his very particular style of accountabilityIt’s been a predictably hectic first week in office for the president of the US, which he has spent fretting over the size of the attendance at his inauguration while signing bits of paper with all the abandon of a small child with a long stick who has just stumbled across an unsupervised blank canvas of freshly laid cement.In the time it takes most civil servants settling into a job to obtain a security pass and computer log-in, Donald Trump has – among other highlights – signalled his intention to do away with Obamacare, given...

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Lacklustre Liverpool head to red-hot Manchester United – Football Weekly Extra

The podders look back on mixed fortunes for Manchester United and Liverpool in the EFL Cup semis as the two prepare to meet at Old Trafford. Plus, Dmitri Payet goes to war with West Ham and Fifa’s plans to expand the World Cup Subscribe and review: iTunes, Soundcloud, Audioboom, Mixcloud, Acast & Stitcher.AC Jimbo is back, and he’s joined for this sparkling edition of Football Weekly Extra by James Horncastle, Jacob Steinberg and Paul MacInnes. What could possibly go wrong? Continue reading...

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Infantino’s World Cup: a dire prequel that will award itself all the Oscars | Marina Hyde

We could be roused by the Fifa president’s claim that ‘football’s back’ – if it wasn’t for his bloated new-look tournament that flies in the face of sporting meritocracyWhat a surprise to find that sporticidal maniac Gianni Infantino has added yet another awards ceremony to football’s calendar. As someone who believes that what the world really lacks is a further glittering night of industrial frottage, I am pleased to see the Fifa president identify the need for the football family to come together in this manner.If only there was a tried and tested way for the footballing elite to measure themselves against each other – perhaps in regular competitions, tournaments, championships, derbies, clásicos, leagues, cups, and various other quaint old ideas...

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Money makes the World Cup go round: more teams means more cash | David Conn

Fifa’s Gianni Infantino has pushed through his 48-team World Cup but those complaining, mostly from Europe, must know that the modern tournament has always been about commerce and politics as much as football gloryIt is still less than a year since Gianni Infantino stood dazzled by destiny at the Fifa congress, tapping his heart in disbelief at really being the president, and already he has swept in the historic, bulky change of a 48-country World Cup. It comes as no surprise, really, that having made it his pitch for votes to expand the World Cup, as he stepped over the fallen careers of his banned former boss at Uefa, Michel Platini, and Fifa’s Sepp Blatter, Infantino has quickly steered through...

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