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Reformed?

Perennial bad boy Petit cited for 'outstanding sportsmanship'

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Posted: Saturday July 04, 1998 01:18 PM

  Petit (left) was lauded for putting the ball out of play so that an injured Italian opponent could get treatment even though the gesture robbed his own team of a scoring chance (AP)

PARIS (Reuters) -- Emmanuel Petit, the Arsenal midfielder once known as a bad boy of French soccer, was praised by FIFA on Saturday for his "outstanding sportsmanship" in a World Cup quarterfinal against Italy.

FIFA said Petit, who put the ball out of play so that an injured Italian opponent could get treatment even though the gesture robbed his own team of a scoring chance, would undoubtedly be in the running for an award.

"He deliberately put the ball out of play and we would like officially to commend Emmanuel Petit for the gesture of outstanding sportsmanship," said spokesman Keith Cooper.

Hosts France, watched by President Jacques Chirac, won Friday's match 4-3 on a penalty shootout at the Stade de France after 120 minutes of attacking football that failed to break through the dogged Italian defense.

The pony-tailed Petit, who had a fine overhead goal-bound shot saved in the fifth minute by Gianluca Pagliuca, could have capped an outstanding performance when the ball came to him just outside the area in the last minute of extra time.

But Italy's Luigi Di Biagio had been injured seconds before and was still lying prone in the box.

Without hesitating, Petit turned and kicked the ball out of bounds, refusing to take advantage of the situation. It was one of the last chances France had of winning the match in normal play before the lottery of spot kicks.

Di Biagio promptly returned to the field after being carried off. He then slammed his penalty kick against the crossbar to give victory to France.

Petit, whose world fell apart when his 20-year-old brother died on a soccer pitch 10 years ago, had a rocky start in French football with a reputation for a volatile temperament.

But after several turbulent years he settled down at Monaco and then Arsenal, where his fighting spirit and unflappable presence in midfield came through last season with an English premier league and cup double.

However, he still has a tough streak and last season was fined and banned for four matches for pushing referee Paul Durkin, who also officiated at the World Cup. The English Football Association charged him with misconduct.

FIFA has a World Cup Fair Play award that goes to the team with the best disciplinary record of the tournament.

England, beaten by Argentina in the second round on a penalty shootout, is currently leading that competition despite the hooligan violence caused by their followers and having midfielder David Beckham sent off in their last match.

The world body also has another award handed out at the end of the year that can go to an individual or group.

Ireland fans won it last year for their sporting behavior after their team was beaten by Belgium in the World Cup qualifying playoffs for France '98.

Former winners of the award include AC Milan's Liberian striker George Weah, who helped his compatriots when the country was ravaged by civil war, and former England forward Gary Lineker, a player who was never sent off in his career.

 

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