Monthly Archives: September 2010

Chemistry

  Interesting observing Real Madrid and FC Barcelona  play in their respective Champions League games this week. Both teams frustrated by the defensive tactics of lesser  mortals. But there all comparisons end. What I find hugely striking is the tension and poor chemistry that is evident not just between Mourinho and his players but among the Madrid players themselves. The Madrid players seem not to be enjoying themselves. They also show signs of genuine fear of what Mourinho might do to them.  By contrast Barca  players , even under pressure, …

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Barca without Messi

A good source of mine at FC Barcelona told me a few days ago that he was convinced that Barca will win La Liga and the Champions League this season. But that was before Messi got injured. I wrote not so long ago on the paradox afflicting Guardiola’s Barca. Its current greatness and potential weakness lay in the Argentine star. With Messi firing on all cylinders, Barca  as a  team is inspired  to greatness , with all the other key parts- Xavi, Iniesta, Pujol, Villa- contributing  to a collective effort …

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The Labour candidate who caught Fire

An interesting story reaches me about one of the candidates for the Labour leadership from a party insider. Not so many years ago the aforementioned candidate was at a celebration party organised by a centre left leaning think tank when he accidentally caught fire off a candle. For a few seconds the poor man (well it wasn’t  Diana Abbot, I can tell you) looked like “a chicken on fire, all puffed up and seemingly nowhere to go” my informant tells me. With the help of nearby comrades, the fire was …

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Why vote for Miliband the Younger

Voting for Ed Miliband After four days following the Pope around, I am back in the near-secular world, convinced that faith has still a party to play, along with reason, in our society, just as the newly beatified Cardinal Newman always hoped for. First on the agenda- opening a backlog of mail. I find, inter alia, a Christmas catalogue from my favourite charity CAFOD, unsolicited mail from my local Pizza take away and Sushi bar up the hill, and a plethora of material from Labour party leadership candidates begging for …

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Newman: The Necessary Saint

My online Book Review of the Month is dedicated to Newman’s Unquiet Grave by John Cornwell (Published by Continuum) I have two reasons for picking John Cornwell’s biography of Newman as my latest book of the month. First on the personal front, my own recently published attempt at biography, Papa Spy , reminded me of how much its subject, my father, the late Tom Burns, owed to Newman, as a leading Catholic publisher (and wartime spook at odds with those Marxists who had infiltrated British intelligence.) From his early schooldays …

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The wise Jesuit

I cannot recall ever having been present in a congregation that greeted a sermon by a Catholic priest with more deserving spontaneous applause, not in England at least. But applause was what Fr William Pearsall the Jesuit priest at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Farm Street got this Sunday after speaking with sensitivity and wisdom about the upcoming Papal visit. Fr William began by telling us how a day earlier he had opened his office window and listened to the raucous song emanating from nearby Hyde Park. He heard …

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Not in harmony with Catholic Voices

I’m listening withy difficulty I came away from last night’s debate at the Conway Hall on the upcoming Papal visit with an uneasy feeling I found myself quickly trying to dispel, drowning a pint with a sympathetic friend at a local pub. I write as a journalist, author and Catholic who found myself poorly represented by Austen Ivereigh and Fr Christopher Jamison OSB, coordinator and patron respectively of Catholic Voices before a packed audience, in which a majority appeared less than enamoured with our current Pope. Catholic Voices is  a …

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