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Zaf Iqbal

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King Binny

Part of the Furniture
Honorary Member
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[article=http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/24403720]Steven Gerrard has described Liverpool's first-team doctor, Zaf Iqbal, as the "king of medicine".

The Liverpool captain was speaking about Iqbal following his nomination at this year's Asian Football Awards.

The awards, which take place at Wembley Stadium on Tuesday, recognise the outstanding contribution of individuals with a South Asian heritage.

Gerrard said: "I've had serious injuries of late, and without the doc I'd have been in big trouble."

Speaking to BBC Asian Network, Gerrard added: "In his spare time, I think Zaf is always pushing for kids to stay healthy and get involved in sport. Credit to him."

Now in their second year, the awards honour those in the professional game and in grassroots football initiatives.

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers said: "I think the awards are really important. It's great that you can reward people for being inspirational in the community.

"I think people like Zaf are a shining light for people who want to go on and have a great career."

Iqbal is up against Shabaaz Mughal (Tottenham Hotspur), Sangi Patel (QPR) and Imran Alam (QPR) for the Behind the Scenes - Medical Award.

Asian Football Awards founder Baljit Rihal said: "Our primary objective is to create an awareness of the positive efforts made by Asians within the football industry.

"We also aim to engage with organisations and individuals to help increase participation levels of the Asian community within the UK.

"I believe the awards will help highlight the growing importance the Asian community plays in the professional game, as well as at grassroots level, and that it will serve as an inspiration for others to get involved."

Awards categories include Player, Young Player, Inspiration, Asian Team, Women in Football, Coach, Development Project and Unsung Hero.

Speaking about football at grassroots level, Harban Singh, the head coach of Mahal FC, a Midlands-based semi-pro British Asian team, said: "We have now got networks, with the scouts at higher football clubs.

"We get talented players and they are getting picked up. For example, we have built a good connection with West Bromwich Albion."

Singh also reflects on the changing attitudes of British Asians, saying: "The attitudes of Asian parents are different from twenty years ago. We are British parents and we now encourage sports - as well as education, in schools."[/article]
http://www.asianfootballawards.co.uk/

[article=http://www.londonfa.com/news/2013/sep/asian-football-awards-2013?c=1#KdhAQFMEalQxxIwQ.99]Among those nominated for AFA 2013 player awards are the Swansea City and Wales left-back Neil Taylor, highly rated youngsters Adil Nabi (West Brom) and Yan Dhanda (Liverpool), and Blackpool striker Michael Chopra. In a new category for south-east Asian players in the British game, Shinji Kagawa (Manchester United), Kim Bo-Kyung (Cardiff City) and Ki Sung-Yueng (Swansea City, currently on loan at Sunderland) are all in the running.

Off the field, Tottenham doctor Shabaaz Mughal, who helped save the life of Bolton midfielder Fabrice Muamba when the player collapsed during the FA Cup quarter-final in March 2012, and Liverpool medic Zaf Iqbal are also nominated for awards. Dr Iqbal is leading a campaign to have automatic electronic defibrillators (AED) present in all schools and public places.[/article]
 
He looked such a miserable little twit in that documentary, but it sounds like he's very good at his job, which is reassuring!
 
Is it just me that finds these success in the 'community' celebrations patronising and hypocritical?

Look kids, you're Asian, and this fine doctor is Asian too. You can make something of your life!
 
The semiotic complexity of that pic would've made Roland Barthes' head blow off.

That joke has separated the cultured folk who get it and the philistines who don't.

*googles Roland Barthes*
 
Is it just me that finds these success in the 'community' celebrations patronising and hypocritical?

Look kids, you're Asian, and this fine doctor is Asian too. You can make something of your life!

No, Mo, it's not just you. There are those who would argue that acceptance of diversity still has some way to go, hence that things like this remain necessary, and I respect that view, but I don't agree with it. In my view (and incidentally I encountered mild prejudice when I was younger because of my Jewish heritage) the best response is to bypass the antis and ignore their views as the irrelevance they are in this day and age.
 
There are those who would argue that acceptance of diversity still has some way to go, hence that things like this remain necessary, and I respect that view, ..........


And I agree with that view. It's easy to say that this is patronising but ask the children/youth if they need heroes from their own culture/race and I think that would be an emphatic yes. It inspires and rewards so the opinions of the PC do-gooders (no insinuation here JJ or MM !) are largely irrelevant.
 
It may seem a little cringe worthy to an outsider, but the main thing is how it is perceived by those it is aimed at surely.
 
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