‘World Soccer Daily’ calls it quits
Steven Cohen, co-owner and host of World Soccer Daily, has decided to pull the plug on the popular satellite radio show dedicated to all things soccer. From the World Soccer Daily website:
Today’s show was the last World Soccer Daily show. After almost 7 years in one form or another, WSD is going off the air. Longtime listeners can probably imagine why, but the details are in the podcast.
We would be remiss if we didn’t offer a sincere thank you to our listeners for making the show such a fantastic ride. I know I speak for everyone when I say thank you for tuning in, thank you for supporting our sponsors, and thank you for helping grow the Beautiful Game.
I guess I should have realized something was going on yesterday when I noticed all the Steven Cohen related traffic coming in yesterday, not to mention the wonderful email I received last night.
So far I’ve only listened to about half of the episode, but it’s safe to say that the death threats and the antisemitic comments directed towards Cohen have taken their toll. All because he dared to share his opinion that there was more than enough blame to go around involving the 1989 Hillsborough Disaster including some (not all) of the Liverpool fans in attendance that sad day.
Angry Liverpool fans began a crusade against Cohen and the show, going after the sponsors of the show and threatening to boycott any product advertised on the show. A good many of the fans also threatened Cohen with bodily harm and even death. Some even threatened Cohen’s family, including his step-children.
All for voicing his opinion.
I originally defended Cohen’s right to voice his opinion. Mostly because I believe in free speech, but also because quotes attributed to Cohen were in fact factually wrong. He was being accused of saying things he never said. At first I thought it was a simple mistake on the part of the person making the claim. I then came to the sad realization that the person making the false claim knew exactly what they were doing.
I then later criticized Steven Cohen for asking listeners for donations. I thought it was crass to ask people who already pay Sirius XM for a monthly subscription to donate money if they enjoy listening to the show. In hindsight, maybe I should have coughed over a few bucks. Cohen has said the reason he’s canceling the show is because of the threats, but I imagine it’s hard to make money doing a radio show without any sponsors, though the show did have at least some sponsors. It’s not like they were running public service announcements during their breaks.
World Soccer Daily asks listeners for donations
Though I earlier defended Steven Cohen for comments he made about the 1989 Hillsborough disaster, I cannot defend what he is doing now. He is asking listeners of World Soccer Daily to give him money in the form of donations.
From the Help World Soccer Daily page on Fundable:
WSD is the only daily football/soccer show in America. The 7 year old caller-driven show deals with football around the world, especially the Premier League, MLS, and the US national team. WSD also has daily guests from around the globe, and correspondents in the major countries or continents of the game.
Recently a small group of people who disagree with some of the opinions stated by WSD hosts have decided to launch a smear campaign against the sponsors and public in order to get the show shut down. While they are welcome to decide for themselves whether to listen to the show or not, they are attempting to decide for everyone else by targeting advertisers of WSD. This is America; we do not approve of people who elect themselves as the moral voice for everyone else, especially when said people who aren’t even members of this country. If you don’t like what is said, you are always welcome to change the channel, but you’re not allowed to mute the voice.
World Soccer Daily is the fans [sic] show, and the fans can play a part beyond their welcome participation. A donation to WSD goes directly to keeping WSD on the air, and a percentage also goes to the Hillsborough Justice Campaign.
I pay to listen to World Soccer Daily. The show is on Sirius XM Radio every week day from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Sirius XM Radio is a paid, subscriber based radio service. I pay a monthly fee to listen to shows on XM Sirius Radio, including World Soccer Daily. Asking me to donate money to a sports talk show I already pay for is more than a little crass.
It’s embarrassing.
Steven Cohen needs to figure out how to get his advertisers back, not hit the listeners up for a handout. It’s not like these advertisers really have a lot of options when it comes to advertising to an American audience for soccer related products. If they want to advertise to American soccer fans, where are they going to go?
The last thing he needs to be doing is asking listeners for a handout.
Checking in on some of the Liverpool FC fan forums
I wrote a few days ago about the Liverpool Football Club posting a statement on their official website condemning the statements made by Steven Cohen, a radio talk show host here in the United States, 38 days after the fact. What I thought was remarkable was not that they waited so long to respond to this controversy, but that they did not address the death threats and other assorted hate speech coming from Liverpool FC supporters.
Someone today left a comment in the comment section of that post claiming, among other things, that Liverpool FC supporter groups have been denouncing this type of speech, but that fact is getting ignored by everyone.
I found this to be quite remarkable because it’s simply not true.
If you go to public Liverpool FC fan sites today, you will find all sorts of things being spewed by Liverpool FC supports directed against Steven Cohen.
For example, LFC Online. It claims to be the “longest-running independent” Liverpool FC website on the Internet. It has a popular public message forum. Here are only some of the comments posted there concerning Steven Cohen:
- “I just wish that people who made “death threats” actually had the balls to follow through with them.“ – Tom R
- “When he dies (of natural causes), I hope it happens slowly.” — Newport
- “Someone should shove a pineapple up his rectum.” — Strontium Dog
- “If anyone can think of a way to upload a virus to their satellites I think that would be doing the planet a favour.” – Scouse Missionary
- “I was about to say, sounds like a jew.“– Phily Hamann
- “I’d be quite happy if he dies in screaming agony quite soon. Some kind of painful, terminal illness, maybe.” — Silverlining
- “Waiting for him to do a sports talk in Orlando so i can personally break his fuckin legs.” — scouselad1991
- “A real shithouse of a cunt and no mistake. Hope the thick fucker gets the bullet.“ — Mozzaretti
What I find interesting about these comments is that the forum administrator allows them to remain. One might think that if they didn’t agree with the sentiment of the comments, a responsible administrator would simply delete them.
The fact that they remain for the whole world to see says quite a lot.
Steven Cohen apologizes

At the beginning of the second hour of today’s Word Soccer Daily, co-host Steven Cohen read an apology for this recent comments concerning the 1989 Hillsborough disaster. He also posted the apology on the Word Soccer Daily website.
It reads:
First of all I would like to apologize for comments made on World Soccer Daily on Monday April 13th that referred back to an event from April 1989. My apology is directed at any and all people whose feelings have been hurt and people who have had awful memories and scars re-opened. The apology is heartfelt, genuine and sincere.
There are some I suspect who will look at this apology with a cynical eye and of course you are entitled to see it as you like.
We are all football fans, we are all passionate football fans and the events that I am referring to could have happened to any club, in any sport, in any country at any public gathering. This is proved by events in the Ivory Coast recently as well as in South America, Ghana, the old Soviet Union etc …
Let me continue by saying that I came to this country 27 years ago, I believe in this country and what it stands for and most importantly I believe in the freedom of speech, opinion and expression and hold these values and freedoms as being amongst the most treasured of all freedoms. I wore the uniform of the US Army for 4 years between 1982 and 1986 because these freedoms are worth defending and worth fighting for. While there are many people in this world who’s views make my blood boil I would fight to defend their right to say what they believe.
I recognize that with my position as one of the hosts of a popular radio show I have a responsibility to my audience and perhaps the radio is not the ideal place to express every opinion and every belief I have if the net result is many people being hurt and upset.
By the same token those who use a keyboard and computer to exercise their own freedom of speech, opinion and expression also have a responsibility. They have a responsibility not to sensationalize comments made and twist them for their maximum appeal especially when this is done only for their own commercial benefit and clearly with malice intended.
Finally, to those out there in the United States who have hidden behind computers and monitors to send correspondence including too many death threats to count know that your actions and words hurt this game in this country more than help it. This game has yet to find a solid and guaranteed footing in the American sporting landscape and the baggage that this game carries with it from the past is only re-enforced and emphasized by threats of violence and death.
Lastly the subjects being addressed in this statement will never be discussed on this show again unless it is in a open forum or debate where both sides view points can be addressed and considered.
I for one hope this puts an end to this whole “controversy”.
NPR on the Steven Cohen Hillsborough controversy
NPR’s All Things Considered had a segment on Friday’s show about the recent controversy surrounding comments made by World Soccer Daily co-host Steven Cohen concerning the 1989 Hillsborough disaster. In the segment, they play that actual clip from World Soccer Daily that started the controversy, as well as comments made by blogger Christopher Harris (The Gaffer) of the popular soccer blog EPL Talk.
Harris comments on the death threats Cohen has received and says that he doesn’t condone them and finds them “equally despicable”. The inference is that threatening a man’s life over something he’s said is somehow equal to Cohen sharing his opinions on Hillsborough. That probably tells you everything you need to know about this drummed up controversy. How anyone can equate death threats to someone saying that at least partial blame for the 1989 Hillsborough disaster on drunk, out of control fans, is beyond me.
1989 U.K. Soccer Disaster Still Stirs Emotions [3 min 50 sec]
The New York Times weighs in on the Steven Cohen controversy
Once again, the mainstream news media has weighed in on the recent controversy surrounding World Soccer Daily co-host Steven Cohen. Once again, they’ve come done on the side of Cohen.
Imagine that.
Jack Bell from the New York Times soccer blog Goal has written about the recent controversy surrounding Word Soccer Daily co-host Steven Cohen.
One can argue with the appeal of a TV chat show like “Fox Football Fone-In” on the Fox Soccer Channel, but what is hard to argue with is the right of one of the co-hosts, Steven Cohen, to state an opinion without becoming the victim of opprobrium, ugly scorn, death threats and vitriolic taunts.
Cohen’s transgression? During a call on April 13 from a Liverpool fan discussing the club’s past success, Cohen (a Chelsea supporter from north London who has been in the United States for nearly 30 years) said “what about the other side of your history,” and went on to discuss the club’s and its fans’ involvement in two of the worst stadium incidents in soccer history: Heysel in Brussels on May, 29 1985, and the Hillsborough disaster in Sheffield, England, on April 15, 1989.
I can only image that Liverpool supporters will now come out of the woodwork and try their best to get advertisers to pull their ads from the New York Times and to get Jack Bell fired.
Steven Cohen: ‘Liverpool’s fans should share responsibility in the blame’
The Los Angeles Daily News published a story yesterday about the recent controversy generated by World Soccer Daily co-host Steven Cohen. From the article:
Cohen dove into the situation head-first when he said Liverpool’s fans should “share responsibility” in the blame.
“When people go to games without tickets and liquored up and 96 tragically die, at some point the fans have to share responsibility. You can’t just blame the police,” Cohen said.”I’m not saying they went with evil in their hearts to do it. Liverpool brought the same number of fans as the year before (to Hillsborough) even though they were at the smaller end of the stadium this time.
“I have expressed an opinion that there was a shared responsibility.”
The article goes on mention the death threats Cohen has received because of his comments. If you read the comments that have been left relating to the article, it’s not hard to believe Cohen’s claim of death threats.
Mel Abshier, the acting representative of the North American branches for Liverpool Football Club, is also quoted in the article. This is the same group that has been heavily involved in putting pressure on World Soccer Daily sponsors and advertisers. From the article:
“Imagine USC (football) supporters going to a game, being told to go down a tunnel into a packed, standing-room only area. And due to the crush, 96 USC supporters died. One might ask one self, why those who went in should ’share responsibility’ in the deaths of their fellow supporters because basically that is Stevens claim.”
Except that’s not Steven’s claim. It’s not a simple case of fans being “told to go down a tunnel”. If you read the report from the official government inquiry of the Hillsborough disaster, the Taylor Report, it’s obvious there was more going on that horrible day than too many supporters being told to go down the wrong tunnel. A good many Liverpool fans, for some unknown reason, were reluctant to enter the stadium and find a place to stand in the pens to watch the game. From the Interim Taylor Report (paragraph 57):
Towards the end of the morning, fans gathered on and around the bridge near the Leppings Lane entrance. They seemed reluctant to enter the ground early. All turnstiles were open at 12 noon and one or two as early as 11.30 am. Some 53 police had been deployed to operate outside the turnstiles and in the Leppings Lane area. They enquired at random whether fans had tickets. Those who had not were advised to go away; nevertheless, many returned more than once. Those who had tickets were guided in the right direction. The police tried to persuade them to enter the ground early. Officers, male and female, had been posted outside each turnstile with the duty of searching entrants for weapons, drink or drugs. Once through the turnstile, an entrant was liable to be searched again by one of a serial of officers positioned just inside.
Why would so many fans, especially those who needed to find a place to stand to watch the game, wait till the last minute to enter the stadium?
Also from the Interim Taylor Report (paragraph 64):
A drunken fan tried to push him off: a beer can was thrown at a mounted officer. But these were isolated acts by individuals;the menace came from the massive numbers single-mindedly determined to be in for the kick-off with time running out. At the back of the crowd fans were frustrated by the lack of progress as 3 o’clock approached. Some, mostly young men who had been drinking, tried to push and force their way forward. At the front, people were jammed together and against the turnstile walls. Some panicked as the pressure intensified. Some youngsters and women were fainting and in distress. They were helped out through the tubular barrier by turnstile G or were passed over the turnstiles elsewhere. Fans climbed up and over the turnstile building or on to the dividing fence. This was to escape the crush rather than to gain free entry since most of them had tickets.
It’s clear that conditions outside the stadium were quickly getting quite dangerous.
Also from the Interim Taylor Report (paragraph 67):
Superintendent Marshall realised the crowd had become unmanageable. Although loth to do so, since it was contrary to basic police strategy, he decided to request the exit gates be opened to relieve the pressure. Otherwise, he feared fatalities would occur. Other senior officers outside the ground agreed. At 2.47 pm he radioed control to permit the gates to be opened. At 2.48 pm, whilst Mr Duckenfield was considering the request, gate C opened to eject a youth who had climbed in with no ticket. Immediately, fans outside took advantage and about 150 managed to get in before a mounted officer enabled the gate to be closed again.
I think it’s clear from reading about this tragedy that there are a good many factors to blame for the disaster that happened. Was Cohen wrong about 6,000 ticketless fans? Probably, but there’s no denying that at least some of the fans there, the same fans that were mentioned in the Taylor Report that were single-mindedly determined to be in for the kick-off with time running out, helped contribute to the tragic events that transpired. The Taylor Report mentions that there were some fans outside the stadium who did not have tickets and that they were turned away by the police only to return later on. How many of them came through the exit gate when it was opened? Nobody knows.
I encourage anyone that’s interested in this to read the entire interim Taylor Report. Don’t just read the few paragraphs I have quted. You can download a pdf version for free and read it yourself.
Defending Steven Cohen
Steven Cohen, co-host of World Soccer Daily, a satellite radio show dedicated to all things soccer, is in a bit of hot water over some things he said on a recent show. On an April 13 episode, while taking phone calls from listeners, Cohen commented on the 1989 Hillsborough Disaster.
It was a horrific event where 96 soccer fans were crushed to death at an FC Cup semi-final match between between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest.
So what exactly did Cohen say? From EPL Talk:
“People showing up without ticket, hell bent in getting into somewhere where they shouldn’t be going because they don’t have tickets, is the root cause of [the Hillsborough Disaster].”
Except this is not what Cohen actually said. The quote is incorrect. The above is a partial quote about the 23 fans that died in a similar fashion in the Ivory Coast at a World Cup qualifier. The correct quote should read:
“The thing is, the 23 that died in the Ivory Coast, in my opinion, the police were absolutely had something to do with it. At the end of the day, people showing up without ticket, hell bent in getting into somewhere where they shouldn’t be going because they don’t have tickets, is the root cause of it in my opinion.
Cohen went on to say more. Also from EPL Talk:
“I’m yet to read anybody write in this weekend’s Sunday papers in England, where they’re all doing big commemorations about the 96, and why we should never forget and how it’s changed the game, nobody discusses the 6,000 to 8,000 who showed up without tickets and my argument has always been, if those people don’t show up, this never happens.”
This too is not an accurate quote, but in this case, the misquoting does not change what Cohen said. His point is that Liverpool fans showed up at the game without tickets. The episode can be downloaded from iTunes. The comments on Hillsborough begin around the 1 hour, 13 minute mark.
People who have a problem with what Cohen said seem bothered the most by Cohen’s opinion that “6,000 to 8,000″ Liverpool fans showed up at the game without tickets. The Taylor Report, the official inquiry into the Hillsborough Disaster, found this not to be the case.
What bothers me the most about all this is that a group identifying themselves as the The North American Liverpool Supporters are trying to get those that advertise on World Soccer Daily to drop the show. They sending form letters to advertisers, urging advertisers to drop the show. An excerpt:
This is not a free speech issue. Mr. Cohen has every right to say what he wants on air within FCC regulations. However he has crossed the line as far as we are concerned. So he is free to say whatever he wants but with free speech one also needs to understand there are consequences to ones action. The potential boycott is one of those consequences.
Except it is a free speech issue and there are no FCC regulations concerning satellite talk radio. Cohen stated over and over again that he was only stating his opinion of what happened that tragic day in Hillsborough. The anonymous members of The North American Liverpool Supporters are the ones that have crossed the line by contacting sponsors to get them to stop advertising on World Soccer Daily.
It’s a dick move.
Is Cohen wrong about the 6,000 to 8,000 ticketless Liverpool fans? Probably, but that shouldn’t matter. Cohen is a radio talk show host. His job is to say things. Sometimes those things are going to be wrong. Sometimes those things are going to be controversial. Sometimes those things are going to be stupid. If you don’t like what someone on the radio is saying, don’t listen. Just because you don’t like what someone says on the radio doesn’t mean you have a right to get someone permanently silenced. It’s wrong.
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