WSC Logo



SEARCH  

Advanced search

dig
ROB

Weekly Howl

A mixture of comment, fact and captivating trivia via email

Sign up

Follow WSC

 twitter

NEWSFEEDS

sstore

 

HOME arrow THE ARCHIVE arrow Webwatch arrow Foot in the door
Foot in the door

Jack Bell reports on the outcome of a misguided offer to FIFA

Earlier this year a website called footofgod.com closed down. Hardly a unique oc­currence, but this one did not die through the reckless ambition of its creators or for any lack of demand for its ser­­vices. Instead it was kicked in the teeth by the football gods – FI­FA. Like many websites, footofgod.com was a labour of love, not profit. This ardour be­longs to Kadima Lonji, a 29-year-old native of Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo) work­ing in New York as director of web development for a major US department store chain.

A fanatical devotion to football led Lonji to spend more than $70,000 of his own mon­ey to start the site. It went live on December 6, 2000 and was disconnected in February 2001. Lonji’s site evolved into an el­­­­­­­ectronic re­­pository of video clips of the greatest goals and moments in the history of the sport – the world’s largest archive of 3,000 football clips great and garish. It included English League goals dating from the early 1960s, goals from the African Nations Cup, the old North Am­erican Soccer League, the Under-17 World Championship, Copa Am­érica, Euro­pean Championship and the World Cup (with footage of every tournament going back to 1934).

The site also offered some more quirky and esoteric fare: clips of famous football ad­vertisements, such as the one from Nike feat­uring the Brazil team juggling their way through an airport that was broadcast during the 1998 World Cup. Endlessly fascinating and almost en­tirely useless.

At its height, footofgod.com received 100,000 visitors from around the world downloading 500,000 clips a week. In turn, visitors to the site were eager to ship their fav­ourite clips to Lonji for inclusion on footofgod.com.

“I knew when I started the site that it would catch fire with the billions of soccer fans around the world,” Lonji said. “It was doing a crazy amount of traffic. I was spending all of my free time trying to keep up with the site and I knew I needed some help.”

He sought help, in retrospect fatuously, from FIFA. “I put out my plea to the group that I thought had the resources to take over the site and for whom the interest was most relevant,” he said. “I just thought that FIFA would have the common sense to see the op­portunity in front of them. I was absolutely wrong and looking back I should have known better than to think that the world works ef­ficiently. They could have had the site free so that the fans could continue to enjoy this wonderful site.”

So, as word of footofgod.com spread ar­ound the world, Lonji got a drop-dead letter from FIFA on February 12. In a rather expansive interpretation of its copyright position, FIFA said it owned all of the content of Foot­ofgod. com, re­gardless of its origins, and or­d­ered Lonji to close down the site. A spec­ious claim, certainly, but Lonji does not have the money or time to challenge FIFA’s claims in court. “I had no choice but to comply,” he said.

He pulled the plug on February 15. The site was dead. That, however, was not the end. “I tried to run a campaign to show FIFA that I was not moving in on their territory and that fans truly wanted the site,” Lonji said. “I ran a one-month campaign to collect one million emails from fans around the world. I got more than a million messages of support.”

Right. Tell it to ISL...

From WSC 175 September 2001. What was happening this month

Share this article:
Delicious
Furl it!
Spurl
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Technorati
Mister.Wong

On the subject...

Comments (0)
Comment
You must be logged in to comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 

Today's most read WSC articles

Oldham Athletic Dowie, Wembley, Division Two   

Steve Ragg   

WSC 194 Apr 03

Teenage anguish - USA MLS youth development   

Mike Woitalla   

WSC 145 Mar 99

Major success? MLS's first season   

Mike Woitalla   

WSC 118 Dec 96

The domination game Praising Chelsea   

WSC   

WSC 217 Mar 05

Amir Karic and Ulrich Le Pen Not worth the money?   

Jonathan Barnes   

WSC 221 Jul 05

Unpopularity contest West Ham and Terence Brown   

Darron Kirkby   

WSC 223 Sep 05

States of happiness 1999 women's World Cup   

Ethan Zindler   

WSC 151 Sep 99

Firm Favourites: Old Firm Sectarianism in Scotland   

Dianne Millen   

WSC 206 Apr 04

No love, no joy Tim Lovejoy’s rubbish autobiography   

Taylor Parkes   

WSC 250 Dec 07

Kenny Achampong Tricky midfielder who disappeared   

Tom Davies   

WSC 179 Jan 02