
Just as the British honours system rewards people deemed to have made a
valuable contribution in society over their lifetimes, the French have
a similar set-up. The Legion of Honour is the highest accolade that the
French state can award and is only given to those whose influence is
unquestionable.
French footballing great Zinedine Zidane will
have his ranking in the Legion lifted from a knight to an officer it
was announced this afternoon.
At 36 years of age, 'Zizou' will
be remembered as one of the truly great footballers of his generation,
performing with Cannes, Girondins de Bordeaux, Juventus, Real Madrid
and France with distinction during a career that spanned 18 seasons.
Few
players can claim to have won the titles that the Marseille-born
superstar has won. Domestically, Zidane has won titles both in Italy
and in Spain in addition to achieving great continental success,
victorious in the European Cup – few will forget his sumptuous winning
goal for Real Madrid against Bayern Leverkusen - and twice the European
Super Cup
It is his exploits with the French international
side that are really being recognised today. Zidane was a spearhead of
the French international side that dominated international football at
the turn of the millennium, playing pivotal roles as France claimed
their first ever World Cup title in 1998, famously scoring two goals,
and then followed this with a dramatic European Championship success a
year later.
The Légion d'honneur, as the French recognise it,
has five levels, of which Zidane has been promoted to the fourth-most
rank, officer – one step ahead of a knight. There is a maximum quota of
10,000 officers at any one time so the award is truly unique and
special.
Jacques Lambert, president of the FFF, was also
upgraded to an officer while Fernand Duchaussoy, chairman of the French
amateur leagues (the LFFA), has been made a knight.
sooner or later u will be seeing Sir Lee Kuan Yew