Living in the UK, obviously football (soccer) is pretty hard to avoid and since I was about 7 I've supported Nottingham Forest, they're not my local team by any stretch but are based on from where my dad's side of my family are from (and for some reason my dad obviously beat my mum off when it came to influencing what team I called my own). I'm going to assume that 90% of the people reading this have no idea who they are, so here's a brief introduction.
"We were good, once". In 1979 and 1980 we won the European Cup (what is now the Champions' League), unfortunately I was minus 7 and minus 6 years old respectively this happened, so for me being a Forest supporter has been like being trapped on the train lines in a car with locked doors with the 14:23 express coimng through in a few minutes. The carnage and horror was almost inevitable but I couldn't get out, nor did I want to. Following a lower league team is masses more fun than following the Manchester Uniteds and Chelseas when it goes right, but probably hurts more when it goes wrong.
However, this weekend someone left the doors open, we could actually get promoted, albeit back to the second teir of the English leagues. I was convinced to go to the match by a friend who told me that if I didn't go and by some fluke we managed to get promotion I would regret. Some drinks later I agreed.
So we went. The jist of the day was we needed a better result than the team above us. We were 1-0 up inside 15 mins, the stress was off, we'd got the ball rolling, and my early nervousness had gone and the path to the lost voice had begun. We were 2-0 up soon enough, this is going pretty well, I might actually be able to enjoy this rather than quietly bricking it for the duration. 2-1 Uh-oh, not that I actually saw the goal as the stewards were trying to direct the disabled wheelchair using fans the way that you'd expect your trans-atlantic flight to be brought in to an airport. The bricking it was back. 3-1 one, nice goal, no more bricking it, back to the assorted shouting (the idea that soccer fans (probably the same for any sports fans in the world) 'sing' is ridiculous, one person may be singing, but the 28,000 others are more than tuneless enough to drown them out).
The score from the other important matches comes through. A strange disembodied cheer echoes round the ground. Nothing's happening yet the roar comes round three sides of the stadium like an aural Mexican Wave. The team above us are losing. We're on course. The shouting gets louder, the throat gets worse.
Half-time. Still bricking it a bit so spend the whole time standing up offering faux prayers to some sort of sporting lord, as every other Forest team - the Under 19's, reserves, Womens' side do their respective laps of honour.
And we're off again. We're not playing well by any stretch of the imagination. But we're playing well enough. Just. A lot of the half disappears into a stress filled haze. Watching the match infront of you, wondering whether any of the strange cheers and reactions from the other side of the ground are for goals in the other important matches. Nothing comes up on the scoreboards, we're safe so far. Oh #### Doncaster, the team above us who we need to better the result of have scored an equaliser. One more goal for them and we could score 80 and it would matter. More #### 3-2. Squeaky Bum Time.
According to my friend for a while I go very quiet at this point. The chants start up then peter out as chewed nails stop words from being formed correctly. My mind runs through every one of the possible scenarios and what they would mean, and what the reactions would be of the 28,000 other around me. The Police are also thinking the same thing, hoards emerge and ring the pitch, some oddly tying themselves to the advertising hoardings, like flourescent jacketed protesters.
Another oddly timed reaction. I look right to the guy with the mini-radio and earphones, he's cheering, and it's spreading. It's good? It's good. Doncaster have conceded again. More policemen emerge from heck-knows-where, some smiling so broadly you wonder if they're going join the pitch invasion they're gathering to try and stop.
Inside of 10 minutes to go. More faux prayers, more short lived chants, more bricking it. 3 minutes of injury time. 3 minutes more of all the above plus repeating 'blow the bloody whistle' over and over. And he does. Chaos. Joy. Noise. Joy. Hoards of fans dodge the policemen to make to the pitch some are rugby tacked to the ground, some rush forward in hoards figuring that some of them will make it through. Me personally, I didn't like the thought of the air holes the police dogs could give my ankle. The "singing" is louder than ever, the wieght lifted from collective shoulders. Promoted to the Championship. Get In!
Spent Sunday at The match between Sheffield Wednesday and Norwich. This is what we've earn't trips to 'big' teams and famous stadiums, although to be honest Hillsborough is in need of some TLC.
I'm still growling through a sore throat and the Forest shirt I'm the proud owner of is set to become part of my molecular structure until it smells so badly I can't bear it anymore.
This weekend is what sport is about. Why millions of people follow teams and players in dozens of sports. The kind of joy I had on Satuday. Roll on August.
The FA Cup is the thing of legend. It's the sort of thing that tends not to exist in mainstream North American sport, it throws up games the like of which are not seen in many other sporting competitions. Games where internationally renouned players, playing for clubs with millions of pounds (or should that be dollars) in the bank, and fans in every time zone in the world, are pitted against teams playing in grounds where only a few thousand people can attend, with players who rather than owning massive houses, several cars and a private helicopter, have to go to work like you and I, being anything from a PE teacher to a dustbinman.
One of those massive clubs is Liverpool, owned (at the moment at least) by US duo Tom Hicks and George Gillett, home to international stars Ryan Babel (Holland), Fernando Torres (Spain) and Steven Gerrard (England). They've won 5 European Cups and the FA Cup seven time
One of the minnow clubs are Havant & Waterlooville. Havent & Water-who-ville I hear you say. Well, I don't blame you, they currently lie 123 league places below Liverpool, playing their regular league games in the 'Blue Sqaure League - South'. They are home to such renouned talents as Jamie Collins (School Football Coach) and Tony Taggert (Dustbinman)
And yet for one day, these polar opposites of sport will be put on a level playing field (it's being played at Liverpool's home ground, as undoubtedy Havent's is on a slope as all non-league grounds are required to by law).
It took only a few minutes for the first goal to go in. And I bet you can't guess who it was to. Havent & Waterlooville. Yep, that's not a typo. Richard Pacquette (no news on his occupation) scored after 8 minutes. Don't worry I had to check as well. But it didn't last long, Lukas scored to make it 1-1, but then it happened again, as Havent made Liverpool look like the underdogs as they took advantage of 'hapless', to quote the BBC website, defending, the dream day was back on. Then off again,as Israeli international Yossi Benayoun made it 2-2.
Liverpool were booed off at half time and it was time for Reds' manager Rafa Benitez to earn his paycheck, presumably turning red with the amount of screaming involved. And what ever shade of puce he managed obviously worked as (unfortunately) Liverpool can out looking like they were really better, scoring 3 goals in the second half through Benayoun, who completed his hatrick, and Peter Crouch.
After the match Havent were rightly saluted, applauded and every Liverpool player gave a Havent player an incredible souvenier - their shirt. And even though they lost they still smiled like they'd won.
Yes, it was a dissapointment that Havent didn't perform the biggest Cup shock of all time, or at least of recent years. But I'm not really sure that matters. for a combined about 40 minutes binmen, plasterers and teachers were the talk of a sporting nation. People who don't support Liverpool, or Havent, in fact people who don't even know where Havent is were watching this game like their lives depended on it. The FA Cup remains a gigantic draw in the world of football. Cup matches are often where the spirit of football is seen, they are often the most exciting matches of a season. The 'romance', the 'drama' and 'magic' of it may or may not exist, but it breeds the sort of matches that will remain on archive reels for decades. I don't care how 'almost' this match was, it will still be spoken about for years to come.
I always want to write something witty here, but my wit is always confused with something worse ------------- ------------- ----NASCAR and Auto Racing in general mostly here, but I get distracted by shiny sporting objects as well and give them an airing too---------- ------------- -----Pastimes include rooting for the underdog and trying to fathom why Golf is considered a sport-------- ------------- ---
Send Lawyers, Guns and Money.