Well,
well, well. Who would have thought it? England fans expected and the players
delivered, rather than disappointed. At work, we allowed people into the onsite bar to
watch it and we took an incredible amount of money through the tills!
I’m
not quite as euphoric as everyone else around me seems to be this morning. I’m
not a huge follower of football, and I’m not someone who will jump onto
whatever cultural bandwagon is currently rolling past and dominating social
media, but I must confess to feeling a strange amount of pride and a certain
swelling of enthusiasm. As Ted eloquently put it to me – “Those f**kers have
been letting us down for years. I’m probably one of the only people in the country
who remembers a f**king final with England in it.”
It has
reminded me a little of my own experience with the Super Bowl in 2013, and
again in 2020.
Yes
- sorry – I’m going to make this all about me, because that’s what modern people
do. (I refer you again to the aforementioned social media).
I love
the NFL, and my team is the San Francisco 49ers. They are historically one of
the most successful franchises in the sport, but all that success happened before
I was able to watch it and involve myself in it. I started following the team
more passionately and being able to watch them on British TV during a long,
horrible, uninspiring lean spell for them. So when they made it to ‘The Big
Game’ 8 years ago, I was ecstatic. It was a chance to prove themselves as the
best team playing that year, but also a chance for me to ‘revisit’ glory days
that I had been too young to feel a part of when they happened. In the end, at
the final whistle, they fell short, but that didn’t bother me too much, because
I was so proud they had made it that far in the first place.
Now I
would never make so bold as to tell fans of a sport I’m not interested in how they
should behave, but maybe that’s the attitude England should have on Sunday. It
would be such a terrible shame if Southgate and his players were deemed to be ‘failures’
just because they lost their last game in a tournament. That would completely
detract from the wonderful achievement of getting themselves to that game;
something no-one under the age of 60 in this country can ever remember
happening before.
I’m
not saying you should just turn up and enjoy the occasion, and be happy to be
there, but if you can approach it with the opinion that you’ve already reached
a goal very few people believed you would reach, then you can feel less
pressure and enjoy every single minute of this once-in-a-lifetime event. And –
win or lose – the feelings of pride and elation can continue.
RC 8-7-21
Thursday, 8 July 2021
Sore heads and smiling faces
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