THE ARCHIVE
Euro 2004
When two sides go to war | When two sides go to war |
|
I t started tensely and just got worse. Before the Portugal v Greece game many of us were troubled by Dull Host Anxiety – you may yourself have experienced this on hearing the voice of Norah Jones wafting earward as you pull off your mittens outside the neighbours’ door. I sat there on day one fearing that in the opening ceremony Portugal would be reduced to a demonstration of the port bottling process by a giant Eusébio doll, aided by Lisbon schoolchildren holding dining-table-shaped balloons. So it was with some relief that I learned Portugal had in fact discovered the world and taught it how to exist. To add colour to the nautical scene, several hundred citizens dressed as orange sperm arranged themselves into a representation of a giant football, a spectacle only partly diminished by a shot of two of the sperm clearly chatting about their costumes on their miraculous journey to the ball-womb. Of course, when tournaments like this arrive, with countries from all over Europe coming together with one goal, it is a chance once again for our pundits and commentators to demonstrate their knowledge of precisely two things about each participating culture. John Motson knew the Germans were Teutonic and thorough. Barry Davies knew something about Greeks bearing gifts, which was handy because it could also be cleverly worked into Greeks not bearing gifts when they kept a clean sheet. Someone else mentioned Trojan horses. Graham Taylor, who once famously attributed his England side’s defeat by Norway to the Norwegians’ greater experience of the outdoors, was quick to offer that the Scandinavians’ skill at building teams was a known characteristic of those countries. One wonders if Taylor realises how faithfully, during the wilderness years of his management of our national side, millions of English people believed he was putting some effort into team-building himself. Clive Tyldesley may know more than two things about our neighbours across the Channel but, unhinged by England’s impersonation of a non-League side holding a lead in a fifth-round FA Cup tie, he informed us that “Arsenal are making a change” when France brought on a late substitute. From WSC 210 August 2004. What was happening this month On the subject...
Comments (0)
Comment
You must be logged in to comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.
|
| «Previous | | | Next» |
|---|
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 |
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 |
Amir Karic and Ulrich Le Pen Not worth the money? |
Jonathan Barnes |
WSC 221 Jul 05 |
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 |








Subscribe to this comment's feed