Where's the passion? By Michael Davies Special to Page 2 |
Day 3: The Column of Death
Yokohama, The Media Center Viewing Room, 9.51 a.m. Can't bring myself to watch eight goals scored by Germans so I decide to watch the Denmark vs. Uruguay game from Saturday instead. Very entertaining. The Uruguayans are so good off the ball. In fact, they don't really need a ball at all. They would be utterly content, it seems, if they could have the ball eliminated from the game altogether. That way they could just play their game, "foot" they could call it, and just run around the field kicking their opponents, tugging their shirts, pulling them to the ground and occasionally feigning injury or injustice and having a jolly good whinge at the referee. The highlight of the game though is the performance of Stig Tofting, one of my favorite hard men in world football. The Danish playmaker tops my list of ...
The 10 greatest player names at the World Cup
2. Gaetan Englebert, Belgium
3. Macbeth Sibaya, South Africa
4. Kaka, Brazil
5. David Seaman, England
6. Doo Ri Cha, South Korea
7. Bo Qu, China
8. Wilmer Lopez, Costa Rica
9. Torsten Frings, Germany
10. Joseph-Desire Job, Cameroon
Honorable mentions
Tokyo Station 12.55 p.m.
At the ticket counter it's like a scene out of Star Trek, all touch screens and flashing lights as Sulu gives me a window seat in first. I was expecting the station to be crawling with England fans, but I could count them on one hand, a couple of white England shirts and a couple of '66 vintage red. Seems strange. Probably down the pub.
Saitama Stadium Media Center, 2.20 p.m. He's sitting in a group with some of the Times World Cup Staff, I recognize them from their photos. I am in danger of becoming a groupie so I leave the main press room and head into the restaurant area where I see the commentator Barry Davies (no relation, unfortunately), former player John Barnes, and managers Graham Taylor and Ron Atkinson. He looks wonderfully miserable and the game hasn't even started yet. I spend some time also with Ty Keough and Jack Edwards, who are covering the game for ABC. These guys and their team could not be nicer, really passionate about the game, constantly trying to improve and they're open to ideas. I give Ty my thoughts on the England team and an interesting way of explaining the way they play to an U.S. audience: David Beckham is the primary quarterback, Michael Owen and Darius Vassell the speedy receivers, Emile Heskey the tight end. You can extend the NFL analogy all the way through the outfield; Danny Mills and Ashley Cole are the full backs/running backs, Sol Campbell and Rio Ferdinand the rocks of the defensive line. Then it breaks down when you realize that Paul Scholes and Owen Hargreaves are also quarterbacks and on the field at the same time as Beckham. Probably not legal. Yet.
Outside Entrance A, 4.05 p.m.
The riot police, literally, in the thousands, look completely and utterly baffled. This isn't what they've spent six months training for.
Media Tribune. 6.25 p.m. Tsk. Tsk. Worse though is the general volume. During the player introductions, their cheers are completely drowned out by the Japanese, especially when Beckham and Owen are mentioned and the Japanese, as we have already discussed, are the quietest people on the planet. Already in the warmups I noticed the England contingent's general lack of volume, range of repertoire and responsiveness. There is no bond established with the players, unlike with Ireland on Saturday, who looked nervous as hell. That might, though, have been down to the ridiculously rigorous nature of the choreographed warm up. That Italian trainer of theirs was wearing them out, surely. Sweden on the other hand were just knocking the ball around, laughing with each other, playing close to their thousand or so fans, a sea of blue and yellow to the right. They sing well, the Swedes, they move as one, like a Bjorn Borg collective, and bring along very fit looking women. All in all it's not easy to dislike the Swedes. Which is bloody annoying before such a big game.
The Media Tribune, final score 1-1, 8.30 p.m.
What I am unhappy with is the England fans. Teams need support, look at the Irish if you want an example. I'm glad the drunken, violent yobs were prevented from entering the country, but are the rest of us such sheep that without them we can't behave like passionate nonviolent drunken yobs and give our team something better than a feeble, occasional, "Eng-er-land, Eng-er-land, Eng-er-land." The English team played a bad second half. The England supporters had a bad warm up, and stunk throughout the game. Ten minutes before the end of the first half, a sizeable pocket of England fans pulled out the inevitable "Are you Scotland in disguise?" The Sweden answer, emphatic in the second half was "No we're not actually, we're Sweden and you've still never beaten us". Not at anything I can remember: tennis, yoghurt, cars, furniture, rape and pillage or football. Bloody Swedes. I'm even marrying one this summer. Michael Davies, a native of London, is executive producer of ABC's "Who Wants to be a Millionaire." He'll be filing five diary entries per week from the World Cup for Page 2. |
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