Nobody knows anything By Michael Davies Special to Page 2 |
Day 8: June 8, ANA Hotel, Sapporo, 2:30 a.m.
I have just arrived back in my crap hotel room (worse than the Bristol, Conn., Radisson) from the Sapporo Dome, site of England's staggering victory over Argentina. Taki is forcing me, forcing me, I say (and boy how I resisted, "All right, Taki, see you there, mate"), to join him at a hot new DJ space he's heard about. He tells me to dress casual, so, being English, I have removed the silk handkerchief from my breast pocket and not polished my shoes. I jump in a cab and repeat to myself 200 times -- "must not get drunk again tonight, must not get drunk again tonight ..." I look out the window as we drive by group after group of reveling England fans making their way back to their hotels. It's already getting light, we're a long way up north, I'm out again way past my bedtime.
"England Rave," Somewhere, Sapporo, 3 a.m. I look around me. A sub-5-foot DJ works behind a massive setup at the far end of the room. About 100 young Japanese ravers, a couple of them Rastafari, move about (tough to call this dancing), facing, trancelike, in that direction. Among them, dozens of pasty, lumpy England fans dance around frenetically, barely able to contain their joy, alcohol and wobbly man breasts. It's a mellow evening. I think we're all stunned or just tired from last night. Satoko has to leave. She seems very sad. She's bought us all silk handkerchieves. She asks us a question somewhat forlornly in Japanese. Taki translates, "She asks when are you all coming back to Sapporo?" "Erm ..."
ANA, Flight XXX, to Haneda, seat 8B, 11:45 a.m.
I was, of course, greeted personally at the door by Satoe Sugie, the head concierge, who had already sent my bags to the room, arranged my Internet connection and ordered me traditional English tea service. As I stuff nine or 10 cakes, tarts and scones down my gullet, washed down by cup after cup of milky, sugary tea, I devour the match reports from the England game in the English language newspapers and on the Internet. Rob Hughes, in the International Herald Tribune, gets it just right, setting the England victory in the context of this already vintage World Cup: "Yet so many games have transcended customary first round cautiousness, and so many have provided the ultimate stimulus in sports, that we turn up to each game like men and women on blind dates. We have a vague idea of how it might go, but we are open to any surprise." On television they are playing Game 2 of the NBA Finals. I love the NBA, but despite another thundering dunk from Shaquille O'Neal, it all just seems so small, so insular. The Laker girls come out during a timeout and give it some wiggle. They're wearing "Pearl Harbor" promotional T-shirts. That will go down well here.
The Press Room, International Media Center, 5:25 p.m. "I don't care," I reply, "we beat Argentina." "But you can not ween the seven matches to win the big," he continues. "Only the Azurri, the Italy, can win the seven matches." We sit and watch as Croatia promptly, if somewhat fortunately, beats Italy two goals to one. The legendary screenwriter, William Goldman, opened his book about the movie business, "Adventures In The Screen Trade," with the oft quoted, "Nobody knows anything." Football is no different. France, Italy and Argentina, all three pre-tournament favorites, have all lost during the first eight days of the tournament. Any of them might still "win the big," but anybody who tells you that they know who will win it for sure, well, refer them to Bill. 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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