
I love the World Cup, but it’s a bit like flying business class. It spoils you. I flew business class once… well, twice. There and back again. I was taken on a press VIP trip to Japan and it was simply fantastic… Bloody fantastic. Space, comfort, personal service, a choice of quality meals, drink the whole way and no questions asked. Delightful – pure and simple.
I have flown hundreds of thousands of miles since. Economy class. And each time I do, I can’t help the unpleasant little tingle of resentment when I see those bastards queuing up and filing on first, but turning left at the entrance to the plane.
That’s what the World Cup is – that’s what it does. It is a luxury journey that we have the right to once every four years (which, granted, is a lot more frequent than my flying business class).
You see, last year, come May, I had already geared myself up to yet another year in the Championship for West Bromwich Albion and the fact that nothing else would happen for another three months.
This year, I got myself all keyed up for the World Cup, desperate to read and watch anything and everything pertaining to it for the month before South Africa kicked off against Uruguay, then watched just about every game through to July 11th and the (more deserved than most people seemed to give them credit for) Spanish lifting the trophy.
Since then, I have been at something of a loose end. Yes, I have started a blog… Two blogs in fact. I have got the ball rolling on establishing my own website – at last! I’ve only been chuntering on about it for about ten years. I have written a few songs and recorded a couple and set up my first gig playing my own brand of digitally looped guitar (Auraloramas)… In fact, I don’t think I have done so much in a two to three week period for decades. 2010 is indeed turning out to be an important year for me, as I had suspected it would be…
But it’s all falling a little flat at the moment. There is a hole in my life and there is nothing I can do about it except wait.
You see, I had failed to prepare myself for the one month and one week of no football between July 11th and August 12th. Completely forgot to prepare myself. What a knobber.
So, I found myself this morning, a little hungover, admittedly, scouring the ‘on demand’ section of BT Vision looking for something to feed my embarrassing habit.
I found it in a rather pants programme detailing the best goals of the first three seasons of the Premier League. Goal after meaningless goal went in, filling me in on three seasons I had largely missed due to my being in Bulgaria at the time.
My wife caught me at it. “Isn’t this a bit like porn?” she asked (a little too shrewdly for my liking). “Just goal after goal and you get a bit desensitised to it."
Well, yes, it was (although I didn’t admit that to her). I felt a little guilty being caught watching it, too.
Did I learn anything? As a matter of fact, yes I did. I learnt that Alan Shearer was as excellent as I remember him being (before he joined Newcastle and became just ‘good’). I learnt that Matt le Tissier was a damned site better than I remembered him. And I learnt (or rather had confirmed) that Ryan Giggs was a blindingly good player in the first three seasons… And, thinking about it, still is now… The bloke’s a living legend. Every season since 1992. A goal in every season. How many titles? A dozen? How many cups? Five? How many European Cups? Two (I know that one). All with one club.
I suppose 2010/11 could be his last season. I hope it’s a good one. I hope he scores a few goals. I hope his record stands for decades to come…
And I wish, as with Le Tissier and Giggs, that players could develop and shine with one club that they love – but I know that’s never going to come true. We’ve come too far.
Still four weeks to go until the season starts… How do we cope? I’m now waiting for the second episode of the best goals of the Premier League to be uploaded… Although next time I’ll wait until my wife goes to bed.