
THE Spanish derby.
The difference? Joaquín. Had the squad rapt, reciting some pre-match poetry and asking are they not entertained?
Comes on, scores the winning header.
The mayor has spoken.
An online commonplace book

THE Spanish derby.
The difference? Joaquín. Had the squad rapt, reciting some pre-match poetry and asking are they not entertained?
Comes on, scores the winning header.
The mayor has spoken.

El Cholo. All black everything. Black shirt, black tie…
I played in midfield and was not one of the better footballers, even though I longed to be and could spend hours and hours banging a ball against an enormous wall during those endless, lazy, boring summer days, or sneak onto a grass pitch with a friend and take penalties for hours on end, but that was never the real point, that wasn’t why I played football, it was because it was always, without fail, fun. It was never boring. It was always exciting. And perhaps, I think now, everything else lost importance, that was the point, you did something together, everyone was in on it, no one was excluded, and you disappeared inside yourself. Playing football was like being somewhere, it was like your own world inside a world, with it’s own rules, where I was happy. Yes, for Christ’s sake, that was what it was all about: happiness. Being somewhere else apart from inside yourself.
–
I stumbled upon Home and Away: Writing the Beautiful Game. Why didn’t anyone tell me this book existed!

Match Day 11.
World Cup’s are at their best when strikers are baggin’ goals. How can you not score with a name like Radamel Falcao?

Match Day 10.
Toni Kroos scored an exquisite stoppage time winner, but Timo Verner‘s dribbling, speed, cutbacks, and tracking back, pumped the Mannschaft back to life.

Stoppage Time
Fox! Get Jorge Perez-Navarro a private jet. Or a helicopter. Or a Star Trek transporter. He should be calling EVERY match.
That is all.

Match Day 7
Musa. Musa. Musa.

Match Day 6.
A slim chance remains.

Match Day 5.
I’m too old to use the word “lit”. But it’s a World Cup summer. My decision making is blurred and well, Jesse Lingard is LIT.