Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,634,461 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Not just a game: soccer as the Argentines play it. (Of Several Minds).


It's more than an hour before kickoff, but Augusto's Pizzeria in the heart of La Boca La Boca is a neighborhood, or barrio of the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires. It retains a strong European flavour, with many of its early settlers being from the Italian city of Genoa. , a proud working-class neighborhood in Buenos Aires Buenos Aires (bwā`nəs ī`rēz, âr`ēz, Span. bwā`nōs ī`rās), city and federal district (1991 pop. , is already packed with men, women, and children sporting blue-and-gold-striped jerseys.

Those are the colors of Boca Juniors, Argentina's most popular professional soccer team. Today, on a sunny Sunday in late October, Boca is playing its eternal archrival arch·ri·val  
n.
A principal rival.
, River Plate, in the super clasico of Argentine soccer, the match that brings the nation to a halt.

Forget Sampras-Agassi, or Yankees-Red Sox, or even Ali-Frazier. When Boca Juniors and River Plate meet, it's more like India-Pakistan.

Nearly a thousand police officers stand alert in and around River Plate's Monumental Stadium, the site of the match. The morning newspapers include city maps detailing the distinct routes Boca and River fans should take to the match. The presidents of both teams have publicly called for Argentina's notorious pockets of violent fans--the barras bravas--to remain under control.

In a nation battered by political corruption In broad terms, political corruption is the misuse by government officials of their governmental powers for illegitimate private gain. Misuse of government power for other purposes, like repression of political opponents and general police brutality, is not considered political  and economic collapse, River-Boca is much more than just a security concern. The match also offers a rare chance for Argentines to forget their well publicized woes. For ninety heart-stopping minutes, there are no financial crises, no upsurge in poverty, and no painful negotiations with international creditors. There is only Boca-River.

"Driving a Ferrari, or traveling around the world ... those are joys for the rich," explains Sergio Noguera, a thirty-eight-year-old salesman and lifelong Boca fanatic. "But there is no happiness a rich man can buy that compares to what Boca Juniors has given me over the years."

Play begins. "Dale, dale, dale, Bo!" ("Go, go, go, Bo!") The crowd at the pizzeria echoes the fans in the Boca section of the stadium.

The seventh minute provides early drama, as Boca forward Carlos Tevez speeds past the River defense on the left side of the penalty box. "Pass it back, pass it back!" roars the restaurant, but Tevez doesn't see his teammate trailing the play. Dozens of fans throw their hands up in disgust.

Minute thirty-one. A River player finesses through the Boca defense. A lone cry of "ole!" emanates from the front of the restaurant, revealing a smattering of infiltrated River fans. "Che, they're going to kill you, friend!" warns Sergio.

Minute forty-two. Marcelo "El Chelo" Delgado scores for Boca on a beautiful free kick from outside the penalty box. Augusto's erupts. Grown men jump up and down, howl in delight, and hug strangers. Boyfriends kiss their girlfriends. Girlfriends kiss back. Sergio dashes outside and lights two thunderous thun·der·ous  
adj.
1. Producing thunder or a similar sound.

2. Loud and unrestrained in a way that suggests thunder: thunderous applause.
 firecrackers in the street. The celebration continues into halftime. Boca leads 1-0.

Sergio reminisces during the break. "My first clasico was April 10, 1981. We won because of Diego Armando Maradona," one of Argentina's all-time soccer greats. "He was just a pibe [a kid] then." Maradona, who led Argentina to a World Cup, would eventually leave Boca to play for Italy's Napoli soccer club. Today, many of Argentina's top soccer stars play for higher-paying European squads. "What can they say when they are offered that kind of money?" asks Sergio ruefully rue·ful  
adj.
1. Inspiring pity or compassion.

2. Causing, feeling, or expressing sorrow or regret.



rue
.

The second half kicks off, with so much confetti on the field that the ball seems to disappear. River slowly takes control. "These are not normal matches," mutters Mutters is a muncipality in the Austrian state of Tyrol in the district of Innsbruck-Land.

    [
 an annoyed Boca fan. "Sometimes the intensity gets in the way of the tecnica, the quality of play."

Minute fifty-two. River Plate's Esteban Fuertes Oscar Esteban Fuertes (born December 26 1972 Coronel Dorrego, Buenos Aires) is an Argentine footballer currently playing for Club Deportivo Universidad Católica in the .  ties the game after a well-executed crossing pass left him virtually alone in front of the Boca goal. The audacious River fans fill the sudden silence with vociferous cheers.

Sergio complains to the manager. "Why do I come here, all the way to La Boca," he demands, "to have someone cheer a River goal in my face? It is a deliberate provocation. You should throw them out!" He then turns to this reporter. "I don't justify the violence some people feel, but I understand it. Read the papers tomorrow--you'll see."

Twelve minutes left. That most unsatisfying of outcomes--a draw--seems inevitable until "El Chelo" fires a blistering, unstoppable kick from thirty-five yards out. River Plate's goalkeeper cannot even move before the ball inflates the net behind him.

Pandemonium Pandemonium

Milton’s capital of the devils. [Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost]

See : Confusion


Pandemonium

chief city of Hell. [Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost]

See : Hell
 at Augusto's. Chairs are knocked over. Tears are shed. Sergio gropes for his two remaining firecrackers and runs outside again.

"Golazo! Stupendous stu·pen·dous  
adj.
1. Of astounding force, volume, degree, or excellence; marvelous.

2. Amazingly large or great; huge. See Synonyms at enormous.
! Masterful! Brilliant!" The emotive television announcer cannot find sufficient adjectives to convey the import of the moment.

The referee finally blows the whistle, and Boca Juniors have notched another win over their nemesis. Boca now leads the all-time series against River with sixty-three wins, fifty-seven losses, and fifty-one ties.

Sergio is back, running around the restaurant, not knowing whom to hug next. "Boca, Boca, Boquita!" he yells deliriously de·lir·i·ous  
adj.
1. Of, suffering from, or characteristic of delirium.

2. Marked by uncontrolled excitement or emotion; ecstatic: delirious joy; a crowd of delirious baseball fans.
. The River fans slink slink  
v. slunk also slinked, slink·ing, slinks

v.intr.
To move in a quiet furtive manner; sneak: slunk away ashamed; a cat slinking through the grass toward its prey.
 out, quickly disappearing among the throngs filling the streets.

The next morning, the Buenos Aires daily El Clarin would report clashes between disgruntled dis·grun·tle  
tr.v. dis·grun·tled, dis·grun·tling, dis·grun·tles
To make discontented.



[dis- + gruntle, to grumble (from Middle English gruntelen; see
 River fans and police that left sixty-two people injured. Sergio was right. Yet the violence seemed a footnote amid the twelve full pages of breathless clasico-related analysis and commentary.

"I was supposed to eat a roast with my mother today, but I called her and explained about the match," confesses a jubilant Sergio as he leaves the restaurant. "It is not that I love Boca more than my mother, of course. But I can eat with her tomorrow, or maybe next week. Boca-River is only today."

Carlos Lozada Carlos James Lozada (September 6, 1946 – November 20, 1967), was a Private First Class in the United States Army and was killed in action in Vietnam. He posthumously received the Medal of Honor for his actions. Biography
Lozada was born in Caguas, Puerto Rico.
 is senior editor of Foreign Policy.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Commonweal Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Lozada, Carlos
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Dec 20, 2002
Words:902
Previous Article:Family connections: Monsignor O'Brien's Daytop Village. (Of Several Minds).
Next Article:The church still in crisis: can we tell the truth?



Related Articles
World cup '98: playing a man up or a man down.
Out of Bounds.
REVOLUTION'S STAPLETON STRESSES DEFENSE, PASSING.(Sports)
Then agony and the ecstasy: A soccer expert examines the dramatic rises and falls of the Tricolor. (Living in Mexico).(Brief Article)
YEARS LATER, THOMAS HAS NO REGRETS HART STANDOUT HAPPY HE CHOSE TO PLAY SOCCER OVER BASKETBALL.(News)
SOCCER NOTEBOOK: HIGHLAND COACH TAKES AIM AT RIVAL.(News)
GALAXY NOTEBOOK: SAMPSON CONFIDENT AS SEASON WINDS DOWN.(Sports)
WORLD CUP WORTH 4-YEAR WAIT FOR FANS THEIR FAVORITE FOOTBALL ENTHRALLING.(News)
POLITICS PLAYED OUT ON THE SOCCER FIELD.(Editorial)(Editorial)
EFFORTS GEARING UP TO SHOWCASE RATTLERS' SOCCER.(News)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles