Gregory's Girl
Another game of squash,
another resounding victory for yours truly. It is appropriate that my latest
sporting success should occur at the same time we are garnering gold
medals galore at the Athletics' World Championships and the old enemy has been well
and truly put to the (Broad) sword.
If David Cameron is looking
for the Olympic legacy, he has to look no further than me.But enough of me...
I suppose I have to own up to
not being enamoured with football. The far too short summer break will soon be
over and the media will once again echo to the sound of spoilt children
masquerading as sports commentators.
Ego fuelled money bags will
spend obscene sums on buying over priced and over here "talents", and
normally economically rational men will willingly hand over a King's ransom for
the dubious pleasure of watching a bunch of twenty somethings chasing a ball up
and down a muddy field.
We'll be subjected to the
interminable, inane after match interviews with self satisfied middle aged men
masquerading as managers. As well as the monosyllabic "dialogues" with
otherwise unemployable yoffs with two brain cells: one in each big toe.
Oh, there will, of course, be
the inevitable false dawn of the national team's revival, and acres of analysis
as to why we're so much crap.
My antipathy to the
"beautiful game" has nothing to do with my total inadequacy on the
field of play. In no way connected with my complete failure of nerve when
confronted by a left back built like a brick house. Or my inexplicable ability
to trip myself up every time I had the ball.
On the cricket pitch I was a
force of nature. In football having me on your team gave the opponents a three
goal advantage.
My dislike of the game is
based on a belief that this nation's decline over the past half century
is because much of the male working population spend all their working day
discussing the last match and constructing explanations why their team was such
an abysmal failure. If all that creative activity was directed towards improving our
nation's wealth, we'd be top nation for sure.
How the combined German economic and
footballing success fits into this analysis is unclear. However I am confident
that if football was banned in the UK we'd all be driving UK BMWs and
holidaying in German South West Africa in no time.
In the meantime here's to Mo, Christine
and Stuart and to the sporting renaissance of which I am such a shining example.
Comments
Dear Bojo: Just what I expected you to say.
Dear JtH: Nope I was off to uni that year.
Dear Anon: You've played squash?