In many countries my outfit would be mercilessly mocked and
ridiculed, but here? Muy, muy guapo.
The girl looks at my jacket out of the corner of her eye as
she opens her mouth and bites her sandwich. I smile and nod at her jersey. Clearly we’ve
bonded.
Her name is Paula.
She is a big Atlético fan. She’s six years old.
“Do you know what time they open the gates?” Dad
asks me in Spanish, as he and his wife take turns steadying Paula on the
barstool. Apparently I look like someone
who knows. “Three thirty?”
Of course I have no idea but automatically assume my default
mode of faking it with conviction. “No, at three, I think,” Complete guess but
let the man dream. Mom gives me a worried-looking nod, calculating how they are
going to entertain a six-year-old in a bar for another 45 minutes. Paula doesn’t seem particularly concerned.
They say that in Spain, soccer (or football, as anyone
outside of North America calls it) is a religion. If that’s the case, it looks like I just walked into the
early service Sunday School.
In eight days, an early morning, pre-arranged rumble on a bridge outside Vicente Calderon stadium between radical Atlético and Deportivo supporters will leave a man dead, after he falls - or is thrown - into the river during the fight. Twenty fans will be arrested.
But today I'm seeing none of this.
In eight days, an early morning, pre-arranged rumble on a bridge outside Vicente Calderon stadium between radical Atlético and Deportivo supporters will leave a man dead, after he falls - or is thrown - into the river during the fight. Twenty fans will be arrested.
But today I'm seeing none of this.
Where are the screaming fanatics? Where are the drunken
brawls? With multiple families and kids under twelve, El Parador looks less like a
testosterone-infused sports bar than it does a tram stop at Disney World.
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Dad asks me another question about the stadium that I can’t
really understand and I probably couldn’t answer if I did. I decide to fess up. “Actually, this is my first game.”
“Ours, too,” Mom
tells me. She gestures toward Paula.
“She really wanted to come. She loves football.”
Paula says nothing, but seems to be eying up the hot dogs. I nod and take another swallow of cerveza. Dad looks at his watch.
At this point a drunken brawl looks extremely unlikely.
At this point a drunken brawl looks extremely unlikely.
* * *
It is true that in Spain, Sports is essentially synonymous
with Football. There is no other sport that really means anything. Basketball occasionally gets a 30-second
mention on the TV sports report, but I suspect only because the Spanish Gasol
brothers (Pau and Marc) currently play in the NBA. After that, it’s ten seconds
of tennis, ten seconds of Grand Prix auto racing, and the motocross results.
That’s not a joke; they actually give the motocross results.
No, if you’re a sports fan in Spain, it’s all about
football. And in Spanish football, it’s
all about La Liga, the top 20-team
division of professional football clubs. La
Liga translates simply as “The
League,” as in “What other league could you possibly be talking about?”
However, “Competitive Balance” – something to which American
professional sports leagues at least pay lip service – is not a concept that
translates at all to La Liga, either
in language or spirit. In the 83 seasons of La
Liga (since 1929, with a couple years off for an ugly Civil War), the
league has been won 54 times by two clubs: Real Madrid, and Barcelona.
In the past 10 years, either Real Madrid or Barcelona has
been crowned the champion all but once.
The undisputed two best players in the world play for these two teams:
Lionel Messi for Barcelona; Cristian Renaldo for Real Madrid. Both clubs have a
worldwide fan base and by far have the most money of any team in the country. It’s like Apple and Microsoft, Nadal and
Djokovic, Presley and Sinatra. And then everybody else.
On the outside of this embarrassment of riches looking in is
Madrid’s “other” football team: Club Atlético de Madrid, or more simply, Atlético.
If Real Madrid are the Yankees and Barcelona are the Red Sox, then Atlético are
the Spanish equivalent of the New York Mets.
It’s like old Shea Stadium in Queens. Minus a toxic waste
dump or two.
But like the Mets, Atlético historically (if not currently) is not entirely hopeless. With less money and less prestige, they still try their best to keep up with the Big Boys. Every now and then – say, once every couple of decades – they actually go on an improbable run and win the whole thing, leaving the spoiled fans of Real and Barcelona fuming with rage. One of those improbable runs happened last year, giving Atlético the championship for the first time since 1996.
When I moved to New York in the late Nineties, I turned my
nose up at the dynasty-building Yankees and became a Mets fan, ushering in
heartbreak for years to come. And of course when I came to Madrid - for reasons I will leave a psycho-analyst to determine - I knew immediately that, like the
Mets, Atlético was the team for me.
* * *
I previously had been to one European football match, 17 or
so years ago, in Belgium. But I’m not sure that really counts.
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While I’m sure he meant well, it was Geert who confirmed my
suspicion that a soccer game – in Belgium, at least – was nothing more than an
organized excuse to drink. As if they needed another one.
We spent the hour leading up to the Anderlecht game with
Geert and his friends hitting as many bars around the stadium as possible, slamming
down a Stella and quickly heading out to find the next round. By kickoff time Jim and I - no strangers to
beer consumption, trust me - were being ridiculed as lightweight Americans
because we were unable to ingest a gallon of alcohol in 45 minutes or less.
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I had no idea the difference would involve kids, more kids, cigars,
air horns, scarves, vomitoriums, and molestation by a security guard. Just did
not see that coming.
* * *
Yes, I bought a scarf, but I’m the American neophyte at his
first Spanish soccer game. Who are the other 999,999 scarves for? The stadium only holds 52,000; how many
scarves can a person possibly wear? It’s not even cold.
Leave it to the Spanish to combine sports paraphernalia with male fashion accessories. I look, but
fail to find the matching Atlético cufflinks and cummerbund.
* * *
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When I reach the underpass, lights are flashing in the
tunnel and the police are shooing picture-snapping Atlético fans away from a
red, white and blue bus parked under the stands. The Atlético team, apparently,
has arrived at the stadium.
Disappointingly, no one in the tunnel appears
to be fighting, and/or drunk. Not even the players.
* * *
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I’m not carrying a bag, purse or backpack, so instead I get a
full-body pat down. Not the perfunctory
pat down you get at the airport if you set off the metal detector; I suspect this
is closer to what you experience when you check in for your first day at prison. Another couple inches further up my leg and
I’m going to ask the guard if he plans to buy me dinner.
Yes, that is a cell phone in my pocket. And no, I’m not just
happy to see you.
* * *
My seat, it turns out, is almost as far away from the field
as it can possibly be without actually being located outside of the stadium. When I enter Vomitorio
34 and show the usher my ticket, she just laughs and points up the concrete
stairs. As in “WAY the hell up there, Pal. Just keep climbing.”
Vomitorio 34, Section 519, Row 16, is in the second-to-last
in the stadium, just under the press box. It might be in the shade, on some
other day. But with the 4:00 p.m. start time I will be staring into a blinding
sun for at least the first half of the game. I am baking in my warm up jacket
and my scarf.
But by American standards, the seat is … not really that
bad. I paid 40 Euro for the ticket, about 50 bucks. At an American football game, I’d be sitting at about the
40-yard line, and paying what? Three or four times this price? And vomiting
probably wouldn’t even be allowed, let alone encouraged.
I lean back, drape my arms over the adjoining chairs, and
prop up my feet in the still-empty row in front of me. I feel like I’m living
large, soaking in the sun and the scene through my Ray-bans in the vomitorio under
the press box of Vicente Calderon Stadium.
That is until the kids arrive.
* * *
Three things of note that have not yet been banned in
Spanish football stadiums: cigars, children under the age of 12, and air horns. Thankfully they have not yet imported the
vuvuzela.
It’s an odd sensation, having cigar smoke blown in your
face. Kind of like being stuck on a
motorcycle in the Holland tunnel in the middle of summer, behind a diesel
tractor-trailer with a bad muffler. I feel like
I’m at a poker game, taking place in 1958.
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Kike and Pepe are at that age – I don’t know, 5? 6? – where
they don’t really give a crap about the actual sporting event taking place on
the field. Yeah there are a bunch of guys running around kicking a ball yadda yadda
yadda okay we got it whatever. It’s much, much more fun for a boy at that age
to throw peanut shells in the hair of the people in front of them, giggle and hide,
and then puncture an eardrum by blowing an air horn.
Paula would never do this.
“Hey!”
Kike and Pepe have just blown their air horn into the ear of
a visibly pissed Russian with a crewcut in the row in front of us. The Russian kid apparently speaks no Spanish,
so he begins yelling in broken English. To the delight of Kike and
Pepe, who know just enough English to giggle and hurl back the insults of a six
year old that transcend all cultural divides.
“What is your name?” Kiki asks the Russian slowly in
English.
“Me, I am Nikolai.”
Kiki and and Pepe both laugh. “You’re stupid.”
Nikolai’s eyes bulge to the size of pies. For a moment I
believe his head might actually explode. “I
STUPID??? I STUPID?? YOU STUPID!! YOU!!”
The kids love this. They laugh and laugh and laugh.
Meanwhile on the field, Atlético has scored its first goal. Kiki and Pepe could
not possibly care less.
* * *
While the game so far may not have quite reached the level
of a religious experience, I do notice about halfway through the first half
that Jesus is sitting in front of me.
Turns out he’s an Atlético fan. I wonder how that is going to go over in Barcelona, and at
the stadium across town.
* * *
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Evidently the playlist at Vicente Calderon has not been
updated since a decade or so before Franco died.
A few minutes before the end of the half, Atlético scores
its second goal, further depressing the contingent of Malaga supporters
relegated to the ghetto of a single section in the far corner of the
stadium. The Atlético fans stand and
wave their scarves, as the end zone chants something to the tune of the Polovetzian
Dance No. 2 by Borodin.
Back in Vomitorio 34, Nikolai continues his debate with Kike
and Pepe.
“You stupid!!”
“No, you are.”
“No, you!”
Jesus looks on impassively,
and opens a bag of peanuts.
* * *
Midway through the second half. The Atlético fans are
growing nervous, as Malaga kicks in a goal almost as if by accident, narrowing
the score to 2-1.
It’s as if everyone is just waiting for a tie to ruin
their afternoon. Who wants to leave the
stadium chanting “Yay! We didn’t lose to each other!” What are the drunken-brawl chances in that?
Here under the press box, the niños are also antsy, but it has nothing to do with the game score. There are, after all, only so many peanut
shells you can throw and Russians you can annoy before boredom sets in.
Kike’s Dad finally makes himself known from the row behind
us and steps in to try to put an end to the tormenting of Nikolai. My personal
opinion is that anyone who argues with a six year old at a football game for 45
minutes pretty much gets what he deserves, but I’m also ready for the exercise of a
little parental control.
“Kike,” Dad says,
confiscating the air horn, “mira el partido.” Watch the game.
The look on Kike’s face switches from unbridled joy to the
grimace of a crushed soul, as if Dad just announced that there is no Santa
Claus. Or whoever it is that delivers Christmas presents in Spain.
Watch the game? Am I
being punished for a war crime? Why do you hate me?
After being prohibited from torturing foreign nationals, Kike
initiates the sporting event version of Are We There, Yet?, swiveling around every five
minutes to ask Dad when the game will be over so they can get the hell out of
there.
“Veinte minutos, Kike.”
“Quince minutos, Kike.”
“Diez minutos, Kike.”
Pepe on the sly tries to coax his friend into re-instigating
hostilities with Nikolai, but Kike’s heart is just not in it anymore. If you can’t deafen an innocent stranger with
an air horn what’s the point, really?
With six minutes left to go Atlético scores another goal,
making the game 3-1, the soccer equivalent of an emphatic beat down.
Scarves are waved. The end zone chants. Kike asks Dad how
much time is left. Jesus sits quietly, eating his peanuts.
* * *
When the final whistle blows, Atlético walks away with a
tidy victory, keeping them within striking distance of Real and Barcelona in La Liga standings. In all likelihood they
won’t pass either of those teams, but stranger things have happened. Hell, they
happened last year.
The riot police look bored. The horses the police are riding look bored. The
kids being dragged home may not necessarily be bored, but most of them clearly need a nap.
A fine Saturday afternoon in Madrid, unless you’re a Malaga
fan. The drunken brawl is still a week away.