Wednesday, February 12, 2020

SPORTING ECSTASY




As I watch Scotland sink to 2 (out of 2) Six Nations defeats, as Arsenal flounder and England’s middle order batting collapses again, in my depression I struggle to recall why I follow sport at all. Then I think of some high-spots over the years, a few of which I personally witnessed, and remember those warm feelings of triumph and achievement which sporting success engenders. Let me share some of my moments with you – you will all have your own fond memories.


I start with Racing. It was 1951 and my ever-generous parents took the family to Bournemouth, whence, aged 9, I was taken to my first race meeting at Bath. That day the champion jockey Gordon Richards rode through the card winning all 5 races. I was most impressed and we all remember Gordon, soon to be Sir Gordon, winning in 1953 the Coronation Derby on Pinza with his characteristic erect saddle position and long reins.


Sir Gordon Richards

Coronation year 1953 was remarkable in many ways. I was at prep school and on the day itself we were roused with the news that Mount Everest had at last been scaled by the British expedition led by John Hunt with the actual peak climbers being New Zealand’s Edmund Hillary and Nepalese Sherpa Tenzing Norgay. An auspicious start for a new reign!


Everest with mountaineers Tenzing and Hillary

 
Still at school that day in 1953 I remember us all crowding round a “steam” radio to hear Denis Compton hit the winning runs as England regained the Ashes lost in 1934. Long years of dominance by Australia with Don Bradman, Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller in the vanguard were finally over. It was fitting that Compton, a dashing cavalier batsman whose smiling features advertising Brylcreem adorned every billboard, should be the hero of the hour, with his trademark leg sweep.

Denis Compton hits the Ashes winning runs (1953)
                     
There were of course other cricket red-letter days – Jim Laker skittling out the Aussies at Old Trafford in 1956 with a 19-wicket haul and Ian Botham’s feats with bat and ball (399 runs and 34 wickets) in 1981 over a whole series. Derring-do indeed!


Another amazing moment was Roger Bannister running the first sub-4 minute mile at the modest Iffley Road track at Oxford University in 1954. Bannister was paced by Chris Chataway and Chris Brasher, both magnificent athletes of the amateur era. Dr. Bannister achieved immortality but was rather prouder of his later achievements as a neurologist.

Roger Bannister beats the 4-minute mile barrier (1954)

English football hit unbeatable heights with the World Cup triumph of 1966, under Bobby Moore’s inspiring captaincy, beating Germany 4-2 at Wembley with goals from Martin Peters and a hat-trick from Geoff Hurst. It was a wonderful performance but hard-won as it went to an unbearably tense extra time. I watched the game in a small Amsterdam hotel where a friend and I were living it up – no, no, I mean we were lapping up the culture! – and the other Dutch viewers were equally enthusiastic.


Bobby Moore and his great team (1966)

Sadly, English football went into a long decline, though we should doff a cap to right winger Stanley Matthews who had much earlier enchanted the crowd and mesmerized opposing Bolton in the 1953 FA Cup Final winning 4-3. Matthews inspired his Blackpool team and Stan Mortensen scored a hat-trick for them. Germany and then Argentina dominated at national level until a great day in Munich in 2001, a World Cup qualifier, when England tore Germany apart 5-1 with Michael Owen scoring a brilliant hat-trick.


Being a Scottish football fan requires a thick skin but at club level there have been high-spots, not least when Celtic under Billy MacNeill beat Inter Milan 2-1 in Lisbon in 1967 to capture the European Cup. A blockbusting goal from Tommy Gemmell equalized and Steve Chalmers prodded in the winner. Scotland rocked and rolled! My own home team Aberdeen defied the odds and beat Real Madrid 2-1 in the European Cup-Winners Cup in Gothenburg in 1983, managed by brilliant Alex Ferguson. The goals came from Eric Black and John Hewitt with stalwart support from stars Willy Miller and Gordon Strachan, but as ever it was a team effort.



Aberdeen beat Real Madrid 2-1 at Gothenburg


Golf in the UK and Europe was dominated from the 1920s by Americans like Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer, Tony Lema or Jack Nicklaus and the likes of South African Gary Player and Australian Peter Thomson. Then, amazingly, Tony Jacklin won the Open in 1969 and the US Open in 1970 breaking a psychological dam leading to regular successes in the Ryder Cup for the European team and individual triumphs in the Masters and other great US events for European golfers. One of the most memorable was Nick Faldo’s single-minded dissection of luckless Greg Norman in the Masters in 1996.


Jacklin wins The Open (1969)
Faldo beats Norman for the Masters (1996)


Finally, some rugby memories, and as a Scotland supporter, pulse-quickening day are liberally interspersed with long months of gloom. Everyone enjoyed the flashes of brilliance from Cliff Morgan, Gareth Edwards, Richard Sharp, Barry John, John Rutherford and more recently from Gregor Townsend, Jonny May and Finn Russell. Yet Scotland’s great day, under David Sole, was her winning of the 1990 Calcutta Cup against England 13-7 at Murrayfield. I was there with my lovely wife; the atmosphere was electric and politically hostile to a confident English team under Will Carling. The winning try came from winger Tony Stanger who controversially touched down a bouncing ball over the English line. Scotland erupted in ecstasy.


Scotland's John Jeffrey disagrees with England's Jeremy Guscott (1990)

Thanks for the memories!


SMD      
12.02.20   
Text Copyright © Sidney Donald 2020

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