Showing posts with label sports player. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports player. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2014

Garrincha (1933–1983)


"a phenomenon, capable of sheer magic. It was difficult to know which way he was going to go because of his legs and because he was as comfortable on his left foot as his right, so he could cut inside or go down the line and he had a ferocious shot too." (Mel Hopkins, Wales full back)

Manuel Francisco dos Santos was born in Pau Grande, Brazil, in total poverty, the grandson of slaves.  He was barely educated, and went on to lead a fairly disastrous life, dying of alcoholism before his fiftieth birthday.  The one thing he could do was play football.  Dribbling, corners, free kicks, people asked whether he was from another planet, such were his skills.  He could even head the ball, despite his shortness.  On four separate occasions in his career, he scored direct from a corner.  With Pele, he was probably the greatest soccer player that Brazil has ever known, and he even has a soccer stadium named after him.   And he was born disabled.

It was his sister who named him Garrincha, after he was born with a deformed spine and a left leg six centimeters shorter than his right: he was always small for his age, and his right leg bent outwards and his left leg bent inwards.  To fans, he was known as Alegria do Povo, “joy of the people” or Anjo de Pernas Tortas, “angel with bent legs”.  And it was watching Garrincha that fans first started chanting “Ole”, the bullfighting cry, as he feinted and tricked defenders with those extraordinary and unpredictable legs.
                       
He was 20 when he joined Botafogo, scoring a hat trick in his first team debut.   Before that, he had been playing for his factory team.  He went on to score 232 goals in 581 matches during his twelve years playing for the club.  

He didn’t play in the 1954 World Cup.  But his reputation for extraordinary dribbling meant that he was in the squad for the next competition, held in Sweden in 1958: he played with a 17 year old named Pelé, and Brazil went on to win its first World Cup.  Brazil would never lose a match with both Pelé and Garrincha on the team.

Four years later in Chile, Pelé was injured early, and so Garrincha got the solo glory, knocking out England with two goals in the quarters and repeating his feat against Chile in the semis.  The British press described him as "Stanley Matthews, Tom Finney and a snake charmer all rolled into one."  Again, Brazil won the Cup, and Garrincha was named best player of the tournament, and won the Golden Boot as leading goalscorer.  He also got the girl, as a glamorous samba singer entered the team dressing room after the match to embrace him in the shower (she would later become wife number two).  
In 1966, luckily for England, Garrincha had problems with his knee, and Brazil lost to Hungary – his only defeat in 55 internationals.

Off the pitch, Garrincha partied as hard as he played.  He is said to have lost his virginity aged 12, to a goat.  Later he drove over his father while drunk.  The father was also a drunk, and cachaca was Garrincha’s undoing too.  Women were often the casualties, including the mother-in-law whom he killed in a drunken car accident in 1969, and her daughter, his second wife Elza Soares, that samba singer, who left him after he attacked her in 1977.  He had at least 14 children, including impregnating local girls when he went on tour with his team. 

As with George Best and Paul Gascoigne, it's questionable whether the sins of a genius should be forgiven. In Brazil, a dismal domestic record did not prevent you becoming a superstar, with the stadium in Brasilia being named after him in 1974.  When he died of cirrhosis of the liver on January 20, 1983, once again a pauper, thousands of fans came to view his body at the Maracanã stadium and pay their respects to the man who had won them their first two World Cups.

As the South American writer Eduardo Galeano wrote:

“In the entire history of football no one made more people happy. When he was out there, the pitch was a circus ring, the ball a tamed animal, the match a party invitation. Garrincha nurtured his pet, the ball, and together they created such mischief that people almost died laughing. He jumped over it, it gambolled around him, hid itself away, skipped off and made him run after it. And on the way, his opponents ran into each other.”


Link: Garrincha in action

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi (1941-2011)


“Aloof yet witty, plain but direct, regal yet casual. MAK Pataudi was so many contradictory things that eventually you stopped trying to classify him.”
(Mudar Patherya)

The first Indian to captain the Oxford University cricket team;  a member of the first Indian team to win a series against England; captain of India at the age of 21; leader of the first Indian team to win a Test series abroad.  “Tiger” Pataudi was quite literally a Prince of the game, always immaculately dressed off the field as befitted the ninth Nawab of Pataudi, son of the Begum of Bhopal.  He inherited the title on his eleventh birthday, when his father - a Test cricketer who played for England as well as India -  died playing polo in Delhi.  When royal entitlements were abolished by constitutional amendment in 1971, a certain MAK Pataudi stood for political office in protest.

Known for his batting, he scored 2, 793 Test runs, including six centuries.  This was all the more remarkable because he had lost an eye in a car accident in Hove in July 1961 and thus had no binocular vision to focus on a fast cricket ball hurtling towards him.  Tiger Pataudi liked to say that he always saw two balls, and hit the inside one.  He usually pulled his cap down over his right eye to avoid the distraction of a blurred double image.  He made his Indian Test debut less than six months after his injury: in the third Test of that series, he scored 103.  He also played for the Sussex country side, which he captained in 1966.  Had it not been for his impairment, he might have been one of the game’s truly exceptional players, instead of simply a very good one.  Oddly, the Indian team which he was instrumental in building and leading to world status contained at least one other disabled person – Bhagwat Chandrasekhar, the famous leg spinner, who had a withered right wrist as a result of polio contracted in childhood. 

Pataudi was the Muslim captain of  Hindu India, who welded all the regional cricketing stars into one cohesive and venerated national unit.  With his film star wife and his aristocratic poise, he brought glamour to the game, and it was in his day that the idolization of India’s cricket team really took off.  In later life, he was on the council of the Indian Premier League, but as Mukul Kesavan wrote:

“He remained untouched by the squabbles and sleaze that attended cricket’s transformation into big business in India.  As a consequence, death finds him happily embalmed in fond radio memories: still tigerish in the covers, still a prince among men.”

Perhaps typically for a man who grew up in a 150 room palace with over 100 servants, his only recorded brush with the law was when he was arrested for shooting a protected species of deer in 2005.