(Note–Not everything this month before we go public is a rerun; and today we bring you a fresh one by our friend, Michael Bloor–LA)
Andy and Davie were on their usual walk, along the banks of the Allanwater as far as the wooden footbridge, and then back again. They were discussing Scotland’s nail-biting victory last week over the Danes, sending the Scots to the World Cup Finals for the first time since 1998. Andy was English and had little interest in football, but he’d been deeply impressed by the tremendous, spontaneous upwelling of joy across the entire Scottish nation that the game had caused. Davie was trying to explain that it wasn’t just about the result, but the circumstances – the manner of the win. Three of the four goals were truly things of beauty. The match took place at Glasgow’s Hampden Park in front of a delirious home crowd, screened live and free-to-view in every home and every pub. It followed years and years of failure to qualify – some of the present team being unborn at the time Scotland had last qualified.
Andy nodded good-humouredly, but Davie could tell that he hadn’t yet got his point across. He tried again:
‘I was ten when I first started going to the football. In ‘The Boys Enclosure’ (admission: 9 pence – 5p. in new money). It was always packed solid, but you were always among friends, you roared, you booed, you sang, and when they scored you all swept forward like a mighty wave. Like I said, I was ten, and for the first time I felt a part of a whole. That was what Scotland felt when that lovely fourth goal hit the net in the last minute of extra time: it felt that we were part of a whole. It was a feeling of solidarity.’
‘OK, yeah, I’ve got it now, Davie. Solidarity: maybe I didn’t recognise it ’til you said it. Solidarity eh? I thought that had disappeared back in 1985.’
‘1985?? Ah, you mean Polmaise?’
[Polmaise Colliery, or the remains of it, lay just nine miles away. All through the year-long miners’ strike in 1984-85, the Polmaise miners never posted pickets at the mine gates to try to deter fellow miners from returning to work: they didn’t need to. They knew that Polmaise miners were all, to a man, solidly behind the strike. Polmaise was famous: they’d previously struck for 10 whole months back in 1938; they’d already been out on strike for a fortnight in 1984, before the national miners’ strike was declared. When the national strike was broken, a whole year later, and the union voted for a return to work, Polmaise, alone, stayed out for a further week.]
‘Yeah, I mean Polmaise. That was solidarity, Davie. I was there, you know, with the whole village at the gates to applaud the lads coming off the last shift, when the Thatcher government closed the pit two years later.’
‘Good for you, Andy. I understand: that was solidarity. So, instead, what would you call our nation of leaping hearts when the ref blew the final whistle at Hampden Park the other night?’
‘Maybe Communion? A transcendent thing, shared and remembered. ‘
‘Ah, like Archie Gemmill’s solo goal against the Dutch in the World Cup Finals in Argentina in 1978?’
‘Ha, if you like.’
‘OK, I’ll settle for communion over solidarity. By the way, do you know what William McIlvanney, your favourite Scots author, did when he got the publisher’s advance for his first novel?’
‘Beats me, Davie.’
‘He jacked in his teaching job in Kilmarnock and headed off to watch Scotland and Archie Gemmill in the 1978 World Cup Finals in Argentina.’
Andy smiled, but he was absorbed in watching a Dipper fossicking in the Allanwater shallows over at the opposite bank. Part of the attraction of Dippers is that, like Puffins, they are both comical in appearance and surprisingly successful in their daily tasks. Dippers are about the same size as a thrush, but black and definitely portly in appearance, with a big white bib under their chin. They are called ‘Dippers’ because they constantly bow and nod their heads up and down, like manic Victorian butlers. Yet these clown-like birds are surprisingly swift underwater swimmers and efficient finders of caddisfly larvae on the bottoms of rivers, lochs and burns.
Davie followed Andy’s gaze. ‘That Dipper looks perfectly happy on his own over there. Maybe we don’t really need communion with others?’
‘Ah, but he’s in communion with Nature.’
Mick
Lovely tone and flow. Money has destroyed a great deal of sports. The Olympics were once an ideal, ameture athletes competeting for homeland and the love of the game. I cannot see that in multimillionaires getting easy citizenships, performing as mercenaries.
Yet, in America, as in Europe and elsewhere, when a city’s team makes a run for the championship a great zeal occurs in the population. There’s something about it that connects people. So maybe sports aren’t completely dead at the soul.
Leila
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Thanks Leila. Yes, sports do connect people, though the connection (unlike solidarity) is often fleeting. (I’m writing this on the weekend that football fans have learned that travelling to the 2026 Soccer World Cup games will cost way more than they can afford). bw mick
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Hi Mick
There is a WC match scheduled in Seattle. It sold out in twenty minutes and the tickets, I hear, were priced beyond anything I could ever pay. 48 nations scattered across the continent. I will root for Scotland.
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Jeez, sold out in 20 mins?! That smells of ticket touts hoovering up tickets to re-sell at even more inflated prices on the internet. Damn shame.
Good of you to root for Scotland: I dont think there can be many countries where a WC win would mean more. I well remember living in Aberdeen in 1983 when the local team beat mighty Real Madrid to win the European Cup winners Cup: the whole town went nuts for a week and every pub was endlessly replaying John Hewitt’s winning goal for months afterwards.
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Hi Mick
The weasels are selling the tickets in tiers. The 40 dollar ones (basically behind posts or might as well be in the parking lot) vaporized instantly. Yet the 440 and 700 dollar ones are done too. Funny thing is the sides have yet to be announced. But Seattle is Amazon and Microsoft, so real people never had a shot.
Indeed, I root for the teams who really mean somethingvto their people. Like Iceland a couple tournies back.
Leila
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Dear Mick
There is a casual compellingness, or a compelling casualness, to your narrative style that is one-of-a-kind.
You create suspense by not trying to.
That is another mark of a real writer.
Dale
PS
Your endings are always both open-ended AND conclusive, yet another great aspect of your style.
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Thanks, Dale. I find endings hard work, even harder than dialogue. I’ve more than one abandoned story/flash fiction because I cant figure an ending. Glad you think this ending worked. mick
ps. Just read your ten re-reads on LS (being lazy and responding here). Your listing of Defoe’s Journal of a Plague Year was striking! I reckon it’s an extraordinary piece of social research, before social research was invented. He wrote about and nailed the mythic character of revenge infection, two hundred years before it resurfaced in the AIDS panic.
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