|
Surprisingly buoyant bubbles
Escape to Victory, West Ham style
(This article originally appeared on the Crossrhythms website)
Sunday 4th March, Upton Park, just before 6pm. A 3-2 lead became
a 4-3 loss in the last six minutes of the game. West Ham were dead
in the water. Just nine games to go, ten points from safety, with
bookies offering 66-1 odds for relegation, as near a certainty as
can be imagined.
Sunday 13th May, Old Trafford, just before 6pm. After being battered
and overplayed by the League Champions, West Ham scored against
the run of play and tabled their best results against Manchester
United for 30 years! On current form West Ham were statistically
the best side in the country, with seven wins out of their final
nine games.
There's a good chance that this article is going to needle many
of you who live north of Watford, west of the Aldgate pump and just
about everywhere else, wherever back pages are read. Why would that
be? Why would one highly respected football columnist declare that
for the good of the game West Ham must be divorced from the Premiership,
while another encouraged folk to cast an evil eye over the team!
Such vitriol, such venom, over a team that had been traditionally
cast as many fan's favourite "other" team.
The heart of this mystery is the controversy over two Argentinian
players apparently acquired in an illegal manner by the previous
administration of the club. An independent court declared that a
record fine would have to be paid for this misdemeanour, a verdict
accepted by the club, despite the new chairman and manager having
nothing to do with this crime. One player had moved on but the other,
Carlos Tevez, was still at the club and cleared to play for the
rest of the season. This needled the other poorly performing clubs,
as Tevez seemed to be instigating a mini-revival through his excellent
performances. These clubs declared that, despite the legal ruling,
West Ham ought to be deducted points, a situation that would have
guaranteed relegation from the Premier League and subsequent safety
for one of these lowly clubs. What was never mentioned were two
important facts. Firstly, that in the first 21 games that Tevez
played in, 15 were lost, arguably because his presence had disrupted
a settled team and secondly, in the seven games that were won at
the end of the season, only two goals were conceded, a sign of good
planning by the manager and excellent performances by the whole
team and not just a single player, however gifted. Perhaps there
was more to all this than met the eye?
Let me now weave a scenario and pick up from where I left off in
my previous article (God, the Devil and West Ham United). In the
context of the extraordinary catalogue of misfortunes that had hit
the club in the first two thirds of the season (of which the Argentinians'
arrival was just a small part), I linked this with the decision
to hold the Global Day of Prayer at the West Ham stadium and the
subsequent unseen spiritual battles that would be fought as a consequence.
One outcome of this was the total collapse of players' confidence
for most of the season and the series of incidents that would normally
be excused away as a 'run of bad luck'.
Well clearly, since the Tottenham game in early March, "their luck
changed". As a Christian and having not an iota of a belief in luck,
chance, fortune or fate, it is my belief that in early March people
were getting down on their knees and praying to a God who listens
and, as a result, curses changed to blessings. Now many of you would
be up in arms about this. Many would say that I am demeaning the
good work of the team, but go back over those final nine games and
see how many times you see such words as 'luck' and 'good fortune'
in the match reports. Yes, confidence and teamwork were a major
factor and the manager should be commended for this, but the Blackburn
game was won by a goal that clearly wasn't and Arsenal and Manchester
United were beaten by a team under severe siege.
God is not just floating in the clouds listening to harp melodies
or visiting churches to soak up the worship. If He is the creator
and sustainer of the Universe then He is intimately concerned about
every detail of our life, whoever we are, wherever we live. As the
success or failure of a sports team has such an effect on a community,
you would expect Him to be particularly interested. We are not controlled
by luck, fate or vague destiny, but each of us, whether we know
it or not, whether we believe it or not, are in the secure hands
of the One who created us.
If my theory is correct and curses have truly become blessings
then you would expect a backlash and from the vitriol poured out
against West Ham United you would think the whole club, from the
dinner ladies to the chairman were unrepentant cheats and villains.
Look beyond the media frenzy and ask yourself whether this is reasonable
behaviour.
The TV news showed West Ham fans in the aftermath of that final
game. There they were, arms akimbo, ecstatically singing the club
anthem in communal worship. "Fortune's always hiding", declares
the second verse of the song. Well that may be so, but God hides
from no man and, unlike your local football team, whether in the
Premiership or the local park, He will never let you down.
|