The rainbow
shot was my childhood obsession, and it went something like this. The ball was
struck from just outside the penalty box, from barely a dozen inches above its
right corner, and, after making a beautiful curling movement over the wall, it
landed perfectly in the left upper-ninety of the goal. The size of the wall was
immaterial as the ball barely registered its presence with the swooshing sound
of a snide dismissal. The hapless goalkeeper was reduced to a spectator, a
pathetic mannequin, who could either make a late jump or watch it unfold in
still agony. And all the while my heart would freeze or else skip a dozen beats
as it followed, quite religiously, the rainbow trajectory of the ball.
It was a
shot I could watch for hours, in dreams as well as in real life. I would sit on
the bench with the best view and gaze at him practicing that shot again and
again. Meanwhile, I would be careful not to clap or express any visible signs
of admiration. It was enough to know that he noticed my stooped presence and
even smiled at me a few times when the ball was struck particularly well.
Barring an occasional sound of subdued delight and equally subdued
disappointment, the ritual was performed in total silence. I think I preferred
it that way.
There were
of course regular training sessions conducted by a disinterested man with a
weight problem. The man coached both teams, senior and junior, drove a battered
old Volkswagen Golf and often entertained us by saying the names of teams where
we would be playing in the future. (Later, I would discover that he committed suicide by hanging himself in the garage.) So he was mostly doing it on his own, with
no props and no coaches, even though once in a while he was joined by another
player from the senior team who either stood between the goalposts or tried his
luck with the free kick. Inevitably, he would fail miserably at both and would
end up lamenting the odds of a foul being committed at that precise spot on the
pitch. A remark that would be dismissed with an awkward yet defiant shrug, the
kind that I would try to emulate at home and during the few interactions with
my classmates.
The remark
was of course well-judged as the odds were indeed quite low. In fact, while I
never missed a single game of the senior team in all those endless seasons of
outdoor football, I could only remember one such instance when the free kick
was supposed to be taken from that particular edge of the penalty box. However,
the fateful substitution had already been made and somebody else wasted the opportunity
by hitting the wall with a shot lacking any teeth or incision. Otherwise, the
fouls were committed outside the danger area where the free kicks were taken by
somebody else on that senior team.
Nobody said
this to my face, but I think he was considered a competent first-team player
with just the right set of skills. He could pass and he could spread the pitch,
and his position on the left wing of the diamond-shaped midfield was never in
doubt. Having said all that, there was of course a small matter of him being
given number six, that least charismatic of all numbers on a football pitch.
And in those days we believed in the numbers, and everyone on the junior team
had it all figured out. 'Seven' meant creative, 'eight' was a playmaker, 'nine'
denoted a goalscorer, 'ten' spelled a genius. 'Six' was neither here nor there.
'Six' was donkey work. 'Six' was average. In fact, the best thing you could say
about 'six' was that 'six' was underrated. Which I believed he was, because
even without the rainbow shot (I was actually the only one who called it that
way), his passing was smart and cut through the opposition's defence with the
elegance and the ease of a still-water vessel, and because his ability to
create space was spectacular. So that when the time came to pick my number on
the junior team, I chose 'six'. The boy who was distributing the shirts looked
at me like I was insane, or defective, and said 'four' was still available.
Hiding my embarrassment, though not quite as gracefully as I wanted, I took
'four'. 'Four' was the backbone. 'Four' was good.
I tried
that shot, too, at all those times when it was raining or the weather was
scorching hot and there was no one else at the stadium. However, the trajectory
was all wrong and the ball barely reached the elevation it needed to hit the
top of the net. I did get the result once in a while, but there was no way I
could tell everyone else on the team that from that time on I would be taking
those free kicks as this was my shot. Because it was not my shot and I was
as bad at it as everyone else who was not wearing the number six shirt on the
senior team. Which is not to say that he always scored it himself. There were
long afternoon sessions (his favourite time was between three and four) when
he missed one or two shots out of ten. This was both disheartening and oddly
encouraging. It meant he was human, even if I did not know whether I wanted him
to be just that.
And then it
came, the football match that should have happened long ago. Two senior teams
from two neighbouring towns contending a local cup as well as a sizable money award. Naturally, the game generated quite a
bit of interest and for once it was not reduced to the junior team and a
handful of family members. This time, there were tickets and an old scoreboard
that a travelling team from some English town had brought to us three years before. As ever, I chose the best bench at the stadium, the one where I watched
all the games as well as his practice sessions. It would be worth noting here
that nobody else knew about my obsession, which was for the best as it spared
me the embarrassment of the whispers.
For me,
this match (as well as any other match played by the senior team) was all about
that shot. Victory and defeat were no more than a marginal interest, an
afterthought, but I cared deeply about that free kick. Because I knew that if
the chance came, he would just do it and there would be no end to people
talking about it for weeks and even months. Oh I had it all in my mind, running
like a fevered dream: the short run-up, the smooth strike from under the bottom
of the ball, the rainbow trajectory that glanced over the wall, the torn cobweb
from the top left corner of the goal. I knew the routine and I knew the outcome.
What I did
not know was that the opportunity would come in this particular match, at the
very end of the regulation time, with the score tied, following a dramatic
comeback from our team. And yet here it was, at that precise spot on the pitch,
seconds after a cynical tackle. It was emotional to see how the other players
turned their heads and looked at the one man who could score it with his eyes
closed. The moment was tense and the spectators were breathlessly looking on,
even though nobody at the stadium (or in the town, for that matter) felt it
the way I did; how the tension was licking my heart dry, how the air got sucked
out of my lungs. He looked calm, though, and he did the whole thing as if it
was a training session with no else at that stadium except for a skinny boy on
a bench nearby, with clenched knees and stooped shoulders. The short run-up,
the smooth strike... In fact, there was just one thing which did not go
according to the plan: the ball did not touch the net. I guess I could blame my
eyes or the racing heart that blurred the vision, but there was the whole
stadium to confirm. There was an old man gasping on that bench by my side:
there was no goal. There was, however, a sense of hushed and rather cautious
jubilation as moments ago the referee had given a penalty.
The brain
was too disbelieving to process what had just happened but the vague impression
was slowly giving way to the clear-cut image at the back of my mind:
one of the players standing in the wall had raised his arms as the ball was
about to fly over his head (lower than expected but just enough to make it) and
the shot got horribly deflected. This image had been supported by
the referee flashing the quickest red card in memory and pointing to the
penalty spot. Everything that followed is a bit of a blur, although the memory
does hold the proven 'number nine' burying that shot, ruthlessly, down the
middle, and then the final whistle that came seconds later, and then the wild celebration
from everyone on that senior team. Including him, the one who left me with a
sick feeling in my mouth.
Somehow,
the rest of that summer disintegrates in other matches and other experiences
and memories that have little to do with football and more with the fact that
we were moving to another town. From then on, I would only be coming to this
place for my summer vacations.
It was
during one such summer that I was alone at the stadium and saw a familiar face.
It was a player from that senior team (a defender and a 'number three', two
facts that I should have forgotten long ago), and I did not expect to see him
that day. It was a scorching morning and very few people stepped onto the
yellow and slightly hollowed out pitch at that point in August. Besides, I knew
that the current senior team was more or less the junior team from the past
(which I was no longer part of) and he was not playing much anymore. Still, he
was passing by in his frayed blue jeans and his shiny shoes, and he said he
recognised me vaguely. He said he had thirty minutes to kill and suggested
being my goalkeeper for a while.
I did not
mind being on my own, but suddenly there was a flicker in my eye, and at some point I mentioned
how nobody was coming to the pitch anymore. He agreed. He said that most of those senior players had grown up and moved on. They still
reunited for a game each Friday (I knew that) but most of them had other things
in life. "So what do you do?" I asked him, and it turned out that he
was working at some local production site and not really enjoying it. In the
meantime, I was scoring goals left, right and centre as he was in all honesty a
very poor excuse for a goalkeeper. In fact, the whole thing must have looked
ridiculous, with him in his blue jeans, with a cigarette end dangling from his
mouth, with a small black leather bag lying by the right goalpost.
To distract
him from all the cursing he was doing when he could not catch the ball (which
was most of the time), I said that he used to be a good defender. He said he
agreed, rather earnestly, but this was me trying to get to the one
subject that mattered. And so I mentioned that I had always liked the way their 'number six' was playing. "Number six?" he said, visibly confused. This
was also the moment when I realised that I never actually knew the name of
'number six'. And so I described him: the light green T-shirt with rough
outlines of New York City, the black shorts with grey stripes at the bottom,
the white Nike boots with spikes, the clean-cut mop of blond hair, the rainbow
shot. He was a little taken aback by so many details, but then he said yes,
yes, of course, he remembered Alex. It was awkward to be talking about all this
with someone I hardly knew, but this was the opportunity I needed and so I asked him why
he never came to play in these Friday matches. "Who, Alex? Well, like I
say. We all have a fucking life now. Some are married, some have girlfriends
and the rest of it." Interestingly, he did not remember much about that
shot ("Yeah, he did fuck around with something like that") and, naturally,
he had no idea that somebody called it a 'rainbow shot'.
"So
you do not remember that match? Or the free kick which led to the penalty that won
the game?"
There was a
pause as he was lighting his fourth cigarette and trying to think several years back. In the end, he did remember it, although he insisted the penalty
was the result of a bad tackle well inside the box. I tried to argue, but there
was no point as he said his memory on that was 'hundred percent'. That we were
talking about two different games was out of the question as every other detail
checked out. He did mentioned, however, that a similar free kick took place in that
game but that it must have happened at a different point in the match.
After which
he picked up his bag and left, back on his way to wherever he was going. While I stayed on
the pitch to keep trying that shot that seemed so elusive. After all, I still could only
practice it when there was no one else around.