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The World Is a Ball: The Joy, Madness, and Meaning of Soccer

por John Doyle

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"In The World Is a Ball, critic and author, John Doyle travels the world in pursuit of his first love, football, and offers a compelling vision of a sport where colonized nations can take on and beat their colonizers, where oppressed immigrants can thoroughly trounce their host countries. In dispatches from Italy to Ireland, from Buenos Aires to Bratislava, and between encounters with crazed taxi drivers and drunken fans dressed as leprechauns or in lederhosen, Doyle celebrates the evolution of soccer as a global phenomenon. He begins his journey with the first game he saw in repressed 1960s-Ireland - a match which left a lasting impression on him and then takes us through the decades until we reach football in the 21stcentury. Here he focuses on the World Cups of 2002 and 2006, the European Championships of 2004 and 2008 - and on to the key games and teams involved in the historic 2010 World Cup in South Africa. With eye-popping, eyewitness accounts that are both hilarious and nostalgic,The World Is a Ball brilliantly weaves together scintillating travelogue, gripping match reporting and compelling social history. Insightful and thought-provoking, it offers a vision of the beaut… (más)
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John Doyle is an Irish-Born Canadian Television critic and, like all right-thinking people, is a soccer fanatic. The World is a Ball is the story of his experiences in the first decade of the 21st century covering three world cups, two European championships, and a gaggle of world cup qualifiers for the Globe and Mail (a Toronto paper) and the New York Times.

Doyle only describes the games in the most elliptical fashion, focusing mostly on the fans, the host cities, and the personalities of the different teams. He continually describes scenes before games of fancifully-costumed fans from different countries partying, laughing, and traveling together. But his descriptions of the teams and fans also show how soccer is the primary sporting outlet for nationalism. In Doyle's telling, fans and teams reflect (sometimes stretched) truths about their country's national character and zeitgeist (and usually positive truths - this is a very positive book except when talking about the English players, wives, and girlfriends).

The travel frustrations of the professional sportswriter also receive much attention (never stay in a Best Western in Berlin) and several cities get judged for their love of soccer and friendliness of their bars, police, and transportation.

But ultimately this book is a celebration of stories; especially the stories that happen on a soccer field when a magical narrative takes over and a nation's fans seem to will their team to victory. ( )
  urland | Sep 1, 2011 |
Culture Soup

I've always thought it would be fun to attend a world event like the Olympic Games or a World Cup. The idea of a myriad of cultures converging on one city fascinates me. The sheer numbers, though, terrify me. I’m not a huge fan of large crowds.

Perhaps, for me, the World Cup provides the most intriguing spectacle. With soccer – the sport adored by the majority of the world, the world championship matters.

In The World Is a Ball, John Doyle explores this worldwide phenomenon. With a decade of soccer coverage for North American publications, Doyle provides a first-hand account of these tournaments and the convergence of cultures.

Watching Those Watching the Game

Interestingly, while one would think that Doyle would focus predominately on the tactics and analysis of the players on the pitch, he seems more interested in the fans. As the world watches the game, Doyle watches the supporters.

For ages, the media focus on hooliganism. With fear dispensed in small to medium doses, many foreigners avoid soccer matches for panic of fan-to-fan violence. Yet Doyle perceives these sporting events as moments of celebration no matter the end result.

On the field, Brazil plays with flair and beauty; in the stands, Brazilian fans act the same. On the field, Italy plays a slow, methodical game; in the stands, the fans are lazy and confident. On this principle, Doyle expands,

“That’s part of the complicated meaning of the World Cup. There is an elaborate synergy between the traveling fans and their country’s team. A nation projects itself, all its hopes and dreams and tangled histories, onto the team. And the team somehow embodies all the complex characteristics of the nation” (18).

Global Soccer

Moreover, views of nationalistic hooliganism fail in the face of globalized soccer. Where nationalism in the past existed with players remaining inside its countries borders, the new strategy for most national teams is to seek players and coaches from all over the world. Doyle writes,

“At the end, just before the Estádio da Luz erupts in colorful, spectacular fireworks displays, the TV commentator reminds viewers that the Greek coach, Otto Rehhagel, is German and Portugal’s coach, Luiz Felipe Scolari, is Brazilian. The point is to tell us that, even at this intensely competitive, nationalistic level, soccer transcends borders and nationality” (132).

Field Notes

However, The World Is a Ball flows poorly. As the book details international soccer matches over the last decade, the stories become repetitive and resemble field notes for the stories Doyle obviously filed for his paid gig.

Additionally, Doyle romanticizes the notion of fan and team unity. While international matches of yesteryear exhibited teams with a national style and identity, modern soccer has found tactics to become increasingly crowd-sourced. Successful national teams blend the possession-style total football of the Netherlands with the defensive tenacity of Italy and the aggressive set play style of Germany. In other words, the way teams play soccer today is becoming tactically similar.

Finally, Doyle writes with basic assumptions about soccer. For those interested in becoming acquainted with the sport, Doyle’s writing will leave you dazed and confused. While no one suggests that a soccer writer must begin a book with a basic explanation of soccer, Doyle uses soccer-specific terms without defining them for a broader audience. Although I understood him, I don’t think his lexicon of terms allows inclusion of non-soccer fans.

A Tragic View of the Universe

Despite my reservations, Doyle contemplates some of the deeper meanings behind the joys of soccer. With low scoring games, spotty refereeing, and theatrical flopping, soccer is not an Americanized sport. Yet, these very issues point to core artistic values. Doyle pens,

“Soccer is a sport perfectly designed to reinforce a tragic view of the universe, because basically it is a long series of frustrations leading up to near certain heartbreak” (311).

This sentiments ring true with the observance of one game. A team can play the perfect game and lose. While a pitcher in baseball gains muscle memory with practice in order to throw the same pitch in the same location whenever he desires it, a soccer player relies on luck. The best for which he or she can hope is to create enough chances to get a positive result.

On the topic of poor refereeing – an experience that United States Men’s National Team fans know full-well with the disallowed goal on a phantom foul against Slovenia in the last World Cup – Doyle writes,

“Injustice happens, but time passes, the world turns just as the ball does during the game. The whole point of the game is that the ball turns, moves forward, much like we do” (315).

Although The World Is a Ball plods somewhat without much stylistic difference and mischaracterizes the connections between the styling of fans and national teams, I enjoyed the first-hand account of the World Cup. With a convergence of culture in one country, we see something bigger than a sporting event; we see a global culture. If you can get past the difficulties and understand the basic terms in soccer, The World Is a Ball is an entertaining read. Nevertheless, I suggest starting somewhere else in soccer literature.

Originally published at http://wherepenmeetspaper.blogspot.com ( )
  lemurfarmer | Jun 30, 2011 |
John Doyle captures something here, an essence of what it is to be there at football's major cup matches. There is a repetitiveness about his take (game after game after tournament after tournament) that wears thin, and his perspective is relentlessly on the ground in the crowd, but he has a way of writing almost breathlessly that sweeps the reader along willingly for the ride. ( )
1 vota maritimer | Mar 14, 2011 |
Similar to The Thinking Man's Guide to the World Cup, I picked this one up soon after hearing the author interviewed on NPR's Only a Game. Feeling fortunate that I did - as it was another entertaining and thoughtful book about the passions and obsessions of World Cup soccer. Though at times repetitive, Doyle successfully captures the sense of community of the in-person experience, as well as the subtle and not-so-subtle subtext of teams, fans, national pride and how all relate to this big globe we inhabit together. This was an enjoyable read, one that can satisfy soccer fan and casual observer alike. ( )
  Griff | Nov 28, 2010 |
Great book about the aura of the game around some of the biggest Soccer events on the planet...it captures that special feeling ( )
  theportal2002 | Jun 24, 2010 |
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"In The World Is a Ball, critic and author, John Doyle travels the world in pursuit of his first love, football, and offers a compelling vision of a sport where colonized nations can take on and beat their colonizers, where oppressed immigrants can thoroughly trounce their host countries. In dispatches from Italy to Ireland, from Buenos Aires to Bratislava, and between encounters with crazed taxi drivers and drunken fans dressed as leprechauns or in lederhosen, Doyle celebrates the evolution of soccer as a global phenomenon. He begins his journey with the first game he saw in repressed 1960s-Ireland - a match which left a lasting impression on him and then takes us through the decades until we reach football in the 21stcentury. Here he focuses on the World Cups of 2002 and 2006, the European Championships of 2004 and 2008 - and on to the key games and teams involved in the historic 2010 World Cup in South Africa. With eye-popping, eyewitness accounts that are both hilarious and nostalgic,The World Is a Ball brilliantly weaves together scintillating travelogue, gripping match reporting and compelling social history. Insightful and thought-provoking, it offers a vision of the beaut

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