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Post Info TOPIC: a British perspective


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a British perspective
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This article, from the London Times, was sent to me by a program friend.

George Best, considered the best British footballer (soccer star) of his
generation, has been hovering near death, and is presently slowly
recovering. He was a terminal case of cirrhosis a couple of years ago,
received a liver transplant after swearing off alcohol (ncluding an antabuse
implant), then was "caught" drinking again at his local pub, with his wife
eventually leaving. Now he has severe infections, difficult to treat because
of the immunosuppressants given because of the transplant.

Now read on ...

The Times (London), Oct. 28, 2005

'Just like Morecambe and Wise, so sport and alcohol were meant to be
together'

By Simon Barnes

NATURALLY, when I was in Basle this week for the Henman-Murray match, I
bumped into John Roberts, Tennis Correspondent of The Independent, and I was
reminded of a famous joke he made, many years ago. At the time, Kevin Keegan
was the hottest thing in football and people were asking what we now know to
be a fatuous question. Is Keegan better than George Best?

Best sighed and explained that Keegan wasnıt fit to lace his boots. So JR
topped this remark: "Kevin Keegan is not fit to lace George Bestıs drinks."
It was a good joke then. Now, as Best moves from crisis to crisis, ever
closer, it seems, to (letıs not mince words here) dying of drink, the joke
gets grimmer by the day. Alas, poor George.

We hear a lot about drugs in sport. We are regularly moved to a righteous
fury when we are told of the latest athlete to get caught. A whiff of
nandrolone and a reputation is gone for ever: no, it wasnıt me, someone
spiked my drink at a party, Iım not like that, the urine sample must be
wrong, the labelling on the supplements tin never said anything about this.

And woe betide the athlete who gets caught with a drug that may have given a
moment of pleasure. Attitudes to cannabis have softened since Mick Jagger
was sentenced to prison for skinning up. But if an athlete gets stoned, he
has to be punished vindictively. Cocaine is still more sinful. Chelsea
hounded Adrian Mutu out of the Premiership in a moral frenzy after he was
found to be using cocaine.

All this is carefully designed to mask the fact that the most dangerous drug
in sport is the one that is killing Best. All this pouncing on drug-users is
a way of legitimising alcohol, sportıs drug of choice.

Donıt even call it a drug. That way, we might see it for what it is.

Sport and alcohol: ham and eggs: Morecambe and Wise: Burke and Hare.

Sport and booze were made for each other, quite literally so. Each enables
the other. Sport provides an opportunity for drink and drink provides an
opportunity for sport. This is a perfect symbiosis, a partnership that
brings benefits to each side. Find the sport and you have found the drink.

Win or lose, on the booze. No matter what happens in sport, it provides an
opportunity and a reason for drinking. You celebrate or you drown your
sorrows. Sport is real life exaggerated and, therefore, sport provides
exaggerated opportunities for drinking. It is an endless cycle and ‹ let us
be frank ‹ for most of us, it is a very pleasant one. So it should be.
Drug-taking is supposed to be pleasant.

In Hong Kong they hold an annual sporting festival, the Hong Kong Sevens. It
has become a great expat shindig, a boozy fiesta in a notoriously boozy
place. It brings two long days of gorgeous sport, a gathering of the rugby
union clans and a thousand bars that never close.

I have been there as a punter and had a marvellous, giddy time of it. I have
also been there to work and found it deeply strange to be one of the few
sober people amid thousands.

The Monday after the sevens is the busiest day of the year for Alcoholics
Anonymous. The sevens bring a boozy lifestyle to a peak.

Naturally, in the grisly aftermath, a fair number wake up in holy terror. A
friend of mine went straight to hospital in a taxi, pausing only to get
tanked up, arriving with the immortal words: "Let me in! Iım pissed!" When
last encountered, he was settled, sober and sorted: a hero, in short.

Most sports, whether you are playing or watching, are based around the
consumption of booze. When the England cricket team won the Ashes, they went
on a corporate bender. "They deserve it," the country responded fondly. The
question of who it was that threw up in the lav at 10 Downing Street was
never, as it were, cleared up.

If you attend a live sporting event, the first thing that happens is that
your bag is searched. We are used to the sad, demeaning routines of
terrorism and we accept it stoically. Of course, they are not searching for
weapons. They are searching for alcohol. Alcohol is not permitted at
sporting events.

The second thing that happens is you walk straight into the most enormous
bar you have ever seen. Twickenham, Lordıs, Wimbledon: all the same. This is
not security but profiteering. "We know everybody is going to drink. Far
better they drink at our prices." The walk from Twickenham station to the
rugby ground is paved with beer cans. Empty them before you reach security.
Into yourself, naturally.

Football has the most ferocious drinking culture. The main square of any
town in Europe with an English team playing that day is a deeply alarming
exhibition of mass drunkenness. Among players there is a culture shift
taking place, but Tony Adamsıs unforgettable autobiography, Addicted, tells
the story of the traditional pairing of drink and football.

Drink is part of the game. Every game. Pimmıs at Wimbledon, champagne at
Lordıs, beer everywhere else. You play cricket, you meet at the pub. Roy
Harperıs marvellous song of cricketing nostalgia, with its brass bands and
the old cricketer leaving the crease, ends with the glorious thought that it
could be the sting in the ale.

And itıs great. Really great. The stumps are uprooted, the boundary markers
collected, the rope strung around the square, the scoreboard and its white
numbers put away and you lock the pavilion door and amble across the grass
and over the road to the Plume of Feathers, where someone has already bought
you your first, and you raise it to the man who got the wickets, and the men
who shared the partnership, and the duffer who held the catch, and we drink,
and we laugh, and we drink.

Blessed days.

More lives are ruined by alcohol than by anabolic steroids, or cannabis, or
cocaine. Road accidents, household accidents, fights, family violence: again
and again, alcohol is the cause. Alcohol is the most readily available route
to degradation and disaster. It is the great contradiction of Western sport
and, by extension, Western society. We drink for comfort and for joy, and
many go on and drink themselves to misery, horror and death. And yet we
pretend that alcohol is not a drug, thereby allowing it to slip beneath our
guard.

Drink is one of the best things about Western life, and one of the worst.
And sport is an inextricable part of the great culture of the bottle. Those
of us who saw Best play would certainly wish to celebrate the extraordinary
joy he brought us. Should we raise a glass to him? A prayer is at least as
appropriate. One that begins: there but for the grace of God .

__________________


MIP Old Timer

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Thanks for sharing that, Hanuman. Strange but true, Eh?


In Canada, its the breweries that sponsor the sports--government makes their big tax dollars-and then pour it back into detoxifying everybody.


In between the lines...... devestation, and addictions, and death, becomes a common factor.


And yes. Its just like bacon and eggs.  Have a good night.


 



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Easy Does it..Keep It Simple..Let Go and Let God..
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