News Item: Zico’s frustration apparently got the better of him 36 minutes into the second half of the game between his team, Kashima Antlers and Kawasaki Verdy in the J-league in Tokyo. This was when the referee awarded the latter team a penalty. As Verdy star Kazuyoshi Miura prepared to take the kick, Zico walked up and spat on the ball.
I AM Zico’s spit. I hit the headlines recently. During a league match, my boss sent me flying through the air. I thought that, as usual, I would land on the green turf. Imagine my surprise when I landed on my friend, Cosco the football.
He looked at me in a daze as I fell with a thud on his face.
“This is really bad manners,” Cosco said.
“I am very sorry, Cosco,” I said, feeling embarrassed.
“You had the whole field in front of you and yet, you had to fall on me,” Cosco said in that hurt tone. “And that too, at such an important moment as a penalty. You know that I have to concentrate very hard, so that I can swerve, depending on which way the boot hits me.”
“My boss is going a little crazy in the head. I can’t imagine how he could have done this to you. After all, it is only through you that Zico has earned a decent livelihood for over 20 years. You have served him well. Both of you have developed such a wonderful rapport. And from being a boy in a poverty-stricken family, he is now a millionaire. I could not believe it when he sent me flying at you. It's shocking, to say the least.”
“Times change,” Cosco said in a philosophical manner. “People change. Zico has changed. He is no longer the soccer player he used to be. I remember what dazzling skills he displayed in the 1980s, especially during the ’82 World Cup. Now, as he reaches his forties, his skills are deserting him. He seems to be injured most of the time.”
“Yes,” I replied. “The other day when my boss got injured yet again, I had a talk with the shins and the knees. And they said that they could no longer stand the pressure of top class football. They told me that they had been doing the job for about twenty-five years now. They just can’t take it any more. After every match, they are bone-tired. They want to stop playing altogether. But Zico insists on pushing himself. I guess, like most people, he is doing it for the money.”
“The craving for more money creates so many problems in life,” Cosco the football said. “In my career, I have seen so many top-class football careers ruined by money. When money comes in, luxury comes in. Women come in. Drugs come in. And then the player loses his hunger and passion for the game. As time goes on, he thinks less about his game and more about how to make greater amounts of money. He is willing to sell himself to the highest bidder.
I suddenly felt sad about what Cosco was saying. He had been a top class football for twenty years and had seen a lot of life. So what he said was the deep, unvarnished truth: I was struck into silence.
“Watch him get mad,” Cosco said, as the referee showed Zico the red card. My boss’ eyes became red, like the card and then he shouted at the referee, “You are a cheat. You want Kawasaki Verdy to win, by hook or by crook. I shall complain about you.”
I rolled down Cosco’s face and moved some distance away.
“Hey, what’s the hurry?” Cosco said.
“The penalty is about to be taken,” I shouted, over the din of the spectators in the stadium. “Kazuyoshi Miura has gone to the top of his eight-step run. Cosco, it’s time to get back to work.”
Cosco immediately closed his eyes and frowned in deep concentration. The Japanese player came up and struck Cosco cleanly. The football rose up in the air and when it seemed that it was about to sail over the bar, it suddenly dipped and went into the net. Goal! The game was played for another five minutes and then the referee blew the final whistle.
I slowly began to walk away from the turf. It was the end of another day. But as I reached the players’ tunnel, Cosco, who was sitting on the referee’s arm, shouted at me, “Hey Zico’s spit, despite everything, I forgive your boss. Give my regards to him. After all, both he and I go back a long way.”
(Published in Sportsworld, February 9, 1994)






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