‘Any way possible’

Image credit Laurence Griffiths via Getty Images.
1986��World Cup Finals
I was only��4��years old��during the��1986��World��Cup finals.��I don���t have many memories of this particular��World��Cup except my dad and my uncle���s animated conversations about Maradona’s infamous�����hand of god.���
My father, a young, very idealistic university graduate,��had moved with my mother to a��rural high school in western Kenya, where he taught��history��to high school students.��My mother taught English. They brought a 14-inch black and white television��that would turn our house into a major community��sports��center��during the World��Cup finals.��I would later learn from��my��father that��our’s was the only television set��in the whole of this rural region. With��no electricity, television sets were��a��rather annoying luxury.��As a back-up, one had to work out elaborate plans to get a hold of lead��acid��batteries. These did not come cheap in Kenya in the early 80s and 90s. The lead��acid batteries��needed��regular��charging, as well as a stock of concentrated hydrochloric acid for topping up.
My uncle��Ben, a��university student��at the time,��ensured that the battery would always be ready for important matches. He would board a matatu��as��early as 5:00 in the morning to get to the nearest urban center, about 40 miles away. He would only come back late in the evening when he was assured that the battery was fully charged.��In the event that there would be a power outage at this urban center,��Uncle Ben��would take a similar trip the following day.��The��World��Cup was important and there was a whole community waiting to watch.
1990��World Cup��Finals
I was old enough to know that my mother hated the��World��Cup. She liked the game of football itself but��was��suspicious of the people��it��attracted��to our house. She also��disliked having to��take all of our family���s valuables and lock them in one��room in our house.��Her��other��nightmare was having to prepare food early, and having to serve it to us before the villagers��started trooping into our ���stadium.��� This was��an opening in front of our veranda, under a big Nandi flame tree.��Football fanatics arrived early and organized themselves on the soft grass in front of our house in some sort of hierarchy based on how familiar they were with my dad and Uncle Ben.��The front row was reserved for our family and my��dad���s colleagues. The front row was a mattress in front of the television perched��on a stool, the stool was delicately��balanced on a table. Selected students, mostly from the high school soccer team filled the second row. In the third row, mostly standing, were random villagers.
The��1990��World��Cup��changed the way I watched soccer. While my young mind had thought that Africans invented soccer,��I��was introduced to another reality. African teams��had not proceeded beyond the last 16.
Now, the entire continent was rapt by Cameroon’s Indomitable Lions. Roger��Milla, implored by Paul Biya to come out��of��retirement to rejoin the national team,��danced around��the Colombian box. He hurdled the Colombian defender���s scything lunge before cajoling a finish past their goalkeeper with his left foot. He quickly dispatched himself to the corner��flag��and unleashed the ecstatic spirit of African dance��on the world.��Cameroon��was in the��quarter-finals,��the preserve of a few special teams. Africa was in dreamland. It was past��1am in the��morning, but the dancing��and ululations��continued into the following day. P��p����Kall����was somewhere in the Congo composing the massive hit ���Roger Milla,��� to forever enshrine this moment in song.
1994 World Cup Finals
I was in a boy���s boarding school with very limited contact to the outside world. We followed the��World��Cup through our teachers, the hip ones. They would come in and update us on a few games if they were in��a good mood. On a few Sundays,��we would chance upon a copy of the��Daily��Nation��with photos of the Super Eagles splashed across its pages. Rashidi��Yekini��was on��everyone���s��lips. Nigeria��would later be eliminated in the��Round of 16 by Italy. My dad��would blame this on��a��myriad��of��issues, including conspiracies to keep Africa down, and lament the��lackluster way the��Super��Eagles played despite the huge amount of talent��at their disposal.
1998 World Cup��Finals
Watching��the World��Cup was banned in my boy’s high school.��Being a library captain, I had unlimited access to daily newspapers. And just like in��the��1994��World��Cup finals,��the Super��Eagles carried the hope of the continent��to proceed��to quarterfinals and beyond.��Nigeria had one of the best African squads at the 1994 World Cup. They were knocking on the door. They had just won the 1996 Olympics, beating Brazil and Argentina with all those stars.��Oliseh���s��thunderous goal against Spain��was a great moment of brilliance, a show of the explosive potential of African teams.��When it��was all done,��we were left with��newspaper cuttings of the ever smiling Sunday��Oliseh��on��our school locker doors.
2002 World Cup Finals
I was a first year��university��student in Nairobi.�� DSTV, a satellite subscription��service from South Africa was already revolutionizing how sports��were��watched across the continent. A��week before the��World��Cup,��our vice chancellor,��Prof.��Eshiwani, visited��common rooms across campus to ensure that all the television sets and satellite subscriptions were working��properly.
The��World��Cup started with a huge upset.��Senegal��beating France, their former colonizer,��was a reminder of��the��possibilities before African teams.��My mother was��visiting, and��together we got��to watch Henri Camara send The Lions of Teranga��to the quarter finals. They were only��the��second team��from Africa to achieve this seemingly impossible feat.
Al��Hadji��Diouf with his eccentricities remains one of most��memorable characters for me from any Cup.
2010��World Cup��Finals
Communal gatherings to watch��the World��Cup on channels provided by satellite��televisions were��in full force��in Kenya and across many African nations.��The government of Kenya had also done��a reasonable job connecting most urban and semi-urban areas across Kenya to the national electricity��grid. Every bar worth mentioning and every little shack in the village center had��satellite TV. We were all trapped in the spirit of Vuvuzelas and the glory of the first world cup��in Africa. This was our chance.��Siphiwe��Tshabalala���s unforgettable wonder goal against Mexico started us on a great trajectory.��Then, Asamoah Gyan,��aka Baby Jet,��roared on stage for the��Black��Stars. We were getting close to the dream.��The much anticipated African magic��moment, where Mandela would rise to award the��World��Cup to an African nation, seemed more and more a possibility.��Then Uruguay broke our hearts.��Suarez, the villain of international soccer used his hands to block an inbound goal from Gyan at the dying minutes of the game. Gyan would later miss the penalty. This is the closest Africa has come to sending a team to the semis.
My��phone��conversation with my��father��about this particular game was very intense. ���The problem with us Africans,��� my dad��started almost in pain, ���is that we want to��win��with raw talent alone.��� He paused. ���You know most these countries are helped by African immigrants, and sometimes unfair referees��and now using their hands… while us Africans, are on our own.��� I listened intently. ���Maybe we should try and win it in any way possible.��� He sighed.�����Maybe we should, Baba.��� I replied and hang up the phone.
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