On a Saturday afternoon a little over forty years ago, I got
into the car with my dad and drove for thirty five miles. Little did I know
that over the course of the next few hours something huge was about to
added to my life. The drive took us from the textile towns of East Lancashire
to the sprawling city of Liverpool on the banks
of the river Mersey . We went from the valleys
to the flatlands: from a skyscape of mill chimneys to a skyscape of dockyard
cranes.
We parked up and had a pint in an extraordinary thin pub
which was packed with larger than life characters who spoke in an accent I
could barely comprehend. At thirteen years old, I duly worked my way down my
pint whilst dad sank two or three. The guys in the pub would have frowned with
disapproval had I chosen the Coca Cola that I would have much preferred. And my
dad would have been uneasy to have been seen in the company of a Coca Cola
drinking thirteen year old son. This was Lancashire
1973 and rules were rules.
Then it was out of the nicotine stained darkness of the pub and out into
a sparkling autumn afternoon and a walk across the manicured Victorian
magnificence of Stanley
Park to where the high stands of Anfield crouched in the midst of a warren of
tight terraced streets.
It wasn’t my first football match. For five years we had
been season ticket holders at Turf Moor, Burnley
– my dad’s boyhood team. But he had been driven to cursing distraction by the
antics of the club’s butcher chairman who had sold all the best players in
order to build a new stand and call it after himself. Well dad was having none
of it. Our season tickets were not renewed and the plan was to adopt and pick
and mix approach. His plan was to tour the venerable stadiums of the north of England,
choosing a different venue each week.
Anfield was the first venue.
And the last.
From the minute I reached the top of the steps and took in
swaying sprawl of the Kop, I never wanted to go anywhere else and I never have.
Forty one years and well over a thousand games later my fortnightly trips down
the M6 are still a central part of my being.
I was not born and raised in Liverpool .
I have never lived on Merseyside. Instead I am a once a fortnight day tripper
to the city. Of course everything has changed beyond all recognition. On that
distant afternoon, I looked over the muddy pitch to where the great Bill Shankly
took the acclaim of his disciples on the Kop like a modern day Emperor. Shanks
epitomised the city in 1973. A hard as nails lifelong Socialist from the tough
school of the Ayrshire coalfield. He was no frills and a the kind of working
class hero that John Lennon had committed to vinyl. The Pool was a tough place
back then; a place where the life expectancy of a scab was measured in days. A
city built on the backs of African slaves that had been sticking up two fingers
to the rest of the country for as long as anyone could remember.
Shanks was the granite face of the city with his gravel
humour and hard man charisma.
What was there not to like for the wide eyed thirteen year
old? I became an adopted son and the city was more than happy to adopt me. Liverpool isn’t fussy about who it adopts. Once upon a
time it was hundreds of thousands of starving Irish families. Now it is
weekending Scandinavians who come in with Ryan Air for two days of Beatles and
Liverpool FC. Now it is the 60 million strong worldwide Diaspora of Reds who
log onto the club website every day in Kuala Lumpur
or Shanghai or Soweto .
We are each and every one of us shaped by the vision Bill
Shankly once sold to a city that was tailor made to hang on his words. It isn’t
just football. It never has been. It is that unique, stroppy city by the sea
which keeps getting knocked down and keeps getting back up with a bloody nose
and a cocky grin.
We are partisan.
And like all partisans, there are always two sides of the
coin. There is the love of our own team but equal in every respect is our
bottomless contempt and loathing for the eternal enemy at the far end of the East Lancs Rd –
Manchester United Football Club.
It means that if we get beat 1-0 it never feels so bad so
long as they have got beat 2-0. Being seventeenth is no great problem so long
as they are eighteenth. A Mancunian failure can give more pleasure that a
Scouse success.
Schadenfreude defines any partisan. Schadenfreude joins
those who loathe the enemy as much as they love their own.
Is it a thing to be proud of? No. It just comes with the
territory. Back in 1973, falling under the magic spell of Shankly’s Anfield had
nothing to do with hating United. That came later. That came once I became an
adopted son. That came when I became partisan.
It creeps up on you and once it has you in its grasp it
never goes away. It is neither pretty nor commendable. It’s just the way it is.
Over the weekend I realised that I am now a part of another
similarly partisan group – the ones who fought for a ‘Yes’ vote. The media was
awash with stories that a coup was about to dispose of Ed Milliband and replace
him with Alan Johnson. The prospect of this happening sent a familiar sense of
dread down my spine. With Milliband at the helm, it looks like a racing
certainty that Labour will be subjected to a complete and utter humiliation
next May. Johnson? That would be a nightmare. All of a sudden the enemy would
have a new boss who might just to start to turn the ship around. All of a
sudden they would have a guy who isn’t public school and Oxbridge. Instead
they would have a guy who talks like a human being who once upon a time
delivered the Royal Mail. I realised that the feeling of dull dread was
identical to the familiar feeling I have known for so many years when the papers
are filled with rumours that the Mancs are about to sign a new multi million
pound superstar striker.
It’s not just that I want my side to win. I also want the
other side to lose. Heavily. Utterly. With complete humiliation. Were United to
fall apart like Leeds and Rangers and be relegated to the depths of the third
tier, then I would no longer have the biggest game of the season to look
forward to. Would I care? Not a chance. Losing the hugeness of United coming to
Anfield would be a tiny price to pay for the utter joy of watching the Mancs
collapse like a house of cards.
There is seldom any logic to Schadenfreude. If I sit down
and read the list of the Labour Party’s proposals for the upcoming election, I
dare say there wouldn’t all that many I have great objection to. But such
sensible logic doesn’t even begin to come into it. After the lies and general
obscenity of the Better Together campaign, there is no room for sensible logic.
I am no more born and raised in Scotland
than I was born and raised on Merseyside. But after the referendum campaign, I
certainly feel like an adopted son.
I found being a part of ‘Yes’ triggered the same partisan
emotions that Shanks triggered all those years ago. It’s us against them.
They’ve got all the money whilst we make all the noise.
When I read Alan Johnson’s article in the Guardian this
morning where he promised in capital letters that he would never, ever stand to
be the Labour leader, it reminded me of hearing the news that Paul Gascoigne had
chosen Spurs ahead of United. Or when Alan Shearer chose Newcastle over United.
Of course there are plenty of sensible and logical reasons
for anyone on the side of ‘Yes’ yearning for a complete Labour wipeout in May.
Such an outcome would surely bring the date of our eventual Independence
much closer, just like Man United in crisis means Liverpool
have a better chance of landing the title.
But I might as well be honest. There is little calculated
logic behind my hopes for a springtime wipeout of the Red Tories.
To see then wiped of the face of the Scottish political map
one by one will give me every bit as much pleasure as watching Messi’s
Barcelona dismember United in Rome like a sadistic five year old pulling the
legs off a spider.
I guess that means I have become a partisan. Something tells
me that I am not alone!
You are very much not alone.
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