FRIENDLY WAR
(Part Five)
BY DR Wilson ORHIUNU (BABAWILLY)
Babawill2000@yahoo.co.uk
Continued.....
SECOND HALF
The game goes on. For kicks my friend four seats
away decided to switch on his black transistor radio
set. Good heavens! Has that commentator lapsed on
his medication or what? I can't believe its the same
match he is talking about. Chai! Talk about
exaggeration!
The ball is passed to our Afro-Disney player and
before he could make contact with the ball the
radio-man shocked us all. "He beats one man, he
beats two man, it is unbelievable. He beats three
man ! He's in a dangerous position o! He will score
o!" Yet all the player did was merely indulge in a
spot of ye-ye rolling.
The poor fellows glued to their radio sets at home
would be having palpitations by now. Serves them
right for being too stingy to come to Liberty
stadium to support the national team. The player in
question who had now made his way into the box
looked up at goal before unleashing a shot so off
the mark the Ghanaian keeper didn't so much as move
a single muscle. The ball however knocked out a
nearby photographer.
The radio commentator was still on another planet.
"He looks up. Will he? Yes he shoots! It's a
goalllll! If football is art then we behold,
Picasso! What a strike. Oh the panache of this
player! What athleticism. Im mama born am well! Oh,
sorry people at home that wasn't a goal. The
Ghanaians have a goal kick".
If it wasn't for politeness, I would have smashed
that black transistor to pieces.
The radio set's owner had in fact had enough and
switched it off. Peace at last.
The game soon began to induce boredom.
We passed Mexican Waves for amusement. Even the men
of 'timber and calibre' in the presidential box
stooped to our level and joined in. After all it was
only a friendly and we led by a goal. The guy to my
left who had tried so hard to be a Zeal Onyia on his
trumpet since kick stopped playing and told me he
thought the Ghanaians had fielded an extra two men
for there appeared more "yellows" than "greens". We
all counted and recounted, it was a false alarm. I
grabbed his flask and unscrewed it like Sherlock
Holmes. In his thermos was the answer to the two
'extra men'; Ogogoro Diploplia. The chap behind me
now said he could see ghosts flying above both
goalposts. 'Mirage my brother. It is just an
illusion', said an off duty physicist.
'Na lie. Mirage my foot. How are we sure people
didn't fall to their deaths during the stadium's
construction and have returned as Stadium ghosts?'
said another. While we were all arguing the
Ghanaians scored. The place went silent. I felt for
my pulse to convince myself that my heart hadn't
stopped.
It was Ghanaba, the true born centre forward that
did the damage. We couldn't talk. Our trumpets were
flooded with tears. Shekere stood motionless and the
talking drums (gan gan) had picked up sign language.
Osibisa's sunshine day was blasted from the public
address speakers as Ghanaba was lifted shoulder high
by his teammates.
A new story spread through the stadium as to why
Ghanaba was called the true born centre forward. A
most unlikely story it was but here it goes.
On the day of his birth his mother was said to have
delivered him on a bed which stood on the Greenwich
Meridian line in a maternity hospital in Tema,
Ghana. When the head appeared down the line the
midwife was said to have commented that if Ghanaba
grew up to be a footballer he would play centre
forward. See my trouble eh! Now those words have
come to hunt us for it was the head of Ghanaba on a
cross from the right wing that has lead to this
equalizer. Anyway, life goes on.
We didn't stay quiet for too long. The music resumed
in full force as our team kicked off. We were
inquisitive as to how the guy on the radio will take
Ghanaian goal and were obliged by the radio set’s
owner. The commentator no longer spoke in English
but wailed in his native tongue as if in much
distress. An Ibibio man stepped up to interpret. We
all stopped playing our instruments for the
interpreter was conveying not just words but actions
with emotions.
"My
uncle told me not to gamble. Who told me to play
Kalokalo with my house and car? I did not even tell
my wife that I added her jewelry to my gamble.
Nigerian strikers please score O! I beg O! Ghanaba
don kill me O!'" We all
fell on each other laughing.
'How can that man bet on a friendly game eh?' I said
aloud between fits of laughter. 'Possessed with the
Las Vegas spirit' said brother Jimoh. Na wa!
Things soon settled and the game continued.
My thoughts returned to my bladder and from there to
the two corpses in the lavatory. Would they have
been cleared off? 'Life is cheap O!' I thought
aloud.
One of my fellow supporters passed his groundnuts in
my direction. Just before I could grab a handful
that silly Otango let loose a flying spittle which
landed on the nuts. Perhaps the others were by now
too hungry to care. They all eat while I politely
declined. And yes I didn't tell them of what I saw
emanating from Otango's mouth. Them no get eye?
"How can you say life is cheap?" came a hoarse voice
behind me, which I at once recognised and decided to
ignore. The question was repeated once more but this
time with a strong push to the back of my head. If
not for his bulging biceps I would have gifted his
ugly face with a dirty slap. How dare the motor park
taut of a riff raff touch my head? I turned round
sharply and smiled.
"Area father, for the Baba ke. Na you will dey look
o. So is life not cheap?" I asked.
"Not at all. The fakest player on that pitch is
worth millions," said Area father.
"A million Kobo?" I teased.
He slapped me hard behind the head and asked "you
dey craze?"
."Only joking Area father" I managed to say as a
serious headache began to dance Atillogwu in my
brain.
An off duty historian took the heat off me to my
great relief.
"I don't see why we should be bought and sold by
capitalist football clubs. They may not brand the
skin but they make human beings wear numbers just
like slaves" He spoke so loudly that every one
stopped singing just to watch his Adam's apple bop
up and down.
Area father slapped him behind the neck with so much
force he flew onto the heads of those sitting in
front of him.
"Sharup, you poor man! If you no like the buying and
selling of human beings, you for stay your house"
Area father said.
The people in front of us in turn threw the
lightweight on and on. He continued to float on a
sea of heads till he ended on the pitch in need of
medical care.
While the historian was in flight I saw one hand
slip into his pocket to steal. The game continued
and so did our singing. Soon I formed a small local
disorganising committee (L.D.C) with those around me
with only one aim. Stage a pitch invasion when we
get the winner. (Ah ah, they didn't call me N.F.A
(no future ambition) at school for nothing o. I am a
born disorganizer.)
It ended a draw however.
As we trooped out of the stadium the selector played
Osayemore Joseph's "Oba no dey go transfer". As we
traveled back to Lagos, I thought deeply about that
song. Indeed the king doesn't go on transfer but the
football players do. They change kingdom at the drop
of a hat making a lot of money in the process. In
fact I reckoned that the players are the new
royalties, for which Oba can ever boast of filling
the Liberty stadium? The players are the new Obas'.
Area father slapped my head again. "Why do you look
so morose? Is a draw not good enough for you?" I
smiled through the pain and joined the singing as we
drove to Lagos for although we didn't win, it was
only a friendly.
The End
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