Kensington and Liverpool - well played (7 May 1999)
In recent years, the nice, clean, almost spotless image of sport has been tarnished - to the extent that many of those who spread the gospel of sport, many of those who believed that sport was the only thing on God's earth which was fair had started
08-May-1999
7 May 1999
Kensington and Liverpool - well played
Tony Becca
In recent years, the nice, clean, almost spotless image of sport has
been tarnished - to the extent that many of those who spread the
gospel of sport, many of those who believed that sport was the only
thing on God's earth which was fair had started to lose faith.
Unlike the good old days when sport was good, clean rivalry between
individuals and teams testing their skills against each other, the
days when winning was second to the joy of participation and the days
when champions were accepted as the best, the past 10 years or so
have seen accusations upon accusations of bribery, match-fixing and
all sorts of under-hand dealings.
The accusations, for example, have been rife in Italian soccer, they
have surfaced in cricket, they have left boxing in a turmoil
following the Evander Holyfield/Lennox Lewis world heavyweight title
fight and they have touched even the International Olympic Committee.
All, however, is not lost. There are still individuals who believe in
fairplay and who will fight to the end and teams which, with their
pride at stake, will never surrender regardless of the odds against
them.
In less than a week, between last weekend and Wednesday, two teams,
one in cricket and one in football, one at the local level and one in
England, one a set of amateurs and one a set of professionals, played
sport as it should be played and those who believe in the greatness
of sport and what sport is all about should salute them.
Last weekend, in the Surrey Senior Cup, defending champions Melbourne
were four points behind leaders Lucas, with time running out on them
they needed all the points they could get against Kensington and with
Kensington, beaten by an innings by Lucas the previous weekend, two
places from the bottom of the standings, Melbourne went to Kensington
Park favoured to get first innings points and hoping to win the
match.
In a wonderful performance, however, Kensington, once the kingpins in
the competition and arch rivals of Melbourne, braced themselves, rose
to the occasion and not only denied Melbourne of victory, but also
snatched first innings points in an exciting match.
On Wednesday, in the English Premier League, Manchester United,
finalists in the FA Cup and the European Club Championships and
hunting the triple, needed a victory against Liverpool to stay in the
lead, they went to Anfield bubbling with confidence, and were two-nil
up with 21 minutes to go.
In a glorious performance, however, Liverpool, once the best in
England and arch rivals of United, hit back to tie the game, and left
the fans dancing in the streets.
But for their pride, Kensington had nothing to gain by leading
Melbourne, and neither did Liverpool by drawing with United. Just as
neither Melbourne nor Manchester expected any favours, however,
Kensington and Liverpool were not in the mood to give any, and
because of that, the fans at Kensington Park were treated to some
lovely cricket and those at Anfield to some great football as two
teams, miles apart and in different settings, polished the image of
sport.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)