Sport, the universe and everything
Marcus Berkmann reviews The Meaning of Sport
Marcus Berkmann
25-Nov-2006
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The Meaning of Sport Simon Barnes (Short Books, 363pp) £16.99


IS IT just me or are Short Books getting longer? Simon Barnes's two brief books on birdwatching
are now followed by a lengthy and discursive meditation on the
meaning and purpose of sport and,
almost incidentally, the meaning
and purpose of sportswriting.
Barnes is well qualified for the
task: he is chief sportswriter at
The Times and for many years has
been showering readers with
thoughtful and often strikingly
original columns and match
reports.
The world probably divides
into those who enjoy his questing,
sensitive, highbrow approach
and those who cannot believe he
has held a job down for so long.
Certainly no one has appeared
more regularly in Private Eye's
Pseuds' Corner column over the
past few years. But, if he sometimes
overreaches himself with the
metaphors, at least he is out there,
reaching for something. It is surely
better to fail from time to time
and risk looking stupid than not to
bother at all.
This book, then, comes as a
sort of culmination of everything
Barnes has been trying to do in his
journalism: to seek out underlying
meaning and work out what sport
is for, if indeed it is for anything.
He begins in Lisbon at the 2004
European Football Championship
- not the most promising point
of departure - and we follow him
from event to event, from one side
of the world to the other, as he
watches and thinks and tries to
make sense of it all.
Initially it all seems very
shambling and random. Each of
his 150-odd chapters is but a few
pages long - one or two are only
a paragraph - and themes come
and go in what seems an entirely
arbitrary fashion. But, as the
book progresses, an intriguing
pattern emerges. The themes
are returning, being built upon,
nestling into each other, all
shaped by the sports he has seen
and reported on. The boldness
and ambition of the book become
apparent only very gradually, by
which time you are completely
drawn into his strange quest. It is
like feeding on something highly
nutritious that happens to taste
good too.
If I have any complaint - and
it is the only reason this book has
not been given five stars - it is that
there is not enough cricket in it. In
the natural order of pieces Barnes
does not visit a cricket match until
halfway through the book and,
although his insights into the 2005
Ashes series are typically acute,
I wanted more of them. But
much of what he writes is at least
indirectly applicable to the greatest
of games.
His book will not please
everyone - he has a tendency to
tick you off if you have not read
Finnegans Wake all the way to the
end and he really does not get
golf - but I have a feeling I will
be coming back to it again and
again, whenever I am in need of
a particular variety of mental
nourishment. And, if you too
sometimes feel you know less about
sport the more you see of it, this
may help you out.
To buy this book click here
This article was first published in the December 2006 issue of The Wisden Cricketer.
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