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Chasing The Dragon
Rugby in Wales is more--much more--than just a pastime
By Matthew Yeomans
At the end of last summer, I was driving on Long Island's Southern State Parkway when a car passed by me with a sticker on its rear bumper that read CYMRU AM BYTH -- or, translated from the Welsh, "Wales for Ever." My heart leapt. It's rare enough in New York to meet another Welsh person, let alone one prepared to announce it the whole world. I sped up to the car and drove by, honking my horn and pointing behind me. The other driver--like me, a man in his early 30s--looked slightly aghast. Some crazy road rager, he obviously thought. But after I overtook him, he understood. On the back of my car was another sticker--the flag of Wales, a red dragon on a background of white and green. As I checked my rearview mirror, my fellow countryman flashed his lights and gave me a big smile and a hearty two thumbs up.
That brief encounter persuaded me to go home to Wales for the 1999 Rugby World Cup, where twenty of the top rugby playing nations were to meet, a month or so later, in a six-week-long competition. Rugby is immensely important in the United Kingdom, South Africa, France, Australia, New Zealand, Argentina, and the South Pacific Islands, but in Wales, it is the national sport. After years of following the game from afar, I decided I had to be part of the action.
But it wasn't just the prospect of attending the World Cup that excited me. After decades of decay, Wales was coming to life again. A principality of only three million inhabitants, Wales had recently been granted "devolution." For the first time since 1283, in other words, Wales would not be directly ruled by England. Along with Welsh politics, Welsh culture also seemed to be flourishing : a brace of Welsh rock bands were dominating the British music scene, classical singers such as Bryn Terfel and Charlotte Church were gaining worldwide recognition, and Welsh actors like Catherine Zeta Jones and Ioan Gruffudd were breaking into Hollywood. Suddenly, it was cool to come from Cymru.
As I drove into Cardiff
on the first day of the World Cup, for Wales's opening game against Argentina,
a gigantic structure suddenly rose before me--an enormous red, white, and
blue oval pod with four huge white support arms jutting out. The building--the
Millennium Stadium, which had been constructed specifically to host this World
Cup, and which had replaced the old national stadium--dwarfed the surrounding
office buildings. But architecture was the last thing on the minds of the
estimated 100,000 Welsh rugby fans who were to descend on the city that morning.
By eleven o'clock,
the fans had set about drinking the city's pubs dry; according to the South
Wales Echo, Cardiff's local paper, they consumed some 500,000 pints of
beer before the day was over. Streets all around the stadium had been closed
off since early morning, and now they were awash in a human sea of red and
white--the colors of the Welsh team. Outside the overflowing pubs, young men
and women were singing the chorus from the Welsh team's de facto anthem, "Cwm
Rhondda" ("Bread of Heaven, feed me till I want no more"), and bastardized
verses of "Delilah," in honor of that favorite Welshman, Tom Jones. On the
streets around the stadium, face painters did a brisk trade adding dragons,
leeks, and the Welsh coat of arms to the already ruddy visages of burly grown
men who at any other time wouldn't have been caught dead wearing make-up.
The city was engulfed in an expectant, celebratory, and yet nervy Welsh hysteria.
All of Wales wanted to see its rugby team reclaim a sporting paradise once
considered lost.
My formative years
as a rugby fan coincided with a decade-long golden period, from 1970 to 1979,
when Wales dominated International rugby. In those days Wales played with
a flair and elan that would take your breath away and make the hairs on the
back of your neck stand on end. The Welsh team ruled the world, or so it seemed
to me. Its stars were storybook heroes who (my bias aside) will be remembered
as among the greatest to ever play the game. There was the scrum half Gareth
Edwards; his mercurial halfback partner, Phil Bennett; the indefatigable and
indestructible fullback, J.P.R. Williams; and the lightning-fast, staccato-footed
wing, Gerald Davies, whose trademark sidestep I used to practice in my bedroom.
Today, Davies is
a writer for London Times. Looking back on the 1970s, he says, "They
tell us now it was the best of times. It was a period to be in, because it
added to the Welsh identity, it gave us confidence as a nation. It was a fabulous
time to be involved because it was the same gang that played from one season
to the next and we all became friends." Still, he adds, "It's only when the
time was over that people come and tell you, 'You gave us a great feeling,
you made us feel so good.' No one tells you that at the time!"
Success evaporated
in the 1980s. One by one, my heroes retired and there was no one to take their
place. Sure, Wales still produced a few exceptional players, and the team
won a few matches. But Its defeats were embarrasing: Romania in 1983, and
Western Samoa in 1991. ("Thank God we weren't playing the whole of Samoa,"
went the joke at the time.) Then, in the summer of 1998, Welsh rugby reached
its nadir: a humiliating 96-13 loss to South Africa.
Half of Wales probably
contemplated committing suicide at this point. After all, Wales was going
to host the World Cup in twelve months. Why bother if we couldn't even compete
anymore? Bereft of any better plan, people in Wales prayed for a miracle--and
they got it, in the form of a new coach, Graham Henry, a canny New Zealander
with bloodhound eyes and what many thought to be the perfect qualification
for the job, an ironic outlook on life.
Many within the insular,
curmudgeonly world of Welsh rugby hoped this usurper would fail, but when
South Africa and Wales met again, three months after that crushing defeat,
he guided Wales to within three points of victory. The score was impressive,
but so was the attitude of the team - for the first time In years, they truly
believed they could win.
In February came
the Five Nations - a two month long annual competition between England, France,
Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. The final match pitted Wales against England,
the eternal enemy. For nearly the whole game the English dominated the Welsh,
but then, with two minutes to go, the Welsh Inside center, Scott Gibbs, received
the ball. He crashed through one tackle, evaded a defender's desperate lunge
at his ankle, sidestepped another defender, then executed a right-angle swerve
that belied his rhinoceros-like frame, flatfooting yet another defender, and
then dove over the goal line, finger raised in salute. The game was ours,
and Henry had a new nickname: "The Great Redeemer."
Wandering among the fans in the Millennium Stadium on that first
day of the World Cup, I felt out of place. For months, I had dreamed about
this scene: finally back at home, I would soak up the pre-match atmosphere
and get in touch with my roots. But I hadn't been to a game for more than
ten years, and now I was experiencing culture shock. Eager to feel more Welsh,
whatever that might be, I went to the nearest shop and bought myself a new
red-and-white scarf. This made me feel a little better but earned me some
disparaging looks in the press box--at least until the Argentinian reporters
arrived, dressed head-to-toe in blue and white, and began chanting "Argentina!
Argentina!"
"Call themselves bloody journos!" a Sunday Times of London
writer in the seat next to me grumbled. I tucked my scarf under my coat.
If it was Welshness I was missing, I needn't have worried. The
atmosphere inside the stadium was incredible, fueled by 72,500 roaring fans
and a seating design that made you feel like you could touch the turf. At
the end of the opening ceremony--an unabashed display of Welsh singing and
celebration of past rugby glories--the crowd let out a thunderous roar of
support for the Welsh team. I had never seen Welsh people so proud to be Welsh.
It was both exciting and a little unnerving.
Wales played pitifully. So revved up were they, so keen to impress
the now-adoring masses, that they reverted to exactly the type of timid, insecure
play that coach Henry--now officially dubbed "The Messiah" by the Welsh press--had
worked to eradicate. The supposed stars--the scrum-half Robert Howley, the
man-mountain Scott Quinnell, and the hero against England, Scott Gibbs--all
failed to impress. Only two snatch tries and Neil Jenkins' kicking helped
Wales prevail, 23-18.
The final whistle had hardly blown before the critics started
griping. What they complained about wasn't so much the team's performance--a
win is a win, the relieved masses seemed to feel--as It was the opening ceremony.
"When will we learn that this self-importance and silly nationalism that has
marked Wales for so long is very unattractive to the rest of Britain and the
world?" one incensed reader wrote to the Echo. "What a load of rubbish,"
was the succinct opinion of another reader.
Even Eddie Butler, a former Welsh rugby captain, joined in.
Now a journalist for the London Observer, Butler caustically wondered
what the song "Everyday I Thank the Lord I'm Welsh," which the hit rock band
Catatonia played at the opening ceremony, had to do with welcoming nineteen
other nations. "Wales is now that little place," he wrote, "that has swapped
its feet on the ground for a puffed-out chest and which is currently floating
like a blimp somewhere over the Irish Sea."
Typical Welshman, I thought. Never celebrate something
if you can have a go at it first.
Lack of confidence was not something the English needed worry
about. Their first game had been against lowly Italy, and they had stuffed
them, 67-7. The three other favorites--New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa--had
also all won their games easily, but France had struggled to beat Canada.
England's next game would be against the New Zealand All Blacks--the toughest
match in the competition so far--and most of the English newspapers were already
referring to it as a dress rehearsal for the final itself.
The following week, in Wales' second match against Japan, the
Welsh fullback Shane Howarth ripped the Japanese defense to shreds with a
series of rapier attacks from deep in his own territory, and Wales won easily,
64-9. The stadium was packed and the singing was inspired. But Wales had been
expected this match to be a romp. Now, as the fans filtered out of the stadium
on another beautiful sunny afternoon--almost unheard of for Cardiff in October--there
were more pressing matters to attend to, like getting to the nearest pub in
time to watch the England-New Zealand game.
I sprinted across Cardiff's pedestrian streets and made it
to the Bar Essential, where some friends were gathered. The pub was filled
with Welsh fans, except for one small group of English university students
who had reserved a couple of tables close to the television and were politely
cheering on their team. They had no idea what they were in for. When Jonah
Lomu, the six-foot six-inch, 260-pound All Black winger ran through three
England players to score the winning try, the pub hit fever pitch. The All
Blacks defeated England, 30-16 and the Welsh crowd was exultant. "I have to
bloody work with them five days a week," one Welshman said of the English
after the game, smug with pleasure. The English fans looked bewildered and
crestfallen. How could the Welsh hate England that much?
The truth is, we don't--except when it comes to rugby, and then
every buried resentment against England and their assumed superiority over
the Welsh (and the Scots, and the Irish, for that matter) comes to the surface.
Although rugby in Wales has long been seen as the game of the people (it was
introduced In Welsh grammar schools at the end of the nineteenth century and
soon became an essential focal point of Welsh small-town life), English rugby
will forever be associated with the privileged English elite. For the Welsh
in rugby, for the Scots in soccer, and for the Australians in all sports,
beating England has centuries of baggage attached to it.
"The worst rugby day I can ever remember," said Peter Stead, a co-editor
of Heart and Soul, an anthology of insightful essays devoted to Welsh rugby,
"was the Ringer sending-off at Twickenham."
I had arranged to have lunch with Stead and his co-editor, Huw Richards,
a rugby writer for the Financial Times, and now, as we sat in a restaurant
that was South Wales's answer to Tex-Mex, Stead was recounting the infamous
1980 match in which the Welsh forward Paul Ringer was sent off for a late
tackle on John Horton, the English outside-half. Wales lost 10-9 that day,
and the defeat marked the end of Wales' s rugby domination. "I think it was
Orwell who said," Stead continued, "'If you dropped a bomb on the West car
park at Twickenham you would end any danger of fascism in this country.' That
day, the English middle class never looked more arrogant. They were there
in their shooting breaks with their games pies and their champagne, and there
we were in our duffle coats. We looked like poor cousins."
As we chased some dodgy tacos away with pints of lager, I asked what being
a Welsh fan meant to them. "For me," Stead answered, "it works on so many
different levels. There is a sense of national identity, or cultural pride.
There's enormous pride in the singing, and in the fact that although you're
only a hundred and fifty miles from London, there's another language. Then
there is the sight of the red shirts. As you grow older and more sentimental,
you wipe a tear from your eye."
On the surface, the idea that one nation should need to define itself so
completely through one sport can seem fairly ridiculous. But when you take
a closer look at the loosely stitched patchwork that is modern Wales, it's
obsession with rugby becomes understandable.
There never has been a united Wales. The last time the Welsh people can claim
to have been independent, in the late thirteenth Century, a new English king,
Edward I, exploited the infighting between the ruling Princes of North and
South Wales and took the spoils for himself. Wales, has been ruled by England
ever since. Today, distrust between the traditionally insular, conservative
North and the more anglicised, cosmoplitan South continues - and the situation
hasn't been helped by centuries of institutional neglect by London. It's pretty
tough to unite a north and south divided by mountains when there is no major
road link between the two, and when the hub for all Welsh railway connections
is in England.
In recent years, politicians and the media have sought to promote the Welsh
language as a future symbol of unity. But only 20 percent of the nation speaks
Welsh, mostly in the North and in mid-Wales, and, so far, the push to expand
it and establish it as the language of government has only succeeded in alienating
the English speaking Welsh in the South. In 1997 Wales voted to establish
an autonomous national assembly by a margin of less than one per cent. This
down-the-middle split is reflected in the views of my friends and family.
There is, for example, my friend Helen, a Welsh speaker and a firm believer
in the new Wales. "I feel Welsh European," she told me one evening. "I never
refer to myself as British anymore." Then there is my English-speaking father,
who voted against the devolution, which he considers a waste of his time and
money. Given the differences, it's no wonder the Welsh are fixating on their
grievances against the English rather than trying to unite themselves.
"There's no doubt at all," Peter Stead had remarked over lunch,
" that the state of the game is hyped and created by the media. A
Welsh elite, and particularly the broadcasting elite, has decided that
rugby is going to be the new expression of our national identity." It
seemed true during my visit.Stories about the national team led every
newscast. The local paper covered little else, and this, my parents told
me, had been going on for months. Even North Wales, traditionally a soccer
bastion, had caught the rugby bug.
On the morning of Wales's third match, against Samoa, the city was once more
throbbing with anticipation. The face painters were back on the streets and
young women were enjoying the unseasonably warm weather in dragon dresses
made from the Welsh flag. Another win and Wales would be guaranteed a place
in the quarterfinals.
The Samoans, however, had the reputation of being big, hard players, and
as they took the field, it was clear that this team was no exception. Within
minutes of the kickoff, Shane Howarth, the hero of the Japan game, tried one
of his traditional darting runs up the middle of the field--and was knocked
flat by a Samoan tackler. A groan went around the stadium. Still, the players
were running well, and soon they were awarded a penalty, about thirty meters
from the Samoan goal posts. The crowd went quiet as Neil Jenkins, the Welsh
outside half, lined up the kick.
For eight years, Jenkins--a balding redhead with jug ears who bore little
resemblance to the image of the modern sports star--had been a controversial
choice at outside half. In the view of many, Jenkins, a prolific goal kicker,
nevertheless failed to live up to the mercurial running and passing talents
of the great Welsh outside halves of the past-"King" Barry John, Phil Bennett,
and, in more recent years, Jonathan Davies. When Graham Henry took over as
coach, many assumed Jenkins would be discarded, but instead he was reborn.
(Behold, the touch of the Messiah again!) Now, if Jenkins made this kick,
he would break the world record for most points scored in international matches--911.
He steadied himself, looked up at the posts and down at his boots, took a
few steps forward, and kicked. The ball sailed high in an impressive arc towards
the posts but then hit the left upright and bounced back into the arms of
a Somoan player. The crowd looked on in horror. It was going to be a long
game.
Jenkins broke the record with his next kick, but Wales could do little else
right, and despite an all-out attack in the final stages, the team went down
38-31. Gloom descended on the crowd. One man walking behind me as I left the
stadium summed it up. "Bloody typical," he said. "I've been coming twenty
years to see them play, and always leave disappointed." Wales felt united
that afternoon, but not in the way I think the politicians envisioned.
Wales' progress to the quarterfinal was no longer guaranteed. With some frantic
consulting of the tournament rule book and some quick calculations, I was
able to figure out that if Argentina defeated Japan in the final group match
by fewer than 69 points, Wales would be declared the winners of the group
and would meet Australia (which had waltzed through its qualifying group)
a week later. Argentina would meet Ireland, and Samoa would have to play Scotland.
So it transpired that two days after the Samoa debacle, fifty thousand Welsh
fans returned to the Millennium Stadium, this time reinvented as Argentinian
fanaticos. And nos compadres didn't disappoint: they turned
in a 33-12 win and allowed all of Wales to breathe a little easier.
Wales-Australia was the big one, without a doubt the most important match
that Wales had played in many years.
Coach Henry wasn't taking any chances. He had talked Wales's chances down
so much that one worried his team might need collective therapy. The former
Australian great David Campese was sure of it. "I know the Welsh love to sing
their hymns, and 'Land of My Fathers' (the national anthem)," he told The
Times, "but I hope they can hum as well because there are no words to the
Death March."
There wasn't a sober person in Wales who really thought we could beat Australia--but
by kickoff time there were very few sober people in Wales. The Echo had set
the tone with its headline call to arms: "COMETH THE HOUR, COMETH THE MEN."
It didn't matter that Australia had won the World Cup in 1991, or that they
had yet to lose a game in this World Cup. When the crowd rose to sing the
anthem, they belted it out with such vim that I thought I might cry. Instead,
the heavens did: as the game got underway, with the Millennium Stadium's fancy
new retractable roof open to the elements, the players were subjected to the
sort of driving tempest only Wales can offer. The Welsh team seemed to revel
in the quagmire that the field soon became and attacked Australia from all
angles. At half time, Wales trailed by only 10-9.
Incredibly, Wales continued to match Australia in the second half. Surely
this couldn't be the same team that had lost to Western Samoa? Then, with
less than ten minutes to go, reality hit home. Stephen Larkham, the Australian
outside half, put through a deft kick that on any other occasion would have
been intercepted by Shane Howarth. Instead, the ball stuck firm in the mud,
allowing the Aussie wing, Ben Tune, to reach the ball and touch down for the
try. Several minutes later, the referee compounded Welsh misery by awarding
Australia another try, even though the scorer, Tim Horan, had obviously dropped
the ball forward - an infringement of the rules. At the final whistle, Wales
had been convincingly beaten 24-9, but the crowd, bitter, and dejected, booed
the referee all the way off the pitch.
That night I met up with an old friend, Andrew, for a couple of drinks.
The mood in the city was one of exhaustion. After having been force-fed a
constant diet of expectation by the media, the Welsh people couldn't quite
believe the tournament, for them at least, was over. Where did that leave
Welsh rugby's revival, so central to the new national sensibility? We couldn't
be sure. "If we'd carried on losing after Henry took over," Andrew said, "and
the World cup had been a complete embarrassment, that could have been the
death of rugby in Wales. It certainly is an interesting question: If Graham
Henry went tomorrow, what confidence would we have in the team in six months?"
Maybe the two of us were just guilty of that classic Welsh pessimism, and
of still craving the lost glory years. "The problem," Andrew went on to say,
"is that sad gits like us who got spoiled are now the ones running the media."
The new Wales didn't collapse with Wales's defeat, and now it was time to
sit back and watch the competition unfold.
Thankfully, England lost to South Africa. Scotland lost to New Zealand. The
following week, Australia beat South Africa in one semifinal, and in the other
France shocked the rugby world by upending New Zealand. That defeat not only
cost the All Black coach his job but also contributed to the reelection defeat
of New Zealand's prime minister. (And people say the Welsh are hung up on
rugby!)
On November 6, Australia met France in the final. An estimated 150,000 fans
came to Cardiff that day. The event was a true international fiesta, and all
the Welsh seemed to be relieved the pressure was off. As with so many major
finals, the Australia-France match was a disappointing affair: Australia soundly
defeated the French. As the sound system played, "I Am a Wallaby," the Australian
captain, John Eales, accepted the trophy from the Queen of England. Just a
few hours before, Australia had narrowly voted against removing the Queen
from her position as head of the Australian state, and Eales, a staunch Republican
who had made it clear he wanted her to go, must have bit his tongue a little
during his royal encounter. It was a situation that no Welsh captain need
worry about for some time.
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