It was circa
4:38pm on Saturday 6th April 2002. The scene: Filbert Street, Leicester. As a
drab match played out in front of 21,447 spectators was drawing to a close, so
were Leicester City’s halcyon days.
Bill Shankly
once said that football was much more than life or death. He was wrong. But it
is undeniable that football affects people in a way that no other sport does.
Football clubs are rooted in communities, passed through bloodlines and markers
in otherwise ordinary lives.
What
happened in April 2002 I could not tell you. Research tells me that Beckham
broke a metatarsal, Lisa ‘Left Eye’ Lopes died in a car crash and there was
political unrest in Venezuela. But an afternoon in early April is clear as day,
because what happened at approximately 4:40pm that day was unspeakably
memorable for all those who were there.
I cannot
remember who (after all the team of the time was thoroughly forgettable -
decimated by Peter Taylor so much that in place of Neil Lennon and Steve Guppy
were the likes of Lee Marshall) but there was a stoppage in play for an injury.
Taunted by the Manchester United fans, haunted by an awful season, people began
to stand and applaud.
At first a
ripple, but gradually it spread. Around the ramshackle stands of Filbert Street
and to the quietest condemned corners. Within a minute the whole ground was on
its feet. To a man applauding. Not for the players down on the turf, not for
anything seen that season, not for anyone in particular. It was a marker, recognition
of an end, to the previous six years.
The European
nights, the fruitful trips to Wembley, topping The Premier League in November,
top ten finishes. It was over and here, en masse, were people whose lives it
had been a major part of recognising, embracing, accepting it. Poignantly beautiful.
Fast forward
12 years and within the next 7 days Leicester City have a chance to return to
English football’s upper echelons.
A lot has
happened in 12 years. If you ask a Leicester fan the list will be longer than
you’ll care to give them to hear the answer. A new stadium, administration, a
brief sojourn to the top level on a hiding to nothing, three takeovers, La
Manga, ten permanent managers, relegation to the lowest level in the clubs
history, Sven-Goran Eriksson, a League One title, a Frenchman chipping a
penalty in a play-off semi-final, a Frenchman missing a penalty in a play-off
semi-final and…. Deeney.
At times it
felt as if it would never end.
As
shell-shocked Leicester City fans ebbed away from Vicarage Road last season,
with ‘Yellow’ blaring over the tannoy and hordes of Watford fans celebrating on
the pitch the prospect of what they themselves now stand on the cusp of, there
was a realisation. Leicester City could play with emotions again. That
afternoon in April 2002, the relegation to League One at Stoke, that night in
Cardiff when Kermorgant chipped a penalty and frittered away a season’s endeavours.
None of it felt as bad as in the aftermath of those infamous 20 seconds. And
everything was certainly not yellow.
To those who
don’t follow a football team, that may seem absurd. It is only a game. But to
understand what promotion means to a long-suffering football supporter of a
team such as Leicester City requires a look beyond 22-men kicking a ball around
on some grass.
Supporting
Leicester City properly does not begin and end with the flick of a TV changer
or the turn of a radio knob. Sitting in traffic jams on some tortuous motorway.
Spending money to see them lose through lack of effort in some of the most
backward places England (and Wales) has to offer. A journey to deepest, darkest
North West England on a rainy Tuesday night which sees you only return home in
the small hours with work the following day.
All of it.
All of it is done with the hope of seeing your team prosper.
Granted,
following Leicester City is not about the glory or the glamour. They will never
win The Premier League. Despite four times trying they never have, and maybe
never will, win the FA Cup. But the club that gave the English footballing
world England’s record cap holder, a World Cup winning goalkeeper and England’s
second highest goal scorer, has been away from the top table for the longest
time ever in their history.
A decade has
been and gone. Too long.
The
footballing clichés; a new dawn, the next chapter, fresh beginnings. Whichever
way you want to put it matters little. That any one fits means a lot.
In Nigel
Pearson, Leicester have a manager as bright and promising as the hungry, young
team he has gradually put together. The days of mercenaries Jermaine Beckford
and Matt Mills caring only for themselves, of Geoff Horsfield on his last legs
or of Darren Kenton and Josh Low being a stellar summer signings are gone. Just 6 points from 7 matches stand between Leicester City and promotion. That it
will not be sealed is inconceivable in a club record-breaking season with no
credible challengers in the chasing pack.
When it is,
the question will be posed: were the pains, the trials and tribulations, the
ups and downs worth it?
And just as
on that early April afternoon almost 12 years ago to the day, words need not be
required. Should the inevitable happen in the next 7 days, look around the King
Power Stadium next Tuesday night when Leicester City host Brighton. Once again,
to a man, you will see what it means.
Leicester
are back.
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