Authors: James McCreath
Calix was little more than halfway back along his goal line when the net behind
him bulged with the Orange-shirt’s header.
Now, ten foreigners stood in huddled elation as eighty thousand looked
on in mute dismay. Holland had come level, and the world order stood on the
brink of collapse.
To make matters worse, the Dutch were far from content with their
stunning accomplishment. They seized the emotional letdown and shock that
their hosts were in the throes of and closed in for the kill.
On came the orange waves, sending the powder-blue and white defenders
back on their heels in disarray. Try as they might, Argentina could not gain
possession of the ball for more than a few seconds at a time before it was
aggressively relieved from them. Eight minutes of relentless pressure culminated
in the finest scoring chance of the day.
Less than a minute remained on Sigñor Patrizio’s watch when the brothers
Trelaan teamed up one more time. Again, it was Arturs who launched a deft
chip shot thirty yards upfield, this offering coming to earth mere yards in
front of his sprinting brother, Kees. Now it was Jorge Calderone’s turn to be
victimized by the onrushing Netherman. The Argentine fullback had given up
the advantage of position, and short of a costly foul, there was nothing he could
do except watch in dismay.
The ball came to earth at the edge of the goal crease, six yards out from
Nirvana. Kees Trelaan was positioned perfectly to pounce on the waist level
volley off the turf and jab the sacred object goalward with his left foot.
Keeper Calix made a futile stabbing motion with his left leg to divert the
black-and-white globe from its damaging trajectory, but he narrowly missed
making contact. The guardian of the gate could only look back in anguish as
he and the onrushing Trelaan became entangled and crashed to the carpet.
The matter was out of everyone’s hands now. The Gods would decide the
outcome of the ball’s pilgrimage to Mecca. The entire football universe gasped
collectively as they followed its flight to the promised land.
Trelaan’s touch sent the orb downwards again, then off the turf two yards
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JAMES McCREATH
out, volleying upwards at waist level. There were no other defenders close
enough to interfere with its ordained destiny. No breathing, living, souls to save
Argentina from a disaster that only minutes before had been unthinkable!
There remained only a certain white, six inch by six inch, upright wooden
object to master. As fate would have it at this moment in time, it was the
goalpost that would change the course of history.
The eighty thousand breathed a collective sigh of relief as black and
white struck white. The benevolent sun of La Bandera Immaculada must have
been shining down on the fortunes of her native sons, for the dreaded object
rebounded back into play. It was then swiftly cleared from danger’s doorstep by
Captain Daniele Bennett.
There was no time left to strike again for the Dutchmen, no time left to
redeploy for the Argentines. The last glorious opportunity had been decided by
an inanimate object, totally impartial and oblivious to the emotional mayhem
that it had created.
Sigñor Patrizio raised his right arm and gave three long blasts of his
whistle. Regulation time had expired. The champion of the soccer world would
be determined in extra time, or failing that, penalty kicks.
The tension inside the circular cauldron known as Monumental Stadium
duplicated its namesake. Octavio Suarez had not been enamored by the play of
his team in the final half of the contest. He had made no substitutions as yet,
and during the five-minute break, he canvassed each of his starting eleven for
signs of fatigue or mental letdown.
No one wanted to come out of the contest. Not one man was willing to
give up his position. These were his shock troops, the best he had available,
and Octavio Suarez would do or die with these same warriors. He gathered his
charges in a tight circle around him just as the officials signaled for the players
to take their positions.
“Señors, we have come a long, long way together. Too far to see things
fall apart now! We are fortunate to be able to continue on in this game! You
must take the battle to their doorstep immediately! Each of you, pull up your
stockings. Let that shining sun guide you to your true destiny. Champions of
the world! I have faith in each and every one of you. These multitudes looking
down upon us have faith in each and every one of you. Have faith in yourselves,
and you will stand on the victory podium in thirty minutes’ time!”
Thirty minutes. Two fifteen-minute halves. No sudden death, just
two fifteen-minute halves played to completion! The occasion called for
the penultimate effort by each of the twenty-two men that lined up for the
resumption of play.
Who would be equal to the task? Who would falter and bear the
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RENALDO
ignominious title of ‘runner-up’ for the rest of their lives? Those questions were
about to be answered as the world watched and waited.
For Renaldo De Seta, there was no doubting the final verdict. He felt
strong and mentally capable of carrying out the duty expected of him. He had
taken only one direct scoring chance himself during the first ninety minutes
of play. He was convinced that his opponents would, therefore, regard him in a
lighter manner. This would translate into more time and space, which he could
use to his advantage.
His role for the last forty-five minutes had been primarily defensive,
due to the sustained dominance of the Europeans in the Argentine half of the
field. But the bothersome Willie Brax had backed off from his persistently
close shadowing as a result of the Dutchmen’s offensive superiority. Number
seventeen had seen room to create chances, if only the men in powder-blue
and white could break down the orange dike and flow into the Lowlander’s
heartland.
Holland kicked off and went on the offensive immediately. Green shirted
keeper Calix was called upon to stifle the orange crush twice before the ball
crossed the center field line going in the opposite direction. But it was that first
charge by the Latins that set the stage for things to come.
Juan Chacon’s headed clearance in the third minute was trapped and
controlled off the chest of Renaldo De Seta. With the Dutchmen pressed
forward in search of the go-ahead marker, the midfield resembled deserted
parkland.
Off tore number seventeen, straight up the field. Long, graceful strides
kept eating up the green carpet. Closer and closer loomed the opposition’s bank
vault. There was only one way that he could be stopped, and it was left to
retreating Dutch midfielder Jan Johannes to lunge desperately from behind at
the mercurial feet of the intruder. Contact was made, and down went Renaldo
De Seta, crashing to earth.
Sigñor Patrizio was on the spot instantly, displaying a bright yellow card
deemed for Mr. Johannes. The fallen Porteño grasped his tender limb to inspect
it for damage. He felt no unusual pain, and once convinced that there was no
harm done, bounded to his feet, and raced upfield ready for the free kick that
the foul had garnered.
Ruben Gitares took the set piece from thirty yards distance, and a diving
Caesar Castro was able to redirect the ball with a precise header into Ramon
Vida’s path. The ‘Boy from Boca’ stood face-to-face with keeper Wilhelmus,
but the shooter’s angle was poor, and the Dutchman was able to parry Vida’s
blast over the touchline. Argentina had served notice that this segment of the
contest was not going to be a carbon copy of the preceding embarrassment.
The ungentlemanly conduct had not disappeared with regulation time,
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JAMES McCREATH
and Sigñor Patrizio, again, had his hands full trying to keep things moving
along with some sort of consistency. Chacon was cautioned, but not carded on
two occasions for blatant fouls that normally would have brought a booking.
Perhaps the besieged official feared having to come into intimate contact
with that deformed visage and foul temperament. He kept his distance as the
frustrated Orange-shirts swarmed around him, pleading for justice. It was to no
avail. Number eight in powder-blue and white merely shrugged his shoulders
at the long-distance reprimand and went about his business.
The Dutchmen had made no adjustment in their offensive tactics, sticking
with the same methodology that had produced their only reward thus far, long,
cross-field buildups, followed by quick breaks toward the Argentine goal by
any man who could shake loose of his mark. The deeper the Europeans pressed,
the more susceptible they became to the fast-breaking Latins’ counterattack.
One minute before the conclusion of the first extra stanza, a misplaced
Dutch cross was trapped by Jorge Calderone twenty yards out from his own
goal line. Turning upfield, the Newton’s Prefect fullback spotted Humberto
Velasquez with acres of space on the near sideline. Calderone’s true pass sent the
little halfback streaking upfield. As two Dutch defenders converged to relieve
him of the ball, he calmly shoveled it off to Ramon Vida, who had drawn close
to lend assistance.
Vida had some time to plan his next move, and he stopped dead in his
tracks to seek out reinforcements. Out of the corner of his eye, he spotted the
musical half of the R&Rs approaching rapidly on the full run.
“Go for it, man,” were the words that accompanied his gift to the dashing
center half. Three defenders had converged on Vida by this time, but none
were fleet enough to catch the rampaging Renaldo. Vida split the opening
between two of the Dutchmen with his pass, and onto the offering ran number
seventeen.
Eighteen yards out, at the edge of the penalty area, Renaldo was forced
to leap over the flailing form of Nilis Hendrik. But the ball stayed true to the
Argentine’s desired course as if it were on a string attached to his ankle. Straight
ahead he propelled himself, closer and closer to his ultimate destination.
Now more Orange-shirts congregated to impede his progress. A slight
feint to his left sent his old friend Willie Brax sprawling to the deck, clutching
nothing but air. After that challenge, Renaldo was clear, and he raised his head
to set his sights.
There, there it is. Right in front of me with only keeper Wilhelmus to beat.
The
Holy Temple of wood and mesh loomed larger than life.
Come on! Come on! Head and feet as one! Head and feet . . .
The words swirled
in his brain, but before he could react with his intended shot, Wilhelmus
abandoned his upright stance and dove straight at the ball.
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RENALDO
There was nothing that Renaldo could do. He leapt to avoid the
outstretched keeper as Wilhelmus sprawled on the turf. Unfortunately, the
leather didn’t accompany the handsome intruder this time as he sidestepped
the last Dutchman. Instead, it struck the goalie’s elbow and floated upwards,
twirling agonizingly in the air. The millions held their collective breath in
slow motion torture. Where would it land? Who would it favor? That was the
ultimate question!
The Argentine center half was now behind the prone Dutch keeper,
watching, waiting for the spinning spheroid to make up its mind. Defenders
Van Vlymen and Laurens had also sprinted behind Wilhelmus and were fast
approaching to assist in the clearance. Even though Renaldo was still onside,
there would be precious little time to act.
The object of attention dropped to earth two yards from the goal line, out
of reach of the prostrate Wilhelmus, but dead in the midst of the two Dutch
defenders and the sandwiched Argentine. All three made frantic attempts to
caress the ball.
Head and feet as one! One more time, one more time!
The shining sun on Renaldo’s left calf guided him home. The touch was
ever so gentle, but it was all that was required. Down, down, the orb spun,
hitting the green grass one yard from heaven, then bounding nonchalantly into
the back of the net.
The goal scorer raised his arms triumphantly, but not believing his good
fortune, sought out Sigñor Patrizio for confirmation. The black-shirt was
striding full speed towards the net, his right arm outstretched, pointing to the
ball now resting contentedly in the far reaches of the Dutch goal.
The usual celebration teemed down from the Gallery Gods, but along with
the ticker tape came the trilled roar that was illuminated on the scoreboard.
“RRRRRRRenaaaaaaaalllldo!”
“RRRRRRRenaaaaaaaalllldo!”
“RRRRRRRenaaaaaaaalllldo!”
The boy was elated by his good fortune, but there was no time to savor the
moment. The home team was not out of the woods yet. These Dutchmen were