In this era of over-hyped, sensationalist media coverage, the
words, ‘disaster’ or ‘tragedy’ are banded about in football like confetti, usually
following a defeat for any Premier League club you’d care to mention. The
reality is that down the years in the game there have been events that are genuine
tragedies. These have included the loss of Italian side Torino’s squad in 1949,
the deaths of many of Manchester United’s ‘Busby Babes’ in 1958, that of Peruvian
club Alianza Lima in 1987 and the Zambia national team in 1993. The common
factor linking all four, being that these disasters were as a result of plane
crashes.
This sad list was added to on 26 November 2016, when Brazilian
side Chapecoense who were travelling to the first-leg of the 2016 Copa Sudamericana Finals in Columbia,
saw their playing and management staff decimated in a crash that saw their
plane plough into the forest mountain of Cerro Gordo.
Whilst Triumph to
Tragedy – The Chapecoense Story details the awful events of that catastrophic
event, the book expresses so much more about the Brazilian game and its
footballing culture, quite an achievement for a book of only 223 pages. It manages
this due to the fact that author Steven Bell has such a passion for the Brazil
national team, nicknamed the Canarinhos
(Little Canaries), his fascination with the World Cup and his love of the game
at club level in the country.
The book follows Bell’s experiences beginning with him
watching Brazil win the 1994 World Cup which took place in the USA and which
led to him travelling to South America to see them host the 2014 tournament. That
six week visit was the catalyst for his deeper interest in the game in Brazil and
his discovery of a side based in the south of the country, Chapecoense. The
author is cleverly able to combine the story of the Brazilian national side, who
have one of the biggest kit deals in history with Nike, with a team that in
2006 was basically a non-league outfit on the verge of going out of business. This
linking of paths is achieved because Bell highlights the 1994 World Cup winning
Brazil squad under coach Carlos Alberto Gomes Parreira, who weren’t in the
tradition of the free-flowing sides of the past playing, O Jogo Bonito (the beautiful game), but instead adopted a pragmatic
European style to lift the trophy. This change in approach was an influence as Chapecoense, nicknamed the Verdao (the Big Green) took on the mantel of underdog, a side willing
to scrap and fight to survive and overcome more illustrious opposition.
The clubs incredible rise and promotions are well documented
in the book and the author’s knowledge of the working of the Brazilian football
organisation is very useful in understanding the State Championship system,
promotion through the Serie divisions
and the wider structure relationship within the game in South America as a
whole, something very unfamiliar to those used to the rudiments of the pyramid
system in England.
As a reader, you are introduced to some of the players,
officials and management that came through the Big Green’s rise, and their individual
stories are told in such a way that you connect with them. They are real people.
Some who had harsh backgrounds, others whose careers were considered over, but
all human, with wives, girlfriends, families and a love of the club. So, despite
the fact that you know there is tragedy waiting in the story, it is still shocking
and sad to read of the deaths of characters that Bell has warmly introduced.
The book doesn’t end with the crash and instead the final
chapter details how the club, country and the footballing community dealt with
the disaster, which lead the author to an interesting concluding observation.
Bell was in Brazil when the Canarinhos hosted the 2014 World Cup and the nation and its
national side hoped to exorcise the demons of the 1950 World Cup loss to
Uruguay, instead they were humiliated by Germany in the Semi-Finals 7-1. It was
a night of tears and tantrums and of perceived national tragedy – Bell describes
the aftermath in which, “Brazilian football was broken: Brazil as a nation was
broken too.” Fast forward to 2018 in Russia and the book reflects a change in
reaction following defeat to Belgium in the Quarter-Finals, with Bell’s opinion
that the Chapecoense disaster had left the nation with the realisation that
there is more to life than football.
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