|
Post by Admin on Sept 24, 2018 4:05:30 GMT
Article coming soon.
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Sept 24, 2018 4:36:16 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Sept 24, 2018 5:10:09 GMT
|
|
|
Post by WH on Sept 25, 2018 0:39:45 GMT
Nice article, Veersen. I think it is quite a special phenomenon, one that my friends in Quebec find incomprehensible, that a match played by teenagers can be followed with such intense emotion, by thousands of people.
You can feel this intensity in the kinds of things Rodriguez remembers. In many ways, chronicling Intercol in Trinidad amounts to authentic historical recording of the period.
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Sept 25, 2018 9:39:52 GMT
Nice article, Veersen. I think it is quite a special phenomenon, one that my friends in Quebec find incomprehensible, that a match played by teenagers can be followed with such intense emotion, by thousands of people. You can feel this intensity in the kinds of things Rodriguez remembers. In many ways, chronicling Intercol in Trinidad amounts to authentic historical recording of the period. I tried to explain this to football fans when living in Turkey that it is not uncommon for us to become more passionate when discussing highschool football than the national team. Perhaps it's a feeling of belonging as well as decades of tradition, akin to what an Arsenal or Liverpool fan might feel. You and I were at that N. Zone final in '79. The QPO was choc full, about 30 000 people. When last did the National team do that? ;-) In an era of great fowards and midfielders, Graeme was one of them, I'm glad his story was chronicled.
|
|