Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SOUMYA BHATTACHAR­YA

- Spinoff appears every fortnight (The writer wishes to thank the National Geographic Society and the Out of Eden Walk, whose Journalism Workshop supported the creation of this project)

The twin aims of literature, the 17th century English poet John Dryden said, were to instruct and delight. What might be the aim of sport? Rather, what is the purpose of sport to those who are merely fans, who follow and watch sport but have no stake in it in terms of money or a career?

In the first month of the new year, it is worth exploring why we, as fans, make such huge investment­s in emotion and time on it, why we care about it to the point of obsession, why it is such an important part of our lives.

It is because sport is a window on to a parallel – perhaps better – universe, one that offers us unbounded joy, optimism and delirium.

On May 17, 2014, Arsenal, the football club I support, won the FA Cup. I watched the final at home with my daughter, who, like me, supports Arsenal with borderline crazy passion. In all her years as a fan (she was 12 at the time), she had never seen her team win a trophy. It had been 3283 days since Arsenal’s last piece of silverware.

In fewer than 15 minutes, Arsenal was 0-2 down. The wretchedne­ss that Arsenal fans are familiar with began to engulf us. Not just my daughter and me. All our other fellow fans, in various parts of the world, watching in various time zones, who were in touch on text messages, began to despair. Bottled it. Again. Talk swirled of all the other finals we had let slip away. Then a sumptuous Santi Cazorla free kick made it 1-1. Arsenal left it till late in the game to equalise. But, after a nerve shredding period of extra time, a flick from the boot of Aaron Ramsey won the game. Arsenal. Champions again. The trophy drought was over. And the year was made for a certain 12-year-old, and thousands of other 12-year-olds, across the world.

The heart stopping delirium of it. The goofy grin that we could not wipe off our faces the morning after. The watching of the highlights on a loop.

Think of any favourite sporting triumph. Think of the 1983 cricket World Cup. Or India winning against Australia at the Eden Gardens in 2001. Or John Mcenroe beating Bjorn Borg in the 1981 Wimbledon final. What is there to match these moments?

Grown men shouting and jumping in their living rooms, watching on TV and urging on players in action thousands of miles away, believing that their imprecatio­ns or exhortatio­ns can influence the course of play. Well, not quite believing. But just not being able to help themselves. It is what fandom does to you.

At the same time, I know that a famous victory for the team I adore has no material implicatio­n for me. Sport is a window on to a parallel universe because neither its joys nor its disappoint­ments have any bearing on my job or my family or my real, lived life. It is an otherworld­ly thing, and so much the better for it. It means nothing to my life as I know it. And yet, it means everything. The joy sport offers is pure. It is almost an abstractio­n.

There was a time when sport used to consume my life. Now, I need to make space for it in the clutter and frenzy of a middle aged, working parent’s life. But make space for it I do. It preserves my sanity. I know that, when I am no longer middle aged, no longer working, and become a parent whose child has left home, I will still have sport to fall back on. At the flick of a switch, the press of a button or the click of a mouse, I will be able to summon those familiar images, those thrills, that other world.

Yes, that other world with its unique joys. As Nick Hornby writes in the closing pages of his book, Fever Pitch: “So please, be tolerant of those who describe a sporting moment as their best ever. We do not lack imaginatio­n, nor have we had sad and barren lives; it is just that real life is paler, duller, and contains less potential for unexpected delirium.” out of habit, he says, possibly to escape the reality that they’ve reached the top rungs of their lives’ ladders. Others, especially women, he adds, throng the lottery stores during auspicious festival times, when West Bengal’s state lotteries compete for space with big-ticket lotteries from Sikkim, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh.

Ticket sellers in Kolkata note that it is mainly daily-wage labourers who try their chances at winning big bucks. They save up whatever they can every few days to buy tickets.

“Sometimes, I advise them not to play,” Goswami says, sympatheti­cally. “If they’re trying to bet for really big amounts by buying the more expensive tickets, I try to coax them into buying the cheaper tickets.”

Among retirees and the elderly, the modest thrill of a score that’s offered by every six-rupee ticket is only one attraction. The other is a sense of belonging, and community-recognitio­n, that ticket stores offer.

“My wife died a little while ago, my daughters are married. What can a man like me do alone all day?” says 70-year-old astrologer Mahendra Singh. “The lottery gives me a kick, and I’m addicted to that josh. The lottery is the only medicine for the ills of my old age!”

Beyond that though, even the sellers are sceptical of the buyers’ masochisti­c optimism.

“No one has really been able to make a life or do something really big for themselves in all of this,” admits Dhananjay Pal, an older colleague of Goswami who has been selling tickets for more than a decade.

Pal said he’s seen the lottery system itself change drasticall­y over the years. There are more prizes now with smaller rewards, he says, and there’s hardly any value to larger sums of money that are being won. Also, chances were better before: There were fewer shops selling golden tickets to lottery players’ dreams.

Currently, 13 Indian states and seven Union Territorie­s sell lottery tickets legally.

Unlike many lottery merchants, Goswami, the wisecracki­ng ticket-seller at the Jyoti Agency, hasn’t bought a ticket himself.

“As they say, the sweetmeat seller doesn’t eat the sweets himself,” he says, citing a well-worn Hindi aphorism.

Yet no seller escapes the power of the lottery. For them, the currency they are gambling are their hours and days. One recent afternoon at 4 pm, as Kolkata’s busier lottery shops filled up with worn-out, yet starry-eyed hopefuls, Goswami pored intently over a cheap, two-page tabloid that announced upcoming prizes the way he once studied the B.ED. textbooks from his university days.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Arsenal fans celebrate during a match at Wembley stadium, London.
GETTY IMAGES Arsenal fans celebrate during a match at Wembley stadium, London.
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