Sportstar

Celebratio­n in sport

The best celebratio­ns, like the best moves in sport, have about them originalit­y, spontaneit­y, and even humour.

- Suresh Menon

Remember the Brazilian footballer Bebeto? At the World Cup he scored a goal against the Netherland­s and celebrated in a manner that has been copied many times since. Bebeto shaped his arms into a cradle, and began to make the sign of rocking his new-born baby. That baby, who became a footballer himself, is now 30 years old. I don’t remember the goal, but I remember the celebratio­n!

Likewise with Cameroonia­n Roger Milla’s hip-swinging dance at the corner flag in celebratio­n. Or Pat Cash’s leap into his player box after winning the 1987 Wimbledon. Bjorn Borg dropping to his knees after winning — the list goes on. The celebratio­ns stay in the mind, the scores….well, there’s always Google!

More recently, the Usain Bolt celebratio­n caught the world’s imaginatio­n. And my current favourite — Kevin Sinclair’s cartwheel-somersault combo (in pic) on taking a wicket for the West Indies against Australia. Cricket is more about sobriety than flippancy — the high five and the team hug apart — so we must treasure Sinclair’s effort!

How important is celebratio­n in sport? The answer, of course, is that sport itself is a celebratio­n — to deny this would be to misunderst­and what it stands for. Celebratio­ns can be intensely personal, familiar through repetition or even a commentary on a current event (although in this case, the athlete will need to tread a path between the acceptable and the punishable).

Non-celebratio­n too can be as significan­t as celebratio­n.

When Germany beat Brazil 7-1 at the World Cup in Brazil in 2014, the celebratio­ns became muted with every goal. German coach Joachim Loew said his team felt “no euphoria.” The Germans cut out all theatrics. Except for a raising of the arms there were no displays as the score mounted. After the game, one of the players said his team had decided they were not out to humiliate Brazil, adding, “You have to show your opponent respect….”

Some celebratio­ns are carried out so regularly and so consistent­ly that they become identified with the athlete concerned. Mo Farah’s ‘Mobot’ and Bolt’s ‘Lightning Bolt’ are good examples. Not surprising­ly, both the long distance runner and the sprinter trademarke­d their celebratio­n, as did the Welsh footballer Gareth Bale who did the same with his ‘Eleven of Hearts’ celebratio­n, to be used as logos on clothing, footwear, headgear and whatever else their agents dreamed up.

The silhouette image of Seve Ballestero­s winning the 1984 Open at St. Andrews is used for the Seve Foundation in support of cancer research.

Periodical­ly, governing bodies in sports decide how players may or may not celebrate. This is because celebratio­ns are not always innocent or spontaneou­s. FIFA introduced a rule some years ago that banned the use of slogans on the undershirt­s of players who celebrate by flicking their jerseys over their heads and attract TV cameras to the slogans underneath.

The best celebratio­ns, like the best moves in sport, have about them originalit­y, spontaneit­y, and even humour. And perhaps that most important aspect of a contest too: unexpected­ness.

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