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A More Splendid Life

An stunning amount of quality soccer writing is going on — just look at this site. But why is that? And why more so for this sport than others? One reason: The dearth of soccer statistics, which encourages the blooming of 1,000 different styles and interpretations for any game, any issue. The second reason: Very few of us are getting paid for it. While “traditional sportswriting is all about diversion” — this, this my friends, is all about love. (Richard Whittall/A More Splendid Life)

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Read of the Day: Is it OK to Miss the Big Game?

You scheduled an unbreakable appointment for the day of the big match — so you work like hell to avoid finding out what happened until you can watch the tape. In the case of Liverpool-AC Milan in 2005, Richard Whittall inadvertently saw a photo on a newspaper, assumed Liverpool had lost, and so missed one of the greatest comebacks ever. So why does he still think he wouldn’t have watched it all live…and that he came away with something far richer? (Richard Whittall/A More Splendid Life)

Read of the Weekend: Stranger than Fiction — Maradona and Messi

Stranger Than Fiction Say you’re a novelist “on the verge of completing a daring, epic novel spanning thirty years” with two protagonists — “Maradona, the Virgin mother,” anything but innocent but vitally alive, and “Lionel Messi, the Lion, the Messiah,” who’s won nearly everything but plays as if programmed by a video game, leaving “no lingering aura”…but who wakes from a dream to find the old man his national team manager in the World Cup. Does Messi fail and learn from Diego that life is more than mere skill? Or does he win and risk your narrative’s credibility? How does it end? (Richard Whittall/A More Splendid Life)

Radio, Radio

Fulham-Juventus second leg — why would anyone have chosen to listen to the match of the year on radio? Because the inanity of the announcers and the visual blanks keep you argumentative and focused, your imagination filling it all in – the challenges, the pleadings, the impossibly cinematic victory celebrations. (Richard Whittall/A More Splendid Life)

Football in the Age of Electronic Reproduction

The globalization of soccer information makes what we considered sophisticated fandom 15 years ago look medieval. But what changes will Football 2.0 bring next? How about a hyperlocal, “ultra fan” culture — a fetishization of the live match worthy of Walter Benjamin? (Richard Whittall/A More Splendid Life)

Read of the Day: Against Player Profiles

No More Profiles: Is there a more execrable sportswriting genre than the player profile? One imagines the poor journalist, pounding out yet another indistinguishable Torres or Messi hagiography, “itching to write that [the player] confessed to being a chronic masturbator and to recreational LSD use while on international duty.” (Richard Whittall/A More Splendid Life)

Why the Left Doesn’t Get Sports

Sport is like one of Wittgenstein’s self-contained language games: life and death on the inside, meaningless from without. But it’s still socially vital, and (like nationalism) it resists the easy reductionism of the left — it’s “a contradiction, or what the theologians used to call a ‘mystery.’” Even in Canada. (Richard Whittall/A More Splendid Life)

Hockey as Therapy for Football

I’m Sorry, Our Three Periods Are Up: Too many soccer fans aspire to the condition of film critics — gushing aesthetics at the expense of effectiveness. But is the breathless relentlessness of hockey “a cleanse from the slow, exacting nature of football” — i.e., therapy for soccer addicts?