There’s a picture on the back page of the Daily Record today of a journalist looking like a plonker and Diego Maradona looking mildly alarmed. The Record wanted to reward Maradona, somewhat belatedly, for knocking England out of the World Cup in 1986. They had a special glass paperweight-cum-trophy, and Maradona looks like he’s afraid he’s going to be lamped. More likely, he’s been caught unawares because there was no pre-arranged photo opportunity – it looks like one of those photos you take of yourself by extending your arm as far away as possible and clicking, invariably producing an unsettlingly leery countenance on the snapper – and because he can’t quite work out why he’s getting the bauble.
It’s a bit tragic that the greatest moments for a Scottish football fan tend to involve the schadenfreude of seeing England knocked out of tournaments. I used to think those “Scotland’s Player of the Year” t-shirts – Pearce and Waddle in 1990, Southgate in 1996; you get the picture – were a riot. Now I think there’s something a bit tragic about them. Perhaps it’s because we’re so focused on English defeat that we’re more accepting of our relative mediocrity as a football nation. While other small countries like Holland, Denmark and Uruguay can look back with fondness at their major championship triumphs, it is the 1966 World Cup final that is seared on our consciousness – and fear of a repeat that is our abiding obsession.
I doubt if Diego would have been any less bemused after it was explained what the trophy was for. He’s a winner; the Scots, he must presume from the way we revel in others’ defeat, are inveterate losers who can only hope to drag others down with them.