Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Camp Nou - a tourist's experience



As you browse through the tourist guidebooks of “must-see” things in Barcelona, apart from the Gaudi works and the Olympic village and the Las Ramblas and the flamenco shows, they mention this museum that’s the most visited in the city. No, I’m not talking about the Pablo Picasso museum although that attracts a fair share of visitors too. I’m talking about the museum at the football club of Barcelona – FCB. Now given that I really enjoy watching the team play and try to follow pretty much every game, such a sort of thing really makes you wince a little bit, but I guess the marketing types need to make a living after all. From the famous Mes que un club motto to the merchandise at the many FCB stores littered all across Barcelona (including the airport, of course), they have taken the football club and made it into a sellable commodity. Pretty much every other kid in the city wears a Messi jersey.

Getting tickets is a far from simple matter because the club works on a complicated system wherein members need to release tickets for them to be available. We managed to get fairly decent seats to watch Barca take on Athletic Bilbao in a La Liga match. Although Bilbao may not be doing too well in the league this season, they made a lot of people sit up and take notice with their annihilation of United in a Europa cup tie. I was fairly confident that Barca would see them off easily at home, especially since they had played a Europa match against Shalke only 2 nights back, but then you never know. Barcelona had also drawn 2-2 away at the San Mames earlier in the season so this was no sure-shot. Oh well, that’s what makes it all fun.

As we walked through the Gothic quarter on the morning of the match, we saw a bunch of Bilbao supporters standing around a bar singing something in Basque (I guess it must’ve been the team song) pointing in the direction of a few local kids decked up in their Barca kits. The needle! The city was getting ready for the match.

After overcoming some linguistic barriers, we were able to pick up our tickets at the pick-up center near Plaza Catalunya and figured out the best way to get to the stadium was to take so-and-so train in so-and-so direction. So we step on to the train in our Barca gear and as expected – the train is mostly full of people heading to the game. It’s funny how supporters of a team are not very different in that regard, irrespective of the sport or the country. Whether you take the line 3 to Les Corts or the Churchgate local to watch a cricket match at the Wankhede, or you take the 4 to the Bronx to watch the Yankees play, the general atmosphere is pretty much the same. You have your supporters wearing imitation T-shirts, some looking fairly sillier than they do on a regular workday, all chatting about in good humor and anticipation of getting a favorable result. It’s something non sport fans will never get. The energy. The anticipation. We did notice a few stares in our direction – not sure if it was because seeing a couple of Indians heading over to the game is unusual or they were patronizing “oh these tourists” looks, but we did notice a few. Spain is similar to India in that sense – people will stare at you quite openly. More on that later.

As we went closer to the Camp Nou, there was the usual throng of supporters patiently waiting outside the gates hoping to catch a glimpse of the team bus and maybe get a picture of the back of Messi’s head or Cesc’s elbow. We headed over to the hot-dog stands outside and I helped myself to a can of Estrella – fairly unremarkable beer, but any trip to a sporting mecca is incomplete without a taste of the local hooch. We headed inside to catch our first glimpse of the imposing stadium that is the Camp Nou. You expect a stadium that can hold almost 100,000 people to be fairly huge but of course, you can’t really taste the atmosphere until you stand there and hear the said 100,000. I checked later that approximately 85,000 people showed up that night, which proves that an empty seat here and an empty seat there can really add up.





As the players came out and started to warm up, I looked behind to see a bunch of Japanese tourists (at least I assumed them to be Japanese) taking in the action as well and I felt myself turn fairly patronizing myself about how they were here just for the tourist experience. That’s where the stares on the train came back to me. They were propagating a stereotype for me, just as I was for those on the train. That was my one big epiphany of the night. Oh well, back to the pitch. The teams were still going through their pre-game drills prompting a bunch of camera flashes going off around the stadium in the midst of the usual cheering and whistling (I had to tell my wife that the whistles are a form of jeering in Spain – very different from the appreciative whistles they let fly from the cheap seats in India).

And then it began. Kick-off was preceded by an 85,000+ strong rendition of the Barca club anthem and the unfurling of the flag. As the match kicked off, Barcelona settled into their rhythmic passing game. Now at this point, it’s worth mentioning that the crowd could stay perfectly silent during the game when something potentially significant was unfolding and that’s a sure sign of a knowledgeable public. Cesc and Xavi hadn’t started so Thiago and Iniesta were playing in the midfield along with Busquets and Messi was leading the line with Tello and Alexis in tow. The midfield tiki-taka was just as mind boggling to watch live as it always is on TV. There were the usual patient buildups, the give and goes and some amazing runs from Messi. The ball did hit the back of the net fairly early, but the whistle had blown and that tempered the Camp Nou that was ready to erupt.

Overall, it was the kind of performance that is starting to be taken for granted from this Barcelona side. Iniesta displayed some fantastic ball-control and along with Messi was running the Athletic defense ragged. There were some marauding runs forward by Pique and some excellent fire-fighting by Mascherano who is starting to look more and more like a center-back with every passing match. Alves spent a lot of his time in the attacking half of the pitch, as is his wont, and even Adriano went forward more than Abidal generally would’ve and it all made for some attacking football. Thiago was fairly disappointing through the game because his first touches were often too heavy and I remembered him giving the ball away cheaply on more than one occasion. After a period of domination in the first half, the first goal duly arrived from a precise Messi pass and with some excellent finishing from Iniesta. We went into the half-time break feeling fairly confident that we won’t be witness to a rare home loss. It was more of the same in the second half and Tello, who had been fairly anonymous up to that point, sped into the box and won a penalty for a shove by the highly rated Javi Martinez. Messi tucked away the penalty without a fuss and around this point, any lingering anxieties went away. Pique had to make a clearance off the line but by-and-large the defense was untroubled by Bilbao’s attack.

Xavi came on towards the end of the second half for Iniesta and that prompted huge cheers from the crowd, but the loudest cheers of all were reserved for their adopted son, Messi. Watching the crowd dote on Messi reminds you a bit of the Wankhede crowd’s unconditional love for Sachin. It’s like a grandparent looking on their prodigal grandson who, in their eyes, can do no wrong. The place erupted as it had threatened to all night when Messi scored the goal. 2-0. Game over.

In the end, it wasn’t the most exciting match ever, but it felt great to be part of the experience. It’s hard to not take a bit of a philosophical angle on the whole thing and realize that behind what we are able to watch, there are thousands and thousands of hours of training that we didn’t. And to understand that it’s this whole Catalan sub-culture that manifests itself on the pitch every time Barca step on. Critics point to the high horse that the club and its followers sit on, but the reasons for the unabashed display of Catalan nationalism that goes hand-in-hand with the club have their roots in the Civil war and are deep enough that anyone who has not lived there can’t even begin to understand. It’s something that I don’t even pretend to do. Maybe the locals don’t object to putting the club’s museum on the list of Barcelona to-do’s. One can only guess. Not knowing Spanish - leave alone Catalan - leaves me culturally poorer and in a position where I will only always be merely scratching the surface. All that aside, I was fortunate enough to watch what may be the best football team of all time. Visca Barca!

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