NOW that only one event of note remains during the concluding half of
1990 -- I refer, of course, to tomorrow's Stone Roses be-in on Glasgow
Green -- we should examine something of which there is tons
gallumphing-on in the city of culture.
Sport.
Millions of it. Orienteering. Cycling. Wrestling. Police v.
padres football matches. Strand-pulling. Synchronised skipping.
Deep-sea stone-skimming.
But can sport be called culture? Sport just happens. You either play
it, or watch it, or talk a bit about it before going out to actually do
something, or you throw things at the telly because of it. Leaving aside
the growing number of excellent and hilarious football fanzines, no-one
really philosophises about sport, do they? Well, not apart from marathon
runners, golfers, and Archie Macpherson and Bob Wilson, and everyone's
agreed they're all imbeciles.
I mean, no-one believes anymore that sport embodies national
aspirations or communicates improving messages or sets out an ideal for
living or articulates common feelings. Think of football, allegedly
Scotland's sport, and remember Ally's
Abject Army in 1978 and scoff at Roy'n'Roxy's Rejects in Italy.
Sport's just a distraction, not a way of life, isn't it?
Yes.
And no.
Speedway is more than a sport. It's a religion. It's the best smell in
the world. It's for all the family. It's for all the people, everywhere,
all the time. It's got badges you can wear and proper statistics --
shut-outs and goal-difference my arse -- and a programme you have to
work away at with a pen like a maths professor.
Speedway is a metaphor for the human condition: sometimes a laugh,
always serious, sometimes winning, sometimes losing, going round in
circles all the time with the occasional chance to show off and the
perennial chance of a painful fall.
In short, speedway is flipping well brilliant. Get thee down to
Shawfield quick, culture-vulture, or you're only half alive.
A fortnight ago I returned to the red shale and the racket and the
heady perfume of methanol for the first time in 20 years. Now I've
discovered Shawfield, Wednesday nights, is the only place to be, I vow
to be there cheering on Glasgow's Radio Clyde 261 Tigers. Back then,
though, it was Belle Vue Aces at Hyde Road, Manchester. Their trademark
ace of spades will forever be tattoo'd on my heart, next to ''Iggy'' and
''Don van Vliet''.
But while some things can't change, speedway always seems to be
fighting a rearguard action against transience. A heavily-badged Tigers
fan told me in hushed, funereal tones that while the Aces still exist,
they've built houses on the old Hyde Road raceway. The top league is
down from about 20 clubs to nine. West Ham no more. Rochdale no more. I
stared tearily at the metal speedway tombstones on his
lapel: whither Halifax Dukes, Nelson Admirals?
As part of the universal personhood of speedway fans, we commiserated.
Glasgow Tigers have experienced more than their fair share of being
shunted around one step ahead of the
Celestial Clerk of the Course, you see. From the White City to
Hampden, Coatbridge to Blantyre, and now a home at the Ru'glen dog
track.
Long may the Tigers flourish there, for despite post-war speedway
being regularly beset by soulless property developers, there is
something innocently timeless at the heart of the sport. At Shawfield, I
saw fans in barred scarves of the sort long vanished, along with
sporting behaviour, from football terraces. Holy Harry Haddock! There
was even a boy with a ricketty!
At Shawfield there is also meeting presenter Bert Turner, man of a
thousand words, some unnecessary and many of which he invents himself.
Bert Turner. This is a good speedway name. Plain. No nonsense.
Foursquare. Stoically unsexy. In the past there have been solid British
names such as Cyril Maidment. Barry Briggs. Doug Templeton. Charlie
Monk. Bert Harkins.
Even speedway's foreign, mostly Scandinavian riders have had names
that were resolutely down to earth. Not exotic, not distant. Bernt
Persson. Bent Larsson. Tigers' forthcoming new non-Brit, Tommy Dunker,
seems set to carry on the tradition.
Bert revealed that Geoff Powell's testimonial year fund-raising
activities will include a jumble sale. Weep for shame, Kenny Dalglish.
Bert then appealed for kind-hearted Tigerfans to loan a TV and a vid to
Ozzie Jason's Ru'glen lodgings.
In speedway, sport of the people, we are truly all neighbours. Like
properly improper rock'n'roll, it looks rotten on the telly. Like
inspired comedy, you really have to be there to get it.
Shoot, I always wanted to have a go myself. Imagine doing a
one-handed, middle-finger wheelie up life's centre-stand straight. In a
tight leather bodysuit, all chimminy orange and candy apple red up
either leg. Never could handle a bike, mind . . . but speedway means
never having to admit you're neither an ace nor a tiger.
The next speedway meeting at Shawfield takes place a week on Sunday.
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