May 26, 2017
BBC News Arica



[image: Matthews dribbling]Image copyrightTHE STANLEY MATTHEWS
FOUNDATION/JOHN D CROSS

Sir Stanley Matthews remains one of England's most famous footballers and
was known as the Wizard of Dribble. But he was also arguably the first
global icon, paving the way for superstars such as Cristiano Ronaldo and
Lionel Messi. And it all began in Ghana, writes Scott Anthony.

Football is the closest thing the planet has to a global popular culture.

Wherever you go in the world, you'll find people kicking a ball around,
watching matches in cafes, wearing replica shirts, and betting or playing
football games on their phones.

Yet the idea of a footballer as a global icon is a relatively recent
phenomenon. The idea that a footballer could bring nations, classes and
races together had to be invented. And it was an idea that was arguably
invented in Africa.

The story begins 60 years ago in Ghana when veteran English footballer
Stanley Matthews strode out to play for Accra's Hearts of Oak against
Kumasi Kotoko.
'A god among us'

Newly crowned as the first European Player of the Year, Matthews came to
Ghana to play a series of exhibition matches to celebrate independence.
[image: Mathews and Ghanain players]Image copyrightTHE STANLEY MATTHEWS
FOUNDATION/JOHN D CROSSImage captionSome Ghanaian players were star-struck
playing alongside Matthews[image: Matthews adorning a local attrire]Image
copyrightTHE STANLEY MATTHEWS FOUNDATION/JOHN D CROSSImage captionMatthews
was installed as a "soccerhene" (soccer chief)

"Matthews' visit had a tremendous impact," says football writer Fiifi
Anaman. "When I spoke with some of the players about it, they said they
couldn't believe Matthews came - it felt almost as if a god was walking
among them."

The media had hyped up the visit, speculating how local hero Baba Yara,
"Ghana's King of Wingers", would measure up against the superstar of
European soccer.

Matthews was mobbed on arrival and more than 80,000 spectators turned up to
watch his first three matches against Kotoko, Sekondi Hasaacas and Kumasi
Cornerstone.

Shortly after his arrival, Matthews was presented with an ivory sword and
installed as a "soccerhene" (soccer chief) in front of the press.
Using sport to promote pan-Africansism

Matthews' tour of the region led people to compare European and African
styles of football.

Newspapers emphasised that Matthews rarely ran, played corners short and
almost never passed the ball off the ground. He avoided heading the ball.

His visit prompted calls for Ghanaians to prioritise teamwork and alertness
over effort and physicality.
[image: Kwame Nkrumah greets players]Image copyrightTHE STANLEY MATTHEWS
FOUNDATION/JOHN D CROSSImage captionGhana's first President, Kwame Nkrumah
(r), was inspired by Matthews visit to use sport as a national unifier

Even more importantly, Matthews arrived as Ghana's first President, Kwame
Nkrumah, was trying to create an identity for Ghana - a country knitted
together from numerous different ethnic groups under colonial rule.

Removing the portrait of Elizabeth II from stamps and coins was easy but it
was more difficult to create new symbols capable of bringing the new nation
together.

In particular, President Nkrumah stressed the need for real-life examples.
He wanted to emphasise the idea that you live your values rather than
passively inherit them.
------------------------------
Who was Sir Stanley Matthews?[image: Library file picture dated 08/11/56 of
Blackpool and England inside-right Stanley Matthews.]Image copyrightPA

   - Born 1 February 1915 in Stoke
   - Played for Stoke City, Blackpool and England
   - Did not smoke or consume alcohol and drank carrot juice every day
   - Known as the Wizard of Dribble
   - Won only major trophy in "Matthews Final", when Blackpool beat Bolton
   4-3 in 1953
   - Won inaugural European Footballer of the Year award in 1956
   - On 15 May 1957, aged 42 and 103 days, became the oldest person to play
   for England
   - 1965: First footballer to be knighted
   - Never booked or sent off
   - Died aged 85 in 2000 - his ashes are buried beneath the centre circle
   at Stoke's stadium

The story of Sir Stanley Matthews
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/stoke/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8517000/8517497.stm>
------------------------------

The success of Matthews' tour helped convince Mr Nkrumah that sport could
also play a significant role in the dissemination of African values.

At this defining moment, Matthews was playing alongside the early greats of
Ghanaian football such as James Adjaye, Chris Briandt and CK Gyamfi, who
would go on to define that greatness.

Ultimately, Ghana's president believed that sport was the perfect vehicle
for the expression of pan-African idealism.

"By meeting together in the field of sport," Mr Nkrumah said, "the youth of
Africa will learn what our elders were prevented from learning - that all
Africans are brothers with a common destiny."

In the years immediately after independence, Ghanaian football would not
only serve as a vehicle for the development of what the president termed
"the African personality" but be invested with the hope that it could help
build a new kind of global solidarity.
'The saint of soccer'

The England international, aged 42 when he arrived in Ghana, was a
compelling if unusual figure.

He had become a celebrity during World War Two when Allied authorities
promoted the matches of touring All Star XIs to keep up morale in war zones.

Here Matthews was a propagandist's dream. In addition to his amazing
dribbling ability, he was never booked and lived an ascetic life. The
contrast between Matthews' modesty and the icons of Fascist sport could not
be clearer.
[image: Stanley Matthews and a Kenyan player]Image copyrightTHE STANLEY
MATTHEWS FOUNDATION/JOHN D CROSSImage captionMatthews also played and
coached in Kenya[image: Stanley Matthews]Image copyrightTHE STANLEY
MATTHEWS FOUNDATION/JOHN D CROSSImage captionMatthews' stringent fitness
regime allowed him to play professional football until the age of 50

After Matthews' Blackpool beat Bolton in the 1953 FA Cup final, popularly
known as "the Matthews final", his fame was propelled worldwide through
newsreels and television.

Affection for "Our Stan" grew as his stringent fitness regime allowed him
to play professional football until the age of 50. During his visit,
Ghanaian newspapers labelled him "the Saint of Soccer" as he visited
schools and hospitals.

Independent Ghana required its own brand of heroic gentlemen.

Approachable but exceptional, the example of the "soccerhene" encouraged
Ghana's government to make sport and sports stars central to their project.

As independence spread throughout the African continent, Mr Nkrumah's use
of sport for nation-building would be widely imitated.

Later in the 1960s, it would become fashionable for icons of global sport,
from Pele to Muhammad Ali, to make pilgrimages to newly independent African
states.

Immediately after Matthews' visit, the Englishman George Ainsley was
appointed manager of the national team, the "Black Stars".

Ghana became the first African nation to tour Eastern Europe and the first
sub-Saharan African nation to qualify for the Olympic Games.

In 1963 CK Gyamfi would coach Ghana to victory in the African Cup of
Nations, a trophy they retained in 1965.

Mr Nkrumah also pushed Fifa to guarantee a spot for an African side at the
World Cup, which was introduced after African nations boycotted the 1966
World Cup. <http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-36763036>

Matthews himself would become a regular visitor to Africa, playing and
coaching in countries such as Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa.
[image: Stanley Matthews]Image copyrightTHE STANLEY MATTHEWS
FOUNDATION/JOHN D CROSSImage captionArchbishop Desmond Tutu said Matthews'
visit to Soweto had dented the armoury of apartheid South Africa

In later life he favourably contrasted the collective spirit of African
football, especially in Soweto, with the economic bigotry he saw taking
over the game in the UK.

"Going into the townships at a time when racial discrimination was at its
most intense [was] something that had all kinds of ramifications,"
remembered Archbishop Desmond Tutu. "It made a dent in the apartheid
armoury."

In Ghana, President Nkrumah's politicisation of football would prove a
double-edged sword, as the regime's centralising and authoritarian
tendencies eventually brought the league into disrepute and fanned regional
factionalism.

Internationally, however, African governmental activism broke the European
and South American duopoly over football and in the process the idea that
football was an uncontainable and universalising global force was born.

*Scott Anthony is a fellow at the Johannesburg Institute of Advanced Study*












-- 
Ann Marie

"The art of living consists of knowing what to pay attention to and what to
ignore."  -- Mardy Grothe

#################################################################################################

Join the African Association of Madison, Inc. for $25 per year.

Mail check to: AAM, PO Box 1016, Madison, WI 53701  Phone: 608-258-0261

Email: [log in to unmask]   Web: www.AfricanAssociationofMadison.org

#################################################################################################
*** Send email to the list: [log in to unmask] ***
*** Access AAM list archives: http://listserv.icors.org/archives/AAM.html ***