Recorded history bears ample evidence of the extent to
which human beings are obsessed by sport. The need to
play is of course a deep urge common to all animals,
but the constant need to create ever more elaborate
forms of play is perhaps the most developed in humans.
So our current societies' preoccupation with sport in
various forms is not new.
Nor is the rise of spectatorhood-the
move away from mostly playing sports to mostly watching them-a
new shift. People have always loved to watch
excellence in games performed by others, and that has
been used to advantage by rulers as well. Even the
ancient Roman emperors knew the value of circuses when
bread was in short supply.
Nevertheless, there are features in the current
situation that are quite new: the tremendous expansion
of the sports business, and the globalization of it in
a quite novel way. All this has been much discussed
and, certainly, we in India no longer need any
reminding of how closely certain sports in particular
are linked with business. The business activities-and
the profits to be made-come not only from the
organization of the game itself but also (and usually
even more so) from advertising and related promotion
of all sorts of other goods, as well as from more
shady activities like gambling and book-keeping. There
has been much talk of how such sponsorship and other
activities threaten the 'purity' of a game, and of
what they do to players' aspirations. But still, it is
likely that many of us do not know the full extent to
which all of us-and even the players themselves-are
being manipulated in the new global organization of
sports.
That is why a new book brought out (in Bengali) by a
team from the Ganashakti newspaper,
Globalisation Covers the Sports Field (Maath
dhekeche bishwayane, Ganashakti, Kolkata, 2003) is
so fascinating. This small book manages to capture the
essence of some of the major changes in the way that
sports are organized and presented, the particular
forms that the globalization of sport has taken, and
the implications for both players and spectators.
One of the aspects that the book brings out clearly,
is how the extensive commercialization of games has
actually led to the growing unfreedom of players. In a
perceptive article on the Brazilian football star
Ronaldo, Debashish Chakravarty traces the evolution of
the boy from the slums of Bento Roseiro, who has
emerged as the game's latest and most spectacular
'phenomenon'. Chakravarty suggests that Ronaldo's
early and harsh lessons in the role of money-such as
his inability to raise the fare to travel to be
auditioned to join the famous Brazilian club
'Flamingo' when he was a teenager-made him understand
the importance of sponsorship. This made him actively
seek out and respond to agents and sponsors
subsequently.
But of course such sponsorship carries its own
hazards. Several articles in the book reveal Ronaldo,
the illustrious and magical sportsman, to be
effectively a prisoner of the sports and footwear
multinational company, Nike. Shantanu Dey describes
how, in the infamous World Cup final of 1998, when
Brazil met France, Ronaldo had convulsions the night
before the match, and was declared unfit. When the
Brazilian team arrived at the stadium without him,
there was panic among the sponsors, especially Nike.
Apparently at Nike's insistence (the company also
sponsors the Brazilian team as a whole and had paid
large amounts of money to them that year), the
decision to play without Ronaldo was reversed. The
suffering sportsman had to be injected with
pain-killers and somehow brought to the playing field,
where he delivered one of his poorest ever
performances. The player had become a commodity more
valuable than his own health or abilities. After all,
the match was not simply a context between Brazil and
France, but also between Nike, personified by Ronaldo,
and Adidas, promoted by the French-Algerian star
Zinedine Zidane. In this continuing tussle, the
winning side keeps varying-that year Adidas won, but
in 2002 Nike emerged the victor with a triumphant
Ronaldo.
Football is (and has been for some time) the most
globalized and commercialized of all sports. Pritam
Sinha shows that the major European football clubs are
hugely profitable business enterprises, which are
usually part of much larger privately-owned commercial
empires spanning other media and entertainment
activities as well. These clubs draw into their ranks
players from all over the world, and increasingly from
developing countries. Indeed, for most footballers in
the developing world, the dream is to be accepted into
(and eventually purchased) by these clubs. Vast sums
are exchanged for the 'purchase' of players, who are
allowed to keep some proportion of this money for
themselves. In addition, of course, there is the cash
to be had from advertising and promotions, as long as
the player is marketable.
Of the 23 main players in the team from Senegal that
won so many hearts at the 2002 World Cup, as many as
21 play in the French league. The real Senegalese
football, it is pointed out, is played not within
Senegal but in the clubs of Europe. And the local
football association within the country has been
reduced to little more than a talent-spotting
enterprise to allow local boys to enter that hallowed
world of demanding but rewarding European soccer.
Even in India, whose national team has never even
qualified for the Football World Cup, this process has
not just started but is getting entrenched. Shubhro
Mukhopadhyay describes how Indian football teams like
Mohun Bagan have become private limited companies in
their own right, and try to mimic their more
successful counterparts abroad by buying the
lower-rung international players, and so on.
Of course, the current fever is all about cricket, and
Panu Bhattacharya provides a useful backdrop to the
huge media hype and attention that is being lavished
on the Indian cricket team. It is extraordinary, the
extent to which, for months in advance of the Cricket
World Cup, the expectations of the masses in the
country were built up by a wide-ranging series of
advertisements and obsessive descriptions in the media
of the wonderful qualities of this team. The media
hype was maintained and even pushed further, despite
poor performances abroad by what is after all a fairly
ordinary team by international standards, simply to
keep public attention-and consumer interest-focused on
the World Cup and to ensure adequate rewards for
advertisers and other promoters in the process. So
overarching was this concern that even when the team
played very badly in the first two matches, this too
became the focus of media attention, overshadowing all
other news.
On the weekend in which history was being made on
streets across the world, as around 10 million people
marched peacefully in more than 600 cities to protest
the Bush administration's war against Iraq, most of
India's print and television media did not have the
time or space to describe this unprecedented set of
events which may mark a historical turning-point.
Instead, they were obsessed with the poor performance
of the Indian cricket team in the match against
Australia.
And our own cricket fans in turn, who had been led by
the same media to fantasize about winning the Cricket
World Cup, expressed their disappointment and anger
not only through acts of aggression on the streets but
in what is now the most effective form of protest in
this business. Thousands of erstwhile fans declared
that they would no longer buy goods endorsed by our
cricketers, thereby threatening the entire material
edifice on which all the hype has been built. This
move sent such shivers down the spines of sponsors
that some of them were reduced to taking out large
advertisements in the newspapers, pleading for the
people to be more understanding of the cricketers!
It is not surprising that sponsors, advertisers and
those involved in the business are able to generate
such a frenzy of excitement among the ordinary people.
Of course cricket and other games provide a welcome
distraction from the more depressing trends in current
affairs, and allow us to forget the irritations and
insecurities that increasingly plague daily existence.
But that is not the only reason. Perhaps the more
significant-even if subliminal-reason has to do with
the vicarious satisfaction that is provided by the
evidence of how individual achievement, in some sports
at least, can become the means for social and economic
advancement. This is all the more satisfying when
other instances of such mobility have become less
apparent.
In fact, sport-like other forms of entertainment-is
one of the few remaining means of individual social
mobility in a world in which economic stratification
is increasingly defined by access to quality
education, and where actual mobility has become more
restricted. The rags-to-riches stories of Ronaldo and
others, or the success of the possible boys-next-door
like Virender Sehwag, create a sense of fulfilment in
all of us, even more so because there are few such
stories in other fields. This may be why all of us
consent to become prisoners of this new and ever more
ambitious industry, as players or as spectators, and
why we allow the actual game to be only the smallest
part of the much more important and profitable game
that is being played out by the corporate world.