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Barry Davies |
| Legend
turned ice-dancer |
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Sometimes guff is more than just about
the gaffes and faux pas. Sometimes it’s a state
of mind.
Barry Davies is proof positive that it’s not just
great players who eventually lose their touch. Before
he bowed out, Davies had become the sanctimonious old
headmaster of BBC commentary, but it’s easy to
forget that in his pomp he had raised more goose-pimples
than anyone else in the gantry.
Davies – far more than those lightweights Lydon,
Mercury and Bowie – provided Britain’s soundtrack
to the Seventies. With an "Oh, I say" and
a "Goodness me" here, a "LORIMER!"
there, Bazza usually struck the right chord. It was
a Franny Lee screamer for Derby against Man City that
inspired one of his greatest hits - a free-wheeling,
squealing, voice cracking, climactic prog-commentary
affair, that serves as a sharp contrast to his tired
"Shearer, one-nil" dirges of recent years:
"This could be interesting... VERY INTERESTING!
Look at his face! Just look at his face!"
His rivalry with Motty for the big gigs was
matched only by the Clemence – Shilton stand-off
of Ron Greenwood’s England. While Motty had the
sheepskin, the stats and the common touch, Davies always
liked to preach. Even in the glory days, the potential
for pontification was there. But at least back then
he chose his causes well. Just such an occasion was
an offside Jeff Astle goal that cost Leeds the championship
and brought Don Revie roaring onto the pitch with, bizarrely,
a blanket over his arm:
"Leeds will go mad! And they have every right to
go mad!"
Davies was still getting it right most of the time in
the Eighties, realising in ‘86, for example, that
it was an expression of low-key wonder rather than boyish
excitement that was needed when Diego scored the greatest
ever goal.
"Maradona… oooh wonderful skill, he has Burrachaga
to his left and Valdano to his left, he doesn't need
them, he doesn't need any of them...Ohhh you have to
say that’s magnificent."
Much like Castro’s little buddy himself, it was
largely downhill thereafter for Davies. His flirtations
with lawn tennis, ice-dancing and the Boat Race had
always been suspect. And gradually, Bazza’s commentaries
became two-parts pompous hectoring of cheats and miscreants,
one-part look-at-me posturing over every foreign pronunciation
(Ole Gunnar Sol-shire-a) and three-parts gentleman-at-leisure
disinterest in the trivial ball game he has to endure.
His new partnership with Mark Lawrenson required Davies
only to punctuate Lawro’s useless gags by moaning
incessantly about the standard of play ("Awful,
just awful"), the negativity ("The Italians
have only themselves to blame, because they will not
learn"), and usually the standard of officiating
("I just cannot believe the French referee. Extraordinary.")
Guff for Davies then, became more a lifestyle choice
than a verbal affliction. In many ways, it is now just
the occasional gaffe that makes Davies tolerable at
all.
For instance, his increased ambivalence to events on
the pitch has seen him seek solace in outlandish puns:
"During the Senegal game, I wonder if the French
coach thought the spelling of his name had changed.
They certainly had le mare."
"Nicky Butt, he's another aptly
named player. He joins things, brings one sentence to
an end and starts another."
Yet, for a man clearly taken with his own intellect,
his grasp of fundamental physics leaves something to
be desired:
"Was the ball entirely over the line? It
didn't cross the line when it landed, unless it was
over the line when it hit the bar."
Trifles such as the scoreline are of minimal
importance:
"It's Brazil 2 Scotland 1, so Scotland
are back where they were at the start of the match."
Mind you, when he’s in the mood, Davies
can do Carry-on Commentating with the best of them:
"McCarthy gave Ian Harte a special cuddle
after he pulled him off."
Nor is he slow to acknowledge impressive achievement
in that department
"They've maintained their unbeaten record
between the legs."
A good referee needs eyes in the back of his head. A
good commentator’s eyes might just be in the back
of his head:
"The crowd thinks that Todd handled the
ball - they must have seen something that nobody else
did."
Unsurprisingly for a tennis-and-boating man,
Barry might not be au fait with the workings of rudimentary
football equipment:
"It slid away from his left boot which
was poised with the trigger cocked."
But, in his scholarly way, Barry has diligently committed
even the game’s more complex laws to memory:
"The substitutes are all on the bench, and that's
where they'll start the match."
We suggested guff was a state of mind, and
Barry’s cranky outlook has occasionally produced
a cutting line in double-edged guff.
"Poland nil, England nil, though England
are now looking the better value for their nil."
And the magnificent…
"Jim Leighton is looking a sharp as a
tank."
From seventies style icon to football’s
answer to Simon Cowell. How the mighty have fallen.
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