Following the Ball. Todd Cleveland
Following the Ball
Ohio University Research in International Studies
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Executive Editor: Gillian Berchowitz
Following the Ball
THE MIGRATION OF AFRICAN SOCCER PLAYERS ACROSS THE PORTUGUESE COLONIAL EMPIRE, 1949–1975
Todd Cleveland
Ohio University Research in International Studies
Global and Comparative Studies Series No. 16
Ohio University Press
Athens
Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio 45701
© 2017 by Ohio University Press
All rights reserved
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Hardcover ISBN 978-0-89680-313-8
Paperback ISBN 978-0-89680-314-5
Electronic ISBN 978-0-89680-499-9
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available
To footballers everywhere, especially my two favorite players:
Lucas and Byers
Contents
CHAPTER 1: Foundations The Introduction and Consumption of Soccer in Lusophone Africa
CHAPTER 2: Engaging with the Game African Practitioners in the Colonies
CHAPTER 3: Following the Ball, Realizing a Goal From the Colonies to the Metropole
CHAPTER 4: Successes, Setbacks, and Strategies Football and Life in the Metropole
CHAPTER 5: Calculated Conciliation Apoliticism in a Politically Charged Context
Illustrations
Figures
I.1. Eusébio leaving the pitch following the 1966 World Cup loss to England
2.1. Clube Ferroviário de Lourenço Marques headquarters, 2012
4.1. Académica’s starting eleven, prior to a March 5, 1961, match versus FC Porto
5.1. Street scene in Coimbra, 1958, with Araújo, Mário Wilson, and Chipenda
5.2. The former site of the Lisbon CEI
E.1 Eusébio monument/shrine, January 2014
Map
Portugal and its former colonies in Africa
Acknowledgments
The process of researching and writing this book was extremely enjoyable, at times exciting, and, most importantly, it generated opportunities to interact with athletes, scholars, and others from across the globe. The research commenced in Portugal, and the first stops were, as is often the case, the Biblioteca Nacional and the Torre do Tombo. Staff at both repositories were, as always, professional and helpful. I also conducted research, for the first time, at Portugal’s Ministério da Educação, where the staff were both patient and supportive, as were staff members at the Biblioteca Municipal de Coimbra. While I was based in Portugal, Adriano Cardoso and Luis Fazendeiro proved to be excellent research assistants, and even better travel companions, as we engaged in the process of tracking down, contacting, and journeying—via rental car, ferry, train, taxi, bus, metro, and, of course, on foot—to interview former players and coaches throughout Portugal. My great friend Jorge Varanda participated in this manner as well, and in so many other ways. At various times during my series of research trips to Portugal, Nina Tiesler and Cláudia Castelo provided key insights into various aspects of this history and were otherwise generous with their time and levels of assistance. I was also fortunate to have met Nuno Domingos and Rahul Kumar. Experts in Portuguese football—past and present—they patiently assisted as I slowly grasped the major developments and contours of this fascinating history and provided the type of support that would have suggested we had been lifelong friends. Even as this project concludes, I look forward to ongoing interactions with Nuno and Rahul.
As the research transitioned to Africa, Gil Filipe and Hélio Maúngue played roles similar to those of Adriano and Luis in Portugal; I am grateful to have worked with both of them. In Maputo, Moira Forjaz introduced me to Paola Rolletta—author of Finta finta—whose knowledge of Mozambican football far outpaces mine, but who demonstrated the same type of patience and assistance that Nuno and Rahul had back in Portugal. While in Mozambique, Dave Morton made a series of key introductions and greatly enhanced the time I spent there, while also making ongoing contributions to the project.
Others provided support away from my fieldwork sites, including Tom Paradise, who generated the two maps that appear in the book; and Marlino Mubai, who transcribed most of the interviews—a demanding endeavor, as