On
their very brightest day, facts and figures are encouraging. Nobody
truly gets excited and punches the air in delight after discovering a
particularly pleasing conversion rate, the reaction you're more
likely to come across is one of mild appeasement. The emotional
equivalent of being at a party with barely anyone you know only to
discover an old acquaintance. Life isn't suddenly inexplicably
perfect but it's better than it was a moment ago.
That's
not to say that I'm some kind of Hodgeasaurus who doesn't believe that stats have any relevance, far from it. What can be gleamed from them
is useful but no conversion rate discussion captures the excitement
of Daniel Sturridge when he's through on goal. The problem is that
by and large, numbers are cold and unfeeling. Mourinho-esque in
their rigidity. They're a slap to the face of ambiguity, with the
ability to instruct and inform but very little else.
Football
is a deluge of numbers. Because of their importance, they're forever
in the top left corner of the minds eye. After a period of very
clearly defined seconds and minutes, all that matters is for one side
of a hyphen to be greater than the other. Those on the pitch - the
people we put all our faith and hope in – once they cross that line
all at once lose their identity and assume that of something greater.
There was a time – feels like an eternity now – when Fernando
Torres' name was sung with pride. Anfield would bounce along in
honour of Liverpool's number nine and while it may seem that it may
now forever be the height of his fame, there was no real magic in
that fabric.
That
shirt has a lineage which makes it coveted, so much so that it's
current occupant spoke of his pride in adorning it for the first time
on Saturday against Preston. Having been associated with players of
the calibre of Rush, Fowler and Heighway mean that there is
expectation. Whether or not Rickie Lambert will live up to that at
Liverpool is still up for grabs. One thing is for sure. He's much
more worthy of such a label than El Hadji Diouf ever was. Iago
Aspas' decision to take that shirt last year looked brave and
endeared him somewhat but ultimately only ever added a pressure his
ability wasn't able to cope with. I doubt he'd make that same choice
twice.
It
goes even further than that. People generate their favourite figure
by any number of frivolous means. Sometimes they're even capable of
wielding some kind of magic. I'm not sure quite how a symbol used to
represent quantity was somehow conferred these powers but thirteen in
particular has a reputation. For better or worse, our strive for
individuality leads to this. Fondness can be found because of any
remote connection. The reason that Liverpool have a relationship
with the number five is not because of our collective worship of
terrible boy bands from the nineties. Similarly United love 1999
because they're all massive Prince fans. Obviously.
I've
been told that they never lie, but Shakira's hips tell me they're not
telling the whole truth. A last minute winner numerically speaking
is the same as any other goal. It's simply one more to the tally.
There's no way what happened in the dying moments at Craven Cottage
in February can be described as trivially as that. Three points may
be all that were awarded that day, same as any other victory. The
manner in which they were obtained and the momentum that followed
will never be represented.
Brendan
Rodgers and his team have over the last twelve months kept the
scoreboard ticking impressively. Over a hundred goals. Eighty four
points. In the end however, it didn't quite add up. Looking at the
table at the end of the season made for joyless reading, if you focus
solely on the numbers. What'll raise a smile in years to come will
not be sums and tallys, but headers and volleys.
Endings
are the perspective from which all history is written. Those that
triumph – have and always will set the narrative. The final score
becomes the point from which the story is told. Any previous events
that do not fit that mould are either bent into shape or discarded
altogether. Spain were moments away from going into their encounter
with the Netherlands in Salvador. David Silva probably should have
doubled that lead moments before Daley Blind's cross field ball and
Van Persie's incredible leap. Five-one doesn't care about all that.
The result will even gloss over the epic nature of the goal which
ultimately turned the tide. Five-one remains unmoved.
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