tarkan
A Simple Game
June 1, 2009 by mpreports06 · 4 Comments
The inaugural video for this site is rather simple, and part of me will confess the opportunity was more a way of testing the equipment versus anything too new, serious, deep, or compelling. However, the results were incredibly successful…and fun.
My friend Kasım and I organized a small pick up soccer game last Friday at Boston College. The idea came about while watching the Bekşiktaş-Galatasaray soccer match at Boston’s Turkish Cultural Center. I asked Kasım if he played much soccer around Boston and suggested it was something we could do together. I was up for the challenge, although I hadn’t played soccer since I was in second grade.
I think if there is anything close to an “international language,” the two most viable candidates are music and soccer. Soccer is in reality “a simple game”. A game that anyone can pick up pretty quickly. No mind twisting plays like in American football, no confounding rules like in baseball, no high rims like basketball, and no ice like hockey. I’m not saying this to say soccer is the greatest sport ever, especially considering I have watched countless more Patriots and Red Sox games than any MLS or World Cup games. However, soccer is a sport that is very easy to pick up and play for several hours like we did on Friday.
What you take from this video, if anything, might be how everyone was able to take a moment out of life to play. On an interesting note, we had people on the field from Turkey obviously, but also from England, Iran, and the US. There were no uncomfortable or awkaward moments, no pauses or mistranslations. Everyone understood soccer’s language: pass, shoot, and score.
I’d like to know what you think about soccer, football, or futbol (whatever you call it). Do you agree or disagree? Has soccer made an impact on your life, or are you one of the many Americans who just doesn’t understand the passion of it all. I guarantee you this won’t be the last soccer related video. In Turkey, futbol is a major part of society, and the rivalries are absolutely fierce! However, I’ll leave that for another day.
Lastly, the music for this video is by Tarkan, a major Turkish pop star that has international reach. He was actually my first introduction to Turkish music by my friend Emily who has been writing her own blog while in Turkey on a Fulbright. In any case, my friends have helped open my eyes to Turkey’s musical diversity since then, but Tarkan wrote this song, “Bir Oluruz Yolunda”, as the entrance song for the Turkish national team during the 2002 World Cup. “Bir Oluruz Yolunda” translates to “United for You”.
Whether you understand the words or not, you certainly can feel the sentiment in the song. Chalk another one up for music’s linguistic abilities.