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staff, but so far, Octavio Suarez had not intervened.
“Are you alright, my captain? They’ve been riding you fairly hard, I
understand. Can I do anything to get them off your back? Suarez is impressed
with you, in case you didn’t know. Every position is still wide open as far as he’s
concerned. The boss has been testing you with this, to see how far you’ll let
them push you. Some say you will pack your bags and go home to your mother.
But I don’t think so! And more importantly, neither does Suarez!”
“Estes, thank you, but I’m not going anywhere! Unless I’m released from
the team, that is. In that case, I won’t have to worry about the rotten apples in
the barrel, will I?”
“Renaldo, you’re not going to be cut from this team, so you’ll have to deal
with this situation right now. It won’t go away until you do. In order to earn
the starting center half position, you’ll just have to tough it out in Suarez’s eyes.
We both know that is your goal, isn’t it? The starting position, not riding the
bench.” Their eyes met at that moment. Old friends, teacher-student, a special
relationship. Santos smiled warmly, then continued.
“But these guys are pussy cats compared to butting heads with the Italians
or Brazilians. Rough treatment isn’t all that bad a thing for you to get used to
on the training pitch. It’s all the off-field shit that I want stopped. You’ll let me
know if the heat gets too intense, won’t you?”
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“Again, thank you, Estes. I’m OK, really! There are some good players on
this team. It should do pretty well. There are some nice guys, too. New friends,
friends like I’ve never had before. Interesting people, all of them.” Renaldo
smiled back reassuringly at the older man. “I have to get through this myself,
Estes. I knew when I came to camp that this would be the toughest thing I
had ever done in my eighteen years, and it is! But it is also the most exciting
thing that I have ever done. To stand at center field in River Plate Stadium and
start the second half representing my country against the Peruvians was an
indescribable feeling. Goose bumps. Every young Argentine’s dream. When
I was little, playing in our garden at the casa, I was always playing for the
National Team in my mind. The dream became reality, Estes, and I want to
keep that reality alive. So don’t worry about me. Besides, Ramon Vida says he’s
going to ‘fucking kill the ugly cocksuckers’ if they lay a hand on me again. I
bet that tough bastard would, too. He grew up on the streets of Boca as a gang
leader. He’s told me some stories . . . Anyway, how are things going with you?”
Renaldo thought it time to deflect the conversation somewhat.
“It’s a bitch, to tell you the truth! After all this time, five international
games, Calix and Martinez have allowed the same number of goals with exactly
the same amount of playing time. Calix should be the starter, but his feet have
turned to cement a few times and his clearing has been erratic. Martinez is
cockier. I think he wants it more. I like his style better, too. More vocal, a real
field general. Calix never says boo unless someone is breathing down his neck.
At this point, I don’t know, it’s a coin toss.”
They said their good-byes with the coach promising to keep an eye out for
his former captain, but the matter was never discussed again.
Lady Luck was not with Octavio Suarez in the days leading up to the
fixture with Eire. One of the first permanent changes to the A squad roster was
to be the inclusion of ex-patriot Americo Galvani at wing half, replacing the
defensive-minded, often lead-footed, Humberto Velasquez. The fleet Galvani
had returned to his native Argentina from St. Etienne of the French league in
enough time to dress for the Irish encounter. On the seventeenth of April, two
days before his first international appearance in two years, Galvani received a
phone call from St. Etienne saying that his wife and two daughters had been
hurt in an automobile accident. A distraught Americo Galvani phoned Octavio
Suarez from the airport minutes before his flight to Paris took off. He bluntly
informed the manager not to figure him into the National Team’s plans. Suarez
was calm and reassuring to the departing husband and father, and insisted that
his spot would be held for him if he could make it back, no matter how long
it took.
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The manager was a realist, though, and he knew that the talented halfback
would not don a National Team jersey in the foreseeable future. It was deflating
news, news that would force him to rethink his midfield strategy.
The word was no better up front. Center forward Nicodemo Garcia
remained mired in a cesspool of politics and intrigue, with Catalonia demanding
outrageous compensation for his release. The Spanish team had booked a
summer tour in the United States to play several of the new North American
Soccer League teams such as the Cosmos. They claimed that Garcia was their
marquee player, and that gate receipts would suffer if he was not a participant
in the tour.
The fact that the tour was a hastily booked ploy was known throughout
the soccer community, and diplomats, presidents, and even royalty were caught
up in the soap opera saga of freeing Nico Garcia from Spain. Octavio Suarez
remained confident to anyone that would listen to him. Garcia would return
and in time to train before the opening of the tournament. The center forward
spot was his to claim. All he had to do was show up.
In the meantime, the battle for Garcia’s backup was leaning toward young
Ramon Vida. Independiente’s Enrique Rios showed flashes of danger, but his
play had so far been mostly uninspired. No one could say that about the one-
man hurricane named Vida. He made things happen, and what was more, he
was a deadly closer.
The crowds that saw Vida play certainly loved him, but the entire nation
awaited the return of Nico Garcia to lead them to the Holy Grail. Privately,
Octavio Suarez had a nagging feeling that he would never lay eyes on the
nation’s most capped player in his dressing room. Only time would tell.
The Eire match was little more than a walk through for the home side.
An easy 3-1 Argentina victory over a weak opponent seemed to make the press
and public restless and grumpy rather than elated over remaining undefeated
in the warm-up games. “The opposition has been of a low caliber in each of the
matches!” the Clarín daily newspaper declared. Some felt the team had yet to
be tested seriously, and that blame fell on the doorstep of the hated Brazilians.
Their cancellation of the Copa Roca matches had robbed the Argentines of the
type of world-class adversary that they needed to play against.
The score should have been -1, taking the clear scoring chances that the
powder-blue and white stripes missed. The need for Nico Garcia’s finishing
skills had never been more evident. Miguel Cruz hit two posts, but also
managed a goal in a confident showing. Ramon Vida scored once after being
substituted in at
the half, but he was frustrated with a few missed passes and
some bad line calls. A yellow card for talking back to the referee didn’t improve
his postgame demeanor.
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JAMES McCREATH
“At least you got onto the field, Ramon. It was pretty painful to watch
that effort from the bench,” was Renaldo’s way of lifting his friend’s spirits.
“You should have been in there, man. That Cruz is a jerk. He wouldn’t
pass me the ball if the goalie had given me an engraved invitation to score on
him. Twice I was wide open, waiting with an open goal in front of me, and
what does he do? Shoots the ball himself, the pig! Missed the fucking net
altogether on one of them. No one sets me up like you do, my friend. The boss
should have put you in at the half as well. Sometimes, I wonder if even Suarez
knows what Suarez is doing.”
With only two substitutes allowed per game, Octavio Suarez had to pick
his lineups, and their potential replacements, with great skill and care. Where
would such and such a player make the most impact? Who had shown the
flashes of brilliance in practice that deserved to be displayed against world-class
opponents? Each position had a different factor to weigh, and different men
fighting for a starting role.
Renaldo’s failure to play did not reflect on his talent, Ramon Vida
proclaimed after he had stopped ranting about Miguel Cruz. It was just a numbers
game, and everyone had to wait their turn. The only positive repercussion of
Renaldo’s bench riding was that the hazing from Chacon and Cruz subsided
to a small degree. It did not, however, make up for Cruz’ increasing arrogance
in proclaiming to anyone who would listen that the center half job was his for
certain, sewn up, a lock, no problem, no contest!
Cruz and Ramon Vida came close to fisticuffs on several occasions
following the Irish visit. Renaldo De Seta just waited for his time to come.
Six days and an overnight ferry ride across the Rio de la Plata later, the
rookie found himself, once again, on the bench as his teammates faced off
against the Uruguayan National Team. One hundred thousand people jammed
beautiful Centenario Stadium in Montevideo to get a firsthand look at the
undefeated World Cup host nation’s side. With their own team having failed
to earn a berth in the global tournament, the Montevideans were expecting to
be dazzled by their Latin neighbors. On this day, however, it would be their
own native sons who would steal the show. The men from across the estuary
would be soundly drubbed! If it was a bad day for the Argentine team, it was
a horrendous day for their youngest player.
The Uruguayans took to the attack from the opening whistle, and only the
diving, leaping saves of a surprisingly vocal Junior Calix kept them at bay. The
keeper pleaded with his mates for help, for closer marking, better clearing, more
communication. Another surprise for Octavio Suarez was the lionhearted play
of the almost deposed halfback Humberto Velasquez. He patrolled his wing,
albeit almost totally in the defensive half of the field, like a man possessed. No
foe would beat him one-on-one. He forced six throw-ins single-handedly. His
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upfield clearing passes always found their mark, and he twice headed the ball
to safety on dangerous corner kicks. Suarez rated him the only player on the
field to be worthy of the National Team jersey at the postgame press conference.
After that, it was all bad news.
The training roster of Argentina’s National Team had remained remarkably
free of debilitating injuries up to their arrival in Montevideo. The usual aches,
sprains, muscle pulls, and bruises were always in existence, but not one player
had been forced to sit out an international game due to injury. That would
change in the first minute after the South American neighbors commenced
play.
Argentina kicked off with Miguel Cruz taking a lateral pass from center
forward Enrique Rios. Ramon Vida sat with his musical partner on the bench.
Cruz was set upon at once by two aggressive Uruguayan forwards, but he
managed to slide the ball through to Carlos Castillo on the left wing. There
was no one within twenty yards of the halfback from Talleres Córdoba, and the
whole left side of the pitch was clear of opponents all the way to the penalty
area. Castillo’s peripheral vision caught Daniele Bennett streaking up the field
from his back position, and things looked perfectly set for the old give-and-go.
The pass to Bennett was perfect, but as Castillo planted his kicking foot to
turn upfield and join in the attack, a sickening crack that was loud enough for
the approaching Uruguayans to hear echoed from the Argentine’s ankle. The
visiting player fell to the turf instantly, shrieking in agony. The Chilean referee
had heard the joint snap as well, and wasted no time in summoning the doctor
and stretcher bearers onto the pitch.
Octavio Suarez agonized on the bench. Another halfback! First Galvani
goes, and now this. Castillo had been a huge part of this team. A steadying
influence who had played the most inspired football of his career. He was truly
irreplaceable!
The job of substituting for the thirty-year-old Castillo went to twenty-two-
year-old Leopoldo Anariba. Suarez was giving up eight years of international
experience, but he had no other option at this point. Anariba looked like a
fish out of water after only two minutes of play, and the host nation set out to
exploit his inexperience with relentless thrusts up his wing. The substitute was
beaten cleanly and left sprawling on the green grass as his opposite number
potted the first tally after eleven minutes.
Argentina had left its offense back across the river it seemed. Miguel Cruz
was invisible on the field after Castillo went down, and Suarez could tell that
the injury had unnerved his entire team. The visitors were lucky to escape the
first half down only 1-0. With only one substitution available, Suarez inserted
De Seta for Cruz, hoping that the boy could turn the flow of the game around
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JAMES McCREATH
with some of his magical passes. As the team lined up in the passageway to the
field before the second half, Juan Chacon gave Renaldo a piece of advice.
“Hey, baby face. You think you can do something that my brother-in-law
couldn’t? You better have eyes in the back of your head then, because you have
more than the Uruguayans to worry about if you do. Keep your head up, my
beauty!”
The word ‘beauty’ was accompanied by a powerful squeeze of the younger
man’s cheeks and jaw by The Ugly One. Renaldo instinctively batted Chacon’s
fist away from his face with his outer forearm. A toothless, hateful laugh was
the only reaction of the antagonist.
Uruguay kicked off the second half and went right to work where they
left off, straight at Leopoldo Anariba. Calix was called on early and often to
keep the visitors from falling further behind, and the continued play in their
defensive zone brought Renaldo into constant contact with his nemesis.
“What the
fuck are you doing out here anyway, De Seta? Shouldn’t you
be back in grade school by now?” was just a sample of the friendly chatter that
Chacon would scream for all to hear during a pause in the action. He never let
up. Every stoppage was greeted with some words of wisdom from the deformed
defender.
The Uruguayan players could not believe what they were hearing at first.
None of them wanted to provoke ‘Killer’ Chacon into one of his savage moods,
but the home side had never imagined that one of Chacon’s own teammates
would be the butt of his stinging slurs. Eventually the comments got so
outrageous that the Uruguayans started to break down laughing whenever
Chacon opened his mouth. The referee warned the Argentine defender that he
would be booked for delaying the game and unsportsmanlike conduct if he did
not button his lip right away. That forced ‘Killer’ to adopt a new tactic.
Renaldo was able to find a small amount of room every so often to take
the ball across the centerline, but once on foreign turf and without Ramon
Vida to work with, it seemed that there was never any support. Where was
center forward Rios? Had he dug a hole to hide in? Gitares was on the bench,
Suarez not wanting to waste his best forward on a day that he had had a
premonition about. It told him things would go poorly across the river, so he
acted accordingly and sat down several A squad players.
Every advance the visitors could muster was stymied and turned aside.
The play remained almost exclusively in the Argentine end. A Uruguayan
free kick from thirty-five yards out at the seventy-first minute brought more
trouble. Juan Chacon dared the young center half to join him in the wall to
block the ball’s path. The rookie took the dare, lining up ten yards from the
ball, arm and arm with the ‘Killer.’
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“So what are you going to protect with your hands, my beauty, your balls
or your face? You wouldn’t want to get la pelota smacked against your pinup
good looks, would you? Here, let me hold your balls with one of my hands so
that you can play hide and go seek.”
Renaldo felt the defenders hand brush against his shorts in a mock attempt
to grab his privates. He twisted his torso to avoid the exploring fingers. At