Forever Young by Oliver Kay
Forever Young by Oliver Kay
Forever Young by Oliver Kay
The busker lowers his head and moves towards the oncoming crowd. It fills his field of vision, but he pushes his way
through the throng, shuffling away from the congestion
and the noise and the edifice of Old Trafford. He carries
on up Warwick Road, past the street vendors Eighty
pence, your programme, United scarf, only a poundand
onto Chester Road, where the match-day smells of fish and
chips, salt and vinegar, cigarettes, ale and horse dung fill
the air. He reaches the bus stop, where he waits, leather
guitar case in hand, trying not to catch anyones eye. The
bus pulls up and spews its passengers onto the pavement,
chanting as they go. He gets on, hands over his fare and
sits quietly, the stadium disappearing behind him, as the
bus resumes its journey into Manchester.
He gets off at the bottom of Deansgate and encounters
another crowd, this time the mass of Saturday afternoon
shoppers. He hates being in a scrum, hates the hustle and
bustle of the city, but he goes on, head down. He turns
onto Market Street and walks along the front of the Arndale Centre. He pitches up in his usual place, unfastens the
buckle, gets out his guitar, slings the case onto the floor,
starts strummingC major, D minor, E minor, F major,
G majorand he is into his stride.
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youth team. Opinion is divided among former teammates, but there are plenty who, whatever their pride at
having played alongside a living legend of British football,
swear that at times even Giggs found himself in the
shadow of Adrian Doherty.
I wouldnt disagree with that, Giggs says. It seemed
like every time we went on the pitch, over a period of about
six months, he was doing something special, whereas I at
that time was a bit inconsistent. Doc always seemed to be
able to handle any situation. He was off the cuff. Playing
alongside him or training with him or watching him, he
would do something that would make you smilebeating
three or four men and sticking it in the top corner. But what
really stays in my mind is how brave he was. He would have
defenders kicking lumps out of him, because of the type of
player he was, and he would just get up and demand the ball
again and keep running at them again and again.
I wouldnt say he had a ping like Scholesy [Paul
Scholes] or a technical kind of cross like Becks [David
Beckham], but at the same time, he could switch the play
and cross it. He could go past people at will. He could ride
tackles like you wouldnt believe. He could go inside, outside, play one-twos, pass and move. He just seemed to
have a picture in his head from a very early stage. You
know in The Matrix, where everything clicks together,
where its all happening quickly, but in the characters head
its happening in slow motion? It was like that with Doc. It
looked like it was all instinctive, but its a bit like Wayne
Rooney, where, yes, hes a street footballer, but you know
hes also a real natural with a real football brain. Doc was
the same.
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