The teams were pretty evenly
matched. I will just call them Team One and Team Two. Nobody scored in the first
period. The kids were hilarious. They were clumsy and terribly inefficient. They
fell over their own feet, they stumbled over the ball, they kicked at the ball
and missed it but they didn't seem to care. They were having fun.
In the second quarter, the Team One coach pulled out what must have been his
first team and put in the scrubs, except for his best player who now guarded the
goal.
The game took a dramatic turn. I guess winning is important even when you're
five years old -- because the Team Two coach left his best players in, and the
Team One scrubs were no match for them. Team Two swarmed around the little guy
who was now the Team One goalie. He was an outstanding athlete, but he was no
match for three or four who were also very good. Team Two began to score.
The lone goalie gave it everything he had, recklessly throwing his body in front
of oncoming balls, trying valiantly to stop them. Team Two scored two goals in
quick succession. It infuriated the young boy. He became a raging maniac --
shouting, running, diving.
With all the stamina he could muster, he covered the boy who now had the ball,
but that boy kicked it to another boy twenty feet away, and by the time he
repositioned himself, it was too late -- they scored a third goal.
I soon learned who the goalie's parents were. They were nice, decent-looking
people. I could tell that his dad had just come from the office -- he still had
his suit and tie on. They yelled encouragement to their son. I became totally
absorbed, watching the boy in the field and his parents on the sidelines. After
the third goal, the little kid changed.
He could see it was no use; he couldn't stop them. He didn't quit, but he became
quietly desperate; futility was written all over him. His father changed too. He
had been urging his son to try harder - yelling advice and encouragement. But
then he changed. He became anxious. He tried to say that it was okay - to hang
in there. He grieved for the pain his son was feeling.
After the fourth goal, I knew what was going to happen. I've seen it before. The
little boy needed help so badly, and there was no help to be had. He retrieved
the ball from the net and handed it to the referee - and then he cried.
He just stood there while huge tears rolled down both cheeks. He went to his
knees and put his fists to his eyes - and he cried the tears of the helpless and
brokenhearted. When the boy went to his knees, I saw the father start onto the
field. His wife clutched his arm and said,
"Jim, don't. You'll embarrass him."
But he tore loose from her and ran onto the field. He wasn't supposed to - the
game was still in progress. Suit, tie, dress shoes, and all - he charged onto
the field, and he picked up his son so everybody would know that this was his
boy, and he hugged him and held him and cried with him. I've never been so proud
of a man in my life. He carried him off the field, and when he got close to the
sidelines I heard him say,
"Scotty, I'm so proud of you. You were great out there. I want everybody to
know that you are my son."
"Daddy, " the boy sobbed, "I couldn't stop them. I tried, Daddy,
I tried and tried, and they scored on me."
"Scotty, it doesn't matter how many times they scored on you. You're my
son, and I'm proud of you. I want you to go back out there and finish the game.
I know you want to quit, but you can't. And, son, you're going to get scored on
again, but it doesn't matter. Go on, now."
It made a difference - I could tell it did.
When you're all alone, and you're getting scored on - and you can't stop them -
it means a lot to know that it doesn't matter to those who love you. The little
guy ran back on to the field - and they scored two more times - but it was okay.
~ Author Unknown ~