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Ministers Letter - June
2008
My Dear friends,
It’s that time of year in the
football season when everything is coming to a climax! We’ve had the final
league matches, the FA Cup Final has taken place and two English (?) teams have
gone all the way to Moscow for the Champions League Final. Now today as I write
this letter the first of the play-off finals (if you discount the Conference)
has taken place, to be followed by two more over this Bank Holiday weekend. And
by the time you read this letter it will all be over and the dust will be
settling for another year.
There are a few folk I know from
this area and my last appointment who have particular reason to be interested in
the play offs this year to decide which of the four teams immediately below the
automatic promotion places will be playing in a higher division next year. One
or two folk support Leeds United, others favour Doncaster Rovers and Hull City
are up there as well this year. And whoever wins will make a lot of fans very
happy, but you also know that for other players and fans there will be bitter
disappointment. For some it will feel like the end of the world!
Well
I did watch the match between Chelsea and Manchester United and you couldn’t
help but feel a bit sorry for the Chelsea players who gave so much yet at the
end of the season have nothing to show for it. In particular you felt for the
Chelsea Captain, John Terry, who had overcome a bad injury sustained 10 days
earlier, had prevented a certain goal late on in the game, but then, when it
came to the penalty shoot-out, missed that vital penalty, slipping on the wet
turf just as he was about to strike the ball. Manchester United went on to win
it when if he had scored the result would have gone Chelsea’s way. He was
inconsolable! Reading my paper on Friday I saw that one of his team mates, Frank
Lampard, just as disappointed probably, had tried to comfort him by saying to
him, “There are
more important things in life than football, John.”
It often doesn’t feel it at the time, but
he was surely right, and Frank Lampard was better qualified than most to be able
to make such a remark. You see it was only a few weeks ago that his mother died.
He would have loved to have won and dedicated his winner’s medal to his mum who
had done so much for him, to whom he quite
literally owed his life. But he hadn’t won and when he reflected on it he came
to the conclusion that losing his mum was a greater blow than losing that match.
I remember the same kind of conclusion being reached by some strong union men
from the workshops at BP Chemicals some years ago. There came a point where it
was announced that after a thorough review some 250 jobs would have to go. The
announcements would be made in March the following year when everybody
on site would be seen individually and would learn whether or not they had a
continuing role in the business. But when in January one man learnt that his
father had cancer, as he said to me, “It kind of puts
things in perspective!”
For some of us, the team we
support inevitably means you have your ups and downs on a fairly regular basis,
but as I said after another relegation, “I believe in resurrection!” For
my team there would be another season and new hope. A year later and that hope
was justified. It doesn’t always happen with humans, but I do know somebody you
can bank on who won’t let you down!
With much love,
Your Minister and friend,
Ray

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