Atletico Tucuman  1  Argentinos Juniors  1

At least Argentinos Juniors managed to dodge the rain and play the full ninety minutes. Two of their five matches played so far this season were abandoned after the skies opened and the teams were not equipped with the flippers and snorkels needed to finish the game.

This was one the boys from Buenos Aires really should have won against a poor Tucuman side. Sloppy defending allowed Claudio Sarrio to put the home side in front in the third minute. But from then on it was all one-way traffic. Javier Paez equalised with an impressive own-goal in the 28th minute. Argentinos hit the woodwork twice, had the Tucuman keeper contorting himself into positions he didn´t know were possible and saw countless sophisticated moves break down on the edge of the penalty area.

It wasn´t going to be. But if Argentinos Juniors keep playing this way they will reap the benefits, eventually, with the results they deserve. Theirs is a history of remaining true to their footballing ideals, for which they´re rewarded every one-hundred years or so. Given that they last paid a visit to the trophy engravers in the mid-eighties, glory is due some time in the middle of the twenty-first century. That was the message I came away with after a visit to Argentinos Juniors´ newly opened museum.

Old Shirts

Old Shirts

On the bus to the ground I warned my kids not to expect too much from the  museum. It wouldn’t be like the Boca Juniors or the Real Madrid museums that we’d visited previously. We’ve got photographs of us pretending to pee in all the urinals in the Bernabeu changing room since we know that at some stage, before some particularly nerve-wracking match, David Beckham would have used at least one of them. So would Alfredo di Stefano, Cristiano Ronaldo, Steve McManaman and Luis Figo for that matter. We’ve pissed where the greats have pissed.

At Boca’s Bombonera stadium, we sat where Diego Maradona sat before each game, beneath a small shrine and statue of the Virgin Saint of plump little arrogant but amazingly talented footballers. The dazzle created by the collection of silverware in both museums is so great that the use of sunglasses is recommended.

That’s not the case at Argentinos Juniors. They did in the mid-eighties, remarkably, unbelievably, win two Argentine national championships and the South American club title, the Copa Libertadores. But it has to be said that the Argentinos Juniors museum is a modest one telling the tale of a modest club. They do, however, do it very well.

The ticket man was unsure about the prices and called upstairs. I got the impression that any reasonable contribution would have been welcome. This is one of only three football club museums in Argentina – the other two being the aforementioned Boca Juniors and the not-to-be-outdone- by-their-rivals River Plate, who have just opened theirs. There are no open-topped tourist buses parked outside.

El Diez

El Diez

The museum is only open for three hours on a Saturday morning. We wandered aimlessly into the ground, not sure where we going, until we came across the word ‘museo’ stencilled on the concrete pillars. We were welcomed by our guides, Alberto, Eduardo and Dario. The first thing we were told, as a point of pride and not an apology, was that the museum had been financed and stocked by the fans. And they keep donating dog-earred programmes and newspaper cuttings, pre-sponsorship shirts and a ticket from that 1954 match against San Lorenzo which they’ve found stuffed into the pocket of some baggy shorts.

Our guides were first and foremost fans. The club, with various changes of neighbourhood, stadium, name and footballers’ hairstyles has been in existence since 1904. And in place of pride in the entrance was an original piece of wooden terracing.

There is silverware on display on the shelves but the gaps between the cups have to be filled with old programmes, newspaper articles and other bits and pieces of footballing paraphernalia representing past decades. There’s a wooden corner flag pole, bits of goal net and a knife once thrown on the pitch in a particularly tense game.

Alberto, our well-informed guide, was constantly interrupted by his colleagues, keen to impart their own memories and opinions. A video was shown detailing the club’s history and as I watched, I could hear the guides, who must have seen the goals from those key games a million times, unable to contain muffled cheers since that 1977 goal against Independiente still meant something to them.

Argentinos Juniors prides itself on being the seedbed of Argentine footballing talent – the Temple of Football, they call it. Among those over the years to pull on the red shirt with a sometimes diagonal, sometimes horizontal white stripe are Juan Román Riquelme, Juan Pablo Sorín, Esteban Cambiasso, Fabricio Coloccini, Fernando Redondo, Julio Arca, Claudio Borghi and 1986 World Cup winner, Sergio Batista.

The Libertadores Cup - Really!

The Libertadores Cup - Really!

One name, of course, stands out above all others. The stadium, for Christ’s sake, is called the Diego Armando Maradona and his family claims the only executive box at the club. His picture is everywhere – a fresh-faced, cocaine-free, innocent look about him. Many of our guides had seen him take the pitch as a precocious sixteen-year-old and still talked with unbridled enthusiasm about his raw talent. Diego was at the inauguration of the museum in December, still harbouring a soft-spot for the club which gave him his start in the kids’ team, the Cebollitas or Little Onions.

He went on to the much bigger and more prestigious Boca Juniors but with the money received from that sale the club could put together a team that a few years later conquered first Argentina then South America.

When I tried to explain my affinity for West Ham, as a club that put more store by playing well than winning at all costs, our guides nodded enthusiastically and with understanding. “Yes, that’s us too,” they said. We all know deep down that that’s simply a euphemism to justify our loyalty to a team that is simply not very good. But without that kind of self-delusion we’d all be Chelsea, Barcelona and Boca Juniors fans.  And where’s the fun in that?!

What I’ve known since I’ve been watching Argentinos Juniors and was emphasised at the museum is that this is a neighbourhood club. It’s riddled with nostalgia. Nearly all the fans live in, or used to live in, or their grandparents lived in La Paternal. Grandads salute grandsons on the terraces on a Sunday afternoon. Boys and girls met here, relationships were formed and babies carried on shoulders, forced to watch another 0-0 draw against Newell’s Old Boys.

This is the kind of club where you feel like tossing your hat into the air when they score. And the museum reflects all of that. The guides were flattered, possibly flabbergasted, that a foreigner should support and become a season-ticket holder of their modest club. Alberto kept calling his mates over and saying: “He’s English, his oldest son was born in London, the youngest one in Spain…..AND THEY SUPPORT ARGENTINOS JUNIORS!!!”

If I was just an enthusiastic observer when I went to the museum, I was a fan by the time I came out. My nine-year-old son, Lucas, who had until then called himself a Boca supporter like his mum, confided that he was switching his allegiance. He’d found his team, the club that fitted his character and personality, where he felt he belonged. His mother is in shock but Boca, surely, have got enough fans already?

Photos by Benja and Lucas

Argentinos Juniors 2 Atletico Tucuman 1

It’s difficult to explain to anyone who is not a rabid, obsessive football fan what makes a person travel for endless hours across the country in a rickety bus to stand on the terraces at a ramshackle ground to watch your team lose – and then spend all of the next night and much of the following day heading home again.

If you’re a Newcastle fan travelling to Plymouth, I don’t want to hear your pathetic whining and moaning. My Argentinos Juniors baseball cap comes off to the fans of Atletico Tucuman. There were hundreds of them in Buenos Aires for this game. Tucuman is 1,340km (that’s 832 miles for you who haven’t been metrificated) to the north-west of Buenos Aires. That’s compared to just four-hundred and forty-four kilometres (or 276 miles) from Newcastle to Plymouth which, in comparison, is pretty much just nipping down the road.

They came from afar

They came from afar

It won’t be much consolation to the Tucumanos, but this was an absolute belter of a game. This was ninety non-stop minutes of quality passing, heart-stopping goalmouth action, a sending off and three pretty good goals. It was just the kind of game I needed to re-establish my faith in football after a 0-0 draw in the rain.

I passed through Tucuman once, many years ago, on my way to somewhere else. I had about four hours to kill between getting off the train from Buenos Aires and taking the bus to somewhere even more remote, hot and dusty.

I didn’t know anyone. It was a Sunday, the streets were empty and the only place open was a porno cinema just off the main plaza. A couple of rancid old men sat on the steps outside. This place epitomised seediness. I must admit that I was tempted to go in. Firstly, it was open and secondly it promised air-conditioning on what was a hot, humid, suffocating day. I fought that temptation. You may not believe me but my wife does.

When, many long, long hours later, my bus finally pulled out of the main terminal, I vowed never to return to Tucuman. That’s the kind of attitude towards the interior of Argentina shared by many who live in and around Buenos Aires. They talk of it, not often, with a disparaging flick of the hand. For the capital city and its surroundings dominate and overshadow the rest of the country in a way that few other capitals dominate theirs.

Forget England’s north-south divide or the disdain many French people feel for the arrogant Parisians. This is much, much worse. Buenos Aires has fought wars with the provinces. There were countless uprisings and mutinies throughout the nineteenth century. And it’s not over yet. Just last year the country’s farmers revolted over government plans, Buenos Aires plans, to impose huge export taxes on their produce. They blocked roads and destroyed cargoes, rather than let them reach the city’s supermarket shelves.

There’s also a race issue here. Most of those who come from Argentina’s interior are of mixed indigenous and Spanish blood. They’ve got dark-skin, black hair and brown eyes. The majority of the residents of Buenos Aires are of Spanish, Italian, German, Croat and British stock – Europeans. Many still have ties with the ‘old country.’ That’s where they do their business and take their holidays, although recent years have seen a strong shift towards the United States.

More than one-third of Argentina’s forty million population lives in and around Buenos Aires. It’s a seemingly endless urban sprawl where it’s often difficult to find any open space, except in the River Plate defence of course! When some does appear it’s usually soon filled by migrant families from the countryside drawn to the big city’s bright lights and overflowing rubbish bins.

The Buenos Aires-based media rarely ventures out of the capital, unless it’s to cover the places where they take their holidays – the southern ski resort of Bariloche or the coastal resort of Mar del Plata, for instance.

And of course it works both ways. Those who live in the countryside generally view those from Buenos Aires, the portenos, as loud, arrogant and ignorant.

Loud, arrogant and ignorant

Loud, arrogant and ignorant

All of this, you won’t be surprised to learn, is reflected in the structure of Argentine football. There are twenty teams in the national first division – thirteen are based in and around Buenos Aires. Fifteen if you count Estudiantes and Gimnasia, from the city of La Plata a mere one hour’s drive south of the capital.

The only two regular residents of the Primera found more than spitting distance from the capital are Newell’s Old Boys and Rosario Central from the country’s second city, Rosario. They’re the kind of Birmingham City and Aston Villa of Argentina. Away matches for Atletico Tucuman, tucked away in the far north, are really long, long way away matches.

It also means that most football fans in Argentina simply don’t have a local top team they can support. I once went to the house of a Wichi indigenous man near the Argentine border with Paraguay. On his mud-brick walls he had a picture of the then president and the Boca Juniors line-up. “You ever get to see them?” I asked rather insensitively. “I’ve never been to Buenos Aires,” he replied. “But I love Boca.”

The national football authorities – would you believe it, based in Buenos Aires? – have even devised a system which makes it very difficult for the established big city clubs to be relegated. They would have to play very, very badly over several seasons to be eligible for the drop. This means that the newly promoted teams, usually from the far-flung corners of Argentina, often only get to enjoy a season or two in the top-flight before they’re forced back down to where they came from.

This means that teams like Atletico Tucuman and their fans really enjoy the short spurts they get to spend hobnobbing with the big boys. And beating the Buenos Aires clubs has a strong political resonance. Like their two-nil victory last week over the biggest of the big boys, Boca Juniors who paid the price, like many from Buenos Aires so often do, for not showing their country cousins sufficient respect.

Thankfully, Argentinos Juniors didn’t make that mistake. There was a goal in each half from Ismael Sosa as reward for as fine a display of quality football as I’ve seen in some time. Luis Rodriguez pulled one back for the visitors. If it carries on like this, I’m going to have to invest in an Argentinos Juniors shirt. Five games, still unbeaten and making a steady climb up the table.