Thursday 6 June 2019

Jamaica, Bob Marley and football: a family love affair


Kingston (Jamaica) (AFP) – In Jamaica, the spirit of Bob Marley is inescapable: it permeates the Caribbean island nation, even its football pitches — a sign of the reggae legend’s passion for the sport.

After Marley’s death, his children picked up the torch — and the country’s women’s team, who have qualified for their first-ever World Cup this summer in France, owe a lot to the musician’s daughter Cedella.

“Two things he loved were music and soccer,” says Allan “Skill” Cole, a one-time local football star who befriended the music icon in the 1960s.

Cole told AFP that Marley was a football “fanatic”, and liked to organize pick-up matches with his bandmates between concerts.

Cole, who is now a 68-year-old with fine gray dreadlocks, was a teenager at the time.

“He wanted to do everything that we did. We trained together, we ran in the morning… The only thing he didn’t like was going to the gym,” Cole said at a hotel in the Jamaican capital Kingston.

Just a few minutes away, at the Bob Marley Museum, among the portraits of the musician that line the walls is a photo of him on a football pitch, chest squared and socks high, 1970s style.

“If I were to play him on a team, I would put him on defense — he was fearless, he loved to tackle,” said Cole, who eventually became Marley’s tour manager and even was credited with co-writing some songs, including “War.”

Football is even intertwined with the story surrounding Marley’s death in 1981 of skin cancer, which first developed under his toenail.

During a game, Marley was tackled and injured his toe. A closer look revealed the rare form of melanoma. Many including Cole believe that an initial infection caused the cancer, even if no medical evidence backs up the theory.

“That’s where the toe first gave signs” that something was wrong,” he said.

“But we didn’t take it very seriously then.”

– In the name of the father –

Marley’s passion for football runs through his family.

In 1998, his eldest son Ziggy recorded the official anthem of the “Reggae Boyz,” Jamaica’s men’s national football squad, when they qualified for their first World Cup.

In 2014, Cedella Marley came to the rescue of the women’s team when their program was axed by the national federation and they even slipped off FIFA’s official rankings list.

Thanks to Cedella, the “Reggae Girlz” quickly regained sponsors and media attention — and launched themselves right into the race for the 2019 World Cup.



from World Soccer Talk http://bit.ly/2ZhxZqR

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