There are few things on this planet which never disappoint. The World Darts Championship is one of them. Every year on the year, it bestows an unstoppable fortnight of dramatic brilliance, amplified by a bloody lot of bloody fun. There is nothing like it.
The game itself is simple, repetitive, comforting and compelling; sending a dart from hand to board is a rhythmic, hypnotic, idiosyncratic treat – the bass beat on contact complemented by the intellectual thrill of calculating scores and predicting outshots (the finishing sequences). Because it is immediately obvious what is going on, it is immediately absorbing, and because so many of us know how easy it is to play but how impossible it is to play well, we have a handy frame of reference to swiftly make it about ourselves.
Nor does it stop there. Darts is about far more than chucking a pointy thing at a flat thing; it tells a story of humanity that is animated and crystallised in close-up and high-definition. No other sport shows, simultaneously, action and reaction; on stage and on camera, there is nowhere to hide.
Brooking neither luck nor tactics, darts facilitates neither refereeing errors nor stalemates; excuses do not exist. Players can do nothing to affect one another. If things are going badly, no teammate will be along to save them, and there is no option to roll into the reds, deadbat a few or cover up on the ropes. Their only option is to throw better.
As such, there is no more exacting test of pressure, no examination of vertebrae more thorough. Under lights, on camera and in front of a crowd, perform a fine motor skill predicated on a steady hand and an empty mind – good luck with that.
“But is it a sport?” ask the kind of funsters who, in other scenarios, prattle on about the differences between indica, sativa, serotonin and empathogens. The correct answer, of course, is: “Who gives a shit?”
One of the most beautiful things about sport is that it allows us to share the most exhilarating, demoralising moments of people’s lives, entwining them with our own and supplying an intensity otherwise lacking – and darts takes that to another level. We see every expression of tension, fear, devastation and ecstasy – you might call it love – so feel that we know the players, and accordingly, can imagine that they know us too.
Because of that, darts offers a study in humanity to captivate not just those who like darts but those who like anything – its themes the same as those found in literature, theatre, cinema and art. Or, put another way, enjoying it is not a matter of taste; rather, there are those who do and those yet to discover that they do.
And, at the moment, darts is the best sport in the world. This is partly because others are regenerating; there are very few great teams and great individuals currently at their peaks. Darts, on the other hand, has never been played better. Michael van Gerwen won 25 tournaments last year, and 18 tournaments in 2015. He also set a new record for the highest three-dart average ever recorded on television, 123.40 .
Van Gerwen is not just the best dart player in the world but the best anything in the world; one of the best anythings in the history of everything. And he is only 27.
But, as with any great sportsperson, to assess van Gerwen by his numbers is to miss the point entirely. A wondrous bolus of uncut genius, his competitive charisma is startling – a mix of passion, intimidation, egomania, and the most distinctive phizog of all-time. He throws darts like flaming javelins, celebrates like a psychopath, and because it is impossible not to know how good he is, he makes no attempt not to know how good he is. He is perfect.
But he has won only one World Championship, in 2014 – the two since then taken by Gary Anderson, his good friend and polar opposite. A laidback, likeable Scot, Anderson is prone to miscounting and, until very recently, to mis-seeing. Only recently did he start wearing the glasses that he’s needed for years. Early in his career, Anderson was the man who faltered at crucial moments, but after working through family tragedy and adding another son to the two he already had, he convinced himself that it wasn’t important whether he won or lost and suddenly became the man who peaks at the right time.
The World Championship format is to his advantage. Generally, matches take place over legs, a succession of races from 501 to zero. But here, each forms part of a set, offering a margin of error to the inconsistent and absent-minded – playing legs against someone as relentless as van Gerwen is almost impossible.
And tonight, the pair meets in the dream final. Anderson, almost disquietingly relaxed, has sailed through his half of the draw, while van Gerwen recorded the competition’s highest ever average in last night’s win over Raymond van Barneveld. It is not unreasonable to anticipate as gripping a contest as has ever been played.
Yet Anderson and van Gerwen are simply part of a sprawling ensemble cast, the limelight shared not just with their opponents but the crowd. The simple genius of an affordable piss-up stretching the length of the piss-up season has created an experience unlike any other, part fancy dress party, part community singalong.
Nauseatingly cringeworthy though that sounds, the ethos of abandon cool all ye who enter here makes an enveloping, uplifting change from the self-conscious self-regard that compromises most other places of enjoyment. The atmosphere is partisan, but in support of everything; the feeling is tribal, but as one. At the start of 2017, we have never needed darts more.
Daniel Harris is a writer, and co-directed House of Flying Arrows, a documentary about darts, for Universal Pictures. Watch the trailer , and buy the film here. Harris tweets @DanielHarris.
What would Captain America make of Donald Trump? That’s not as fatuous a question as it might seem. Marvel CEO Ike Perlmutter is getting a place on the President-Elect’s team , and also donated money to his campaign. But what about one of Marvel’s best-known characters? Captain America is an inherently political figure. After all, someone assumed to represent a country could never not be. But Cap is far from the mouthpiece of government-sanctioned conformity many assume.
The cover of Captain America Comics #1 shows Cap punching Hitler. From a twenty-first-century perspective, that image fits neatly into America’s sense of itself in the mid-twentieth century. There’s nothing politically controversial, even strictly political at all, there. Right?
The first ever Captain America comic had the character fighting Hitler. All pictures: Wikimedia Commons
But Captain America Comics #1 was published in March 1941, months before Pearl Harbour and America’s entry into World War II. Before, even, the signing of the Lend-Lease Act, which provided for American financial/military support to allies when its interests were threatened. That’s a time when thinking that the US becoming involved in “Europe’s War” was a political position, a divisive one, and at odds with government policy.
This makes Captain America, aka Steve Rogers, a figure who takes positions on controversies in domestic American politics from literally the first image of him ever released. This should not be surprising. Cap was the creation of Jack Kirby (1917-94) and Joe Simon (1913-2011), a pair of New York-born Jewish cartoonists, who were making a statement about America’s role in the world, and what America should be, during a global conflict with an antisemitic criminal state in which America was neutral.
Once America entered World War II, Cap became a more straightforward figure politically-speaking, aligned with the age of moral certainty created by fighting fascism.
It’s worth noting that Captain America was neither the only, nor even the first, patriotic American superhero created in response to World War II. Will Eisner’s Uncle Sam predates him by over a year, and MLJ Comics’ The Shield beat Cap to the newsstands by a few weeks. Nedor Comics’ Fighting Yank is almost his exact contemporary.
The Fighting Yank, a contemporary of Captain America.
But it’s Steve Rogers who endures, partially because of Kirby’s brilliant design (compare Cap’s costume with that of Fighting Yank) and partially because his creators endowed him with layers that other examples of his archetype lack.
By the 1950s, Captain America was portrayed – by hands other than those of Simon and Kirby – as an uncomplicated “Commie Smasher”. His creators responded with “The Fighting American”, a bizarre, whimsical and satirical series for another comics company, which took pot-shots at Cap’s then adventures and almost McCarthyite mindset.
Two decades later, Captain America’s comic was earmarked for cancellation. Steve Englehart, then a young comic book writer, was assigned to the flailing title. Englehart thought the character had been badly served of late. A character “wrapped in the flag”, who had been conceived to be pro-WWII, worked badly amid the counterculture revolution and Vietnam War protests. (Englehart himself had been a conscientious objector when called up.) But it was not that Cap had failed to move with the times, more that the character’s essence was not being applied properly to the Seventies.
Englehart’s Captain America #156 sees the series abandon the character’s Fifties incarnation, revealing him to have not been Steve Rogers, but an imposter called William Burnside. Burnside is portrayed as explicitly racist and increasingly deranged, and later becomes the leader of a Far Right group called National Force. Far from Cap being an approving symbol of unthinking nationalism, Englehart’s stories used the character as a device to interrogate it.
Captain America battles his far-right imposter.
For an encore, Englehart embarked on “Secret Empire”, in which Cap fought “Number One”, a Klan-like hooded figure leading a conspiracy lodged at the heart of American government. The story was Englehart’s baroque reaction to Watergate, and as far as he was concerned “Number One” was literally Richard Nixon. As the writer later explained:
“I was writing a man who believed in America’s highest ideals at a time when America’s President was a crook. I could not ignore that. And so, in the Marvel Universe, which so closely resembled our own, Cap followed a criminal conspiracy into the White House and saw the President commit suicide.”
This storyline led to Rogers’ disillusionment with America, and abandonment of the Captain America identity, becoming “Nomad” or “The Man without a Country”. When Rogers later readopted the Captain America identity, he did so with the specific mission statement that he would represent the ideals of America, rather than its present reality or current administration. This explicit framing of the character has proved influential ever since, and political events have prompted Rogers to abandon being Captain America on more than one subsequent occasion.
In 2003, writer Robert Morales (1959-2013) took on the main Captain America comic. Morales had encountered controversy with his and cartoonist Kyle Baker’s brilliant miniseries Truth: Red, White and Black , which posited links between the super soldier programme that created Captain America and the racist Tuskegee experiments , using that as a metaphor for the treatment of African Americans throughout history. It also established that an African American, Isaiah Bradley, had been Captain America before Rogers. (Which made some corners of the internet VERY ANGRY.)
Morales’ initial story “Homeland” (art by Chris Bachalo) saw Rogers sitting on a military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay, where an American citizen, a history professor, is being tried on manufactured charges. The story ends with the suggestion that a senior American military officer – who announces he believes in “obeying orders, whatever they are” – is all but admitting that he sent federal agents to kill Cap, as his determination to see due process done had become an embarrassment.
Rogers concludes that civil liberties are the US’s immune system against authoritarianism, and ponders accepting the Vice Presidential spot on a liberal senator’s planned third-party run for the White House. Sadly, neither this nor his second arc “Requiem” (art by Eddie Campbell), which built on Truth , were considered a success and Morales left the title after eight months.
Civil War (2006-7), written by Mark Millar and drawn by Steve McNiven, saw Captain America drawn into conflict with the US government, and several erstwhile friends, over civil liberties issues. Written against a background of the ongoing Iraq War, the story’s central conceit doesn’t really work, and was heavily revised for the 2016 film adaptation. But it served to indicate the curiously anti-establishment nature of this man wrapped in red, white and blue – particularly when Rogers was assassinated for his convictions in the story’s aftermath.
Writer Ed Brubaker and artist Luke Ross’ Two Americas (Captain America, #602-605) resurrected William Burnside as the head of a barely disguised Tea Party and set him against Rogers’ successor as Cap, Bucky Barnes (the character played in MCU films by Sebastian Stan). Complaints from conservative pressure groups saw Marvel’s editor-in-chief apologise, while Brubaker publicly pondered :
“Left-wing fans want Cap to be giving speeches on the street corner against the Bush Administration, and all the really right-wing fans all want him to be over in the streets of Baghdad, punching out Saddam.”
What has all this to do with Trump? Just that a fictional character who opposed mandatory identity registration and refused to sanction Guantanamo Bay is unlikely to remain quiet at the construction of “a beautiful wall” between Mexico and the United States, or acquiesce to an unconstitutional national register of Muslims.
Captain America works best when he’s used as a device to illuminate the distance between the ideals of America and their execution in the real world. If that gap becomes a chasm in the coming years – as many believe it will – there is no better fictional device for casting light on what that chasm contains.
© Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/sport/2017/01/why-you-should-watch-world-darts-championship-final-even-if-you-don-t-darts
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