One of the attractions of watching sport is that of giant-killing, where an underdog defeats a far more powerful or wealthy club or player. This can be even more surprising and satisfying than a long-priced winner in a horse race.
Cup competitions, in football and elsewhere, can throw up encounters between mismatched opponents which sometimes do lead to a giant-killing. In this season’s Carabao Cup, League 2 Grimsby Town beat Manchester United, and in 2000 in the Scottish FA Cup Inverness Caledonian Thistle defeated Celtic. One of the classic cases was in 1972, when non-league Hereford United beat First Division Newcastle United, which included an iconic goal from Ronnie Radford. And in this year’s third round, non-league Macclesfield Town beat the holders Crystal Palace, in what has been described as ‘the biggest upset in Cup history’. Comparable victories can happen at international level, too, such as Iceland’s win over England at the 2016 European Championships.
Similarly, sometimes, in individual sports. Boris Becker won the Wimbledon tennis men’s singles title in 1985 when unseeded, and in 2021 Emma Raducanu won the US Open title after having to play three qualifying matches to get into the main draw.
The opposite to giant-killing can be unequal and so uncompetitive events or tournaments, and anything too one-sided can be unappealing to spectators. At the time of writing, Wolverhampton Wanderers are adrift at the bottom of the Premier League, having had to wait till their twentieth match for their first win. The Italian national rugby union team had won just sixteen matches in the Six Nations tournament since joining it in 2000, and lost 112.
The recent Ashes Test Matches between Australia and England looked like being very ill-matched, with Australia winning the first three tests rather easily, the first being over in just two days. But then England got their own back, winning the fourth test in two days, before losing again in the fifth.
Contests between unequals can take place in boxing too, such as the recent fight between former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua and ‘social influencer’ Jake Paul. Joshua was much the heavier, in addition to being far more experienced, and he won by knockout, with Paul suffering a broken jaw. The purse for the fight was reportedly to be $184m. The recent ‘Battle of the Sexes’ tennis match between Nick Kyrgios and Aryna Sabalenka may have been similar. It’s not clear how much they got paid, but both happen to be represented by the same sports agency. The match was much criticised as being unexciting, and also not helpful for women’s tennis, but no doubt it created a lot of publicity.
Maybe giant-killing gives workers the idea of ‘rags to riches’ social change, as very occasionally happens under capitalism.
Paul Bennett

1 comment:
I added the picture. (Feel the pain.)
I also added a couple of links. That Ronnie Radford goal was an absolute peach.
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