By Malay Mail
BUENOS AIRES, July 17 β Angst-ridden Argentine football fans are putting their faith in good luck rituals ahead of Sundayβs World Cup final against Spain.
Lionel Messiβs men are just one game away from retaining their title after beating old foes England 2-1 in Wednesdayβs semi-final in Atlanta.
But as adrenaline levels soar, supporters need something to calm the nerves.
Good luck rituals are common across the South American nation and a healthy dose of superstition is helping fans cope with the pressure.
During the match, βno one moves from the spot they occupied the last time,β Andres Gonzalez told AFP in the working-class Liniers neighborhood of Buenos Aires.
The self-declared βfootball addictβ believes it is essential for everybody to follow the rules.
βIf you went to the bathroom and thereβs a goal, we lock you in. You stay there until the match is over,β the 48-year-old accountant explained with conviction.
Cabala
Gonzalez is referring to a βcabalaββa ritual believed to bring good luck.
Such practices take place throughout society, with Argentine President Javier Milei disclosing his own special habits yesterday.
βUnder no circumstancesβ would Milei break his custom of watching World Cup matches from the presidential residence, he told El Observador radio.
Over in saleswoman Estela Vargasβs house, match rituals are set in stoneβeveryone wears the same clothes and sits in the same chair, while the dog must stay outside.
βIn the match against England, since heβs an English bulldog, we put an Argentina jersey on him,β the 65-year-old said.
βFor Spain, rain or shine, he stays outside.β
In Graciela Camposβs home, it is her mother-in-law who has to leave the room.
βShe goes into the kitchen and knits a blue-and-white scarf,β Campos said.
Feeling involved
These wacky habits are no joke to those who practice them.
βIn football, Argentines donβt feel like spectators but like protagonists,β sociologist Diego Murzi told AFP.
βRituals are part of thatβfeeling involved by bringing good luck and warding off bad luck,β he said.
βItβs something very present throughout the world of football,β Murzi added, pointing to former coach Carlos Bilardo as a prime example of the phenomenon.
Bilardo, who coached the team that won the World Cup in 1986, is βa man of science, but a superstitious person to an extreme degreeβ, said Murzi.
The sociologist recalled the story of a phone that rang in the locker room during Argentinaβs first match.
βA player picked it up, and no one answered,β he said.
βBilardo saw that and, since Argentina won, before every match he would have someone call that phone, have the same player answer, and make sure no one responded.β
Works every time
Wild excitement and frayed nerves come together in many of the capitalβs neighborhoods, almost all of which are decked out in blue and white.
βAll my rituals work every time,β said retiree Lidia Otero, who adores the national team just as much as her beloved Boca Juniors.
The 74-year-old walked AFP through the specific gestures and chants she hurls at the TV when the other team is in possession.
In the first half of the semi-final against England, she said, βthe dog sat watching the TV and Argentina didnβt scoreβ.
βYou know what?β she continued. βIn the second half I turned her around, and thatβs when the result turned around.β
Football legend Diego Maradona, who died in 2020, remains a figure of reverence in Argentina.
Maradonaβs former home in the Villa Devoto neighborhood in Buenos Aires is the site of an altar to honor the beloved number 10.
Nor has the age-old tradition of freezing Argentinaβs opponents faded.
βI grab the playerβs sticker and put it in the freezer. My grandpa taught me that,β said 11-year-old die-hard Messi fan Rodrigo Serna. β AFP
Source: from-frozen-stickers-to-lucky-seats-argentines-embrace-world-cup-superstitions
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