I woke up with butterflies in my stomach around 8:30. We didn't get to sleep until 2am as our friends Raquel, Joel, Zach and Scott came in at midnight and we stayed up chatting and watching condensed match replays of games we've seen twice already. Iara and Isabella, our hosts, came to the apartment every morning to cook us breakfast. An absolute feast. grilled ham and cheese sandwiches, eggs, fruit, coffee, juice... more than we can possibly handle. Neither one of them speaks more than a handful of words in English, so communicating is very difficult. Thank God for Google Translate. We got out of the apartment at around 10:30 after trying to communicate with Iara to figure out the best route. She took Zach and Scott to the taxi station before looping back to pick us up.
We got to the main road and had to go rather slowly, there was 3-4 inches of brown water streaming down the street. After backtracking to
get on the main road, we finally turned left onto the street next to the beach
and drive north for a couple slow kilometers. We had to pick up the tickets, so turned left on a very busy
road. It wasn't promising. Cars packed in the street. Motorbikes with half of their wheels
submerged spraying excess water onto our windshield. We got back on track after picking up the tickets at a hotel,
crawling only a car length or two every minute. Finally a group of kids splashed their way through the
middle of the traffic to yell and signal to Iara not to drive past the next
block, as the flooding was too severe for her car to handle. What a fun day for these kids – no
shirts, obviously with good intentions, just having fun together directing
traffic during the heaviest rainstorm in Recife in years. There was over 3 inches of rain reported that morning before 9am.
The back
streets would actually end up being better anyway. Until we hit the next main
street. This is where it got even
more interesting. Hitting more
traffic, we were able to cut through to get onto a street that would take us
close to the train station. We
turn right and look in front of us to find the street we want to be on – no
cars on the road. That would have
been very exciting, the only problem is that the road was also flooded, over a
foot deep. Another group of 4-5
kids fumbled into the screen, this time teaming together to push another
compact car through the river to the next street. They succeeded in getting the
car to the other side of the road, smiles from ear to ear. A quick wave and it was off to the next
struggling driver. Bennett,
Raquel, Joel and I couldn’t believe our eyes. We ended up cutting through a gas station and stop to
contemplate entering the river.
Joel suggested the sidewalk.
So that happened. Barely
getting off the sidewalk back onto the safe street, we were finally near the
train station.
We ran up the train and were well on our way to the
stadium. About 10 stops, a train
transfer followed by another six or seven stops and we were at the stadium
stop. The train ride was crazy, as
we were packed to the brim with other Americans, not because we were all
stressed, sweaty, ticked and wet, but because of what was outside. Flooding everywhere, as we had already
seen, but the ride showed a whole different part of Recife that we had not yet
been introduced to yet.
Slums. The real slums. Bennett and I didn’t need to say
anything to each other, just a quick glance to make sure we were seeing the
same thing. Scattered pieces of
wood, metal, cardboard even comprised the structure of the houses. Plastic roofs if they were lucky. Houses the size of my closet. Many raised up on stilts to handle this
exact event. My guess is that many
people living in this area were soaked inside of these shambled boxes. No wonder there is so much crime in
Brazil – the salary for a minimum wage worker is $760 Reis(Brazilian Currency)
a year – equal to about $360
dollars. Expenses and cost of
living is lower than USA, but not by a significant amount. Here is the best picture I could get. There was another section that was much, much worse.
After the slums, we got to the stadium stop, which was still
about 3 km away. Busses next, racing the hundreds of other fans to get onto the
first bus at 1:20pm for the 1:00 game.
As we finally got a glimpse of the first stadium vendor at the bottom of
the hill about a half a kilometer away, the bus started slowing down, and pulled
into a stop. Moans and groans
accompanied everyone’s realization that we had to walk the rest of the
way. We got off the bus, and I
looked to Joel. “Want to get a
move on?” So we ran. Half a kilometer to the bottom of the
hill, then another half a kilometer to the stadium entry. I divvied out the remaining tickets to
my friends and we finally got inside.
We’re on the 4th level, opposite side of the stadium. Soaked, sweaty, scared and excited, we
put our heads down and ran some more.
As I passed the sign for the second tier, I picked up the pace. A little glimmer of hope – a burst of
energy overwhelmed me. I realized
what just happened, what I had just been through and where I was going. I’m about to watch USA vs. Germany in
the final group stage match in the World Cup in Brazil. A couple yells and shrieks of
encouragement and we were all nearing a sprint as we got to our section. The numbering was horrible, and two
different stadium personnel pointed us up the wrong staircase after showing them
our tickets. We finally sat down,
but only for a minute. Bennett and
I shared a quick moment of embracing and celebration before devoting our full
attention to the game. 35th
minute. Let’s get started.
The game was rather boring, honestly. Two teams understanding their fate –
USA trying to not lose 4-0, Germany trying to at least tie. Once Muller scored, nothing really
changed. The majority of the 55
minutes of the game was devoted to soaking in the experience, taking pictures,
checking with the American behind us for score updates for the Ghana/Portugal
game, looking around at the fans and cheering. Once Ronaldo scored for Portugal in the 80th,
minute, the American celebration of a 1-0 loss had begun. Once the final whistle blew, we all
celebrated. Americans and Germans
embracing one another, taking pictures together, singing, dancing, and
drinking. We sat around in our
nosebleeds and hung out with everyone else. We slowly made our way to the 1st level, where we
found a German group of Germans celebrating in German soccer songs. Their call and repeat was really cool,
I got a few seconds of it on video.
They also did a chant where they all yelled “get down” or something in
German, then jumped up at the same time and started singing again. After another 10 minutes of
recruiting a big group of Americans for the below photo, we slowly made our way
out of the stadium so we would miss the rush of people getting out of the
stadium.
Stopping for a beer outside from the vendors at a
roundabout, it was a big party.
Mostly Americans, but scattered of everyone, a few people were taking
advantage of the warm temperature and intense rain, the grass area inside the
roundabout was quickly turned into a Brazilian slip n’ slide. After a few minutes, Bennett says
“should I do it?” He really didn’t
have a choice after those words.
So I joined him. I won’t
show the video, but here's the after affects.
We apparently one-upped everyone else, but the other two slip-and-sliders spent some time hanging out with us. We ended up hanging out with drunk guy to my right for a long time that night. I gathered that he was actually kind of cool once he sobered up... five hours later. As we were walking back to the bus with drunk guy and his
sober friends, we got to talking to a guy that had a GoPro on a stick, he got
our slide on video. Turns out, he
is a player on a certain Seattle Seahawks Football team(the Pro-Bowler asked to
stay private). We took the
bus with drunk guy, Seahawk and Seahawk’s brother the dentist back to the
train. We got some great USA
chants – Yanks go marching in, I believe, USA, We Love Ya just off the top of my head. The bus administrators in front of us were blown away at the
energy everyone was bringing.
Germans led one chant, then we led one. Back and forth it went. I'm going to try to load a video when I get home, but it's not coming up properly today.
After getting off the bus, It was a crammed walk up the ramp
to the entrance of the train.
Lining the streets were a bunch of locals – kids of all ages, mostly,
all yelling and screaming USA and “America”. It was really
cool. The eight stops, train
transfer and other 8 or 9 stops was quite another experience, details aside.
We took a cab to the Fan Fest area to sit and relax a
bit. There was still a good amount
of other people out and about, as it was only 5 or 6 by then. The sun was gone and after relaxing for an hour or two, we were ready for
the next chapter of the night. We cabbed
back to a bar called The Underground pub which was a mix of people from the
states, England and Brazil. I bought a Budwiser and Jack Daniels because it felt right. We spent more hilarious time with Seahawk and his crew, met new people, sung a couple more USA chants, and Bennett and I had a great time chatting with Bea - a Brazilian girl that speaks good English. She also went to the game with a
friend, but unfortunately had German gear on. We talked about Portuguese and American words and their meanings, creepy guys at bars, and we all took turns bragging about our significant
others. By the end of our chat,
she was in full support of the USA.
A job well done by us.
We headed home at around 1am with a good buzz of alcohol,
pride and amazement.



Hey David (Guetta), nice text!!!! Thanks for say that I have a good english.. haha. I hope see you and your brother again.
ReplyDeleteBeatriz.