未分类题

It was a little after 5 A.m. in my home when Jerzy Dudek, the Polish goalkeeper of Liverpool Football Club, saved a penalty from Andriy Shevcbenko, a Ukrainian playing for AC Milan. The save ended the most exciting sporting event you will ever see, secured for Liverpool the top European soccer championship for the first time in 21 years, and allowed me to breathE.Within seconds, my wife had called from London, and the e-mails started to flood in -- the first from TIME's Baghdad bureau, others from Sydney, London, Washington and New York. In my fumbled excitement, I misdialed my brother's phone number three times. Then Steven Gerrard, Liverpool's captain, lifted the trophy, and behind the Cantonese chatter of the TV commentators I could just make out 40,000 Liverpudlian voices singing their club's anthem, You'll Never Walk AlonE.And that's when I started to cry.
Apart from the big, obvious things -- love, death, children -- most of the really walloping emotional highs and lows of my life have involved watching Liverpool. There was the ecstasy of being in the crowd when the club won the European championship in 1978, and the horror of settling down in my office for a 1985 European championship game -- only to watch Juventus fans get crushed to death when some Liverpool supporters rioteD.Through long experience, my family has come to know that their chances of having a vaguely pleasant husband and father on any given Sunday depend largely on how Liverpool fared the previous day. But what on earth makes this -- let's admit it -- pretty unsophisticated devotion to the fortunes of men I've never met and don't really want to so powerful?
Fandom -- the obsessional identification with a sports team -- is universal. The greatest book ever on the psychology of being a fan, Nick Hornby's Fever Pitch, was written about a London soccer team but easily translated into a film about the Boston Red Sox. Particularly in the U. S., it seems possible to be a fan of a team that's based far from where you have ever lived, but I suspect the origins of my obsession are more common. I didn't have much choice in the matter. Both my parents were born in tiny row houses a stone's throw from Liverpool's stadium. My father took me to my first game as a small child, and from the moment I saw what was behind the familiar brick walls -- all those people ! That wall of noise! The forbidden, dangerous smells of cigarettes and beer! I was hookeD.
We fans like to describe our passion in religious terms, as if the places our heroes play are secular cathedrals. It's easy to see why. When you truly, deeply love a sports team, you give yourself up to something bigger than yourself, not just because your individuality is rendered insignificant in the mass of the crowd, but because being a fan involves faith. No matter what its current form. may be, your team is worthy of blind devotion -- or will soon redeem itselF.Belief is all. As Brooklyn Dodgers fans said in the 1950s: wait ‘ til next year.
But as you get older, it becomes harder to believE.Yes, the Dodgers won the World Series in 1955; but they aren't ever coming back from Los Angeles. Loss of faith can set in. That, however, is when you appreciate the deeper benefits of being a fan. For me, 'following one soccer team has been the connective tissue of my lifE.I left Liverpool to go to college and have never had the slightest desire to live there again, but wandering around the world, living in seven different cities in three continents, my passion was the thing that gave me a sense of what 'home' meant. Being a fan became a fixed point, wherever I lived; it was -- it is -- one of the two or three things that I think of as making me, well, mE.
But fandom does morE.than defeat distance and geography. It acts as a time machinE.There is only one thing that I have done consistently for nearly 50 years, and that is support Liverpool. To be a fan is a blessing, for it
A.1978
B.1985
C.1999
D.2006

A.m.
B.
C.,
D.
E.
F.
G.1978
B.1985
C.1999

【参考答案】

C
解析:推断题。第一段说利物浦队21年来首次赢得欧洲杯冠军,第二段又说在1978年利物浦队赢得过欧洲杯冠军,可......

(↓↓↓ 点击下方‘点击查看答案’看完整答案 ↓↓↓)
热门 试题

未分类题
Isn't it amazing how one person, sharing one idea, at the right time and place can change the course of your life's history? This is certainly what happened in my lifE.When I was 14, I was hitchhiking from Houston, Texas, through El Paso on my way to CaliforniA.I was following my dream, journeying with the sun. I was a high school dropout with learning disabilities and was set on surfing the biggest waves in the world, first in California and then in Hawaii, where I would later livE.Upon reaching downtown El Paso, I met an old man, a bum, on the street comer. He saw me walking, stopped me and questioned me as I passed by. He asked me if I was running away from home, I suppose because I looked so young. I told him, 'Not exactly, sir,' since my father had given me a ride to the freeway in Houston and given me his blessings while saying, 'It is important to follow your dream and what is in your heart, son.'The bum then asked me if he could buy me a cup of coffeE.I told him, 'No, sir, but a soda would be great.' We walked to a comer malt shop and sat down on a couple of swiveling stools while we enjoyed our drinks.After conversing for a few minutes, the friendly bum told me to follow him, He told me that he had something grand to show me and share with mE.We walked a couple of blocks until we came upon the downtown El Paso Public Library.We walked up its front steps and stopped at a small information stanD.Here the bum spoke to a smiling odl lady, and asked her if she would be kind enough to watch my things for a moment while he and I entered the library. I left my belongings with this grandmotherly figure and entered into this magnificent hall of learning.The bum first led me to a table and asked me to sit down and wait for a moment while he looked for something special amongst the shelves. A few moments later, he returned with a couple of old books under his arms and set them on the tablE.He then sat down beside me and spokE.He started with a few statements that were very special and that changed my lifE.He said, 'There are two things that I want to teach you, young man, and they are these: 'number one is to never judge a book by its cover, for a cover can fool you.' He followed with, 'I bet you think I'm a bum, don't you, young man?'I said, 'Well, uh, yes, I guess so, sir.''Well, young man, I've got a little surprise for you. I am one of the wealthiest men in the worlD.I have probably everything any man could ever want. I originally come from the Northeast and have all the things that money can buy. But a year ago, my wife passed away, bless her soul, and since then I have been deeply reflecting upon lifE.I realized there were certain things I had not yet experienced in life, one of which was what it would be like to live like a bum on the streets. I made a commitment to myself to do exactly that for one year. For the past year, I have been going from city to city doing just that. So, you see, don't ever judge a book by its cover, for a cover can fool you.''Number two is to learn how to read, my boy, for there is only one thing that people can't take away from you, and that is your wisdom.' At that moment, he reached forward, grabbed my right hand in his and put them upon the books he'd pulled from the shelves. They were the writings of Plato and Aristotle -- immortal classics from ancient times.The bum then led me back past the smiling old woman near the entrance, down the steps and back on the streets near where we first met. His parting request was for me to never forget what he taught mE.We can infer from the passage that at 14, the author ______.A.did not do well in his studyB.did not like his motherC.planned to live in California all his lifeD.did not like his life in Huston
A.B.'
C.'
D.
E.
F.
G.'
H.'
I.'
J.'
K.
L.
We
M.
A.did
N.did
O.planned
P.did