Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
Also interesting is the fact that the World Cup mania in many established (and relatively assimilated) immigrant origin communities in Ontario and Quebec is a bit of ''rekindling''. In the 1970s I can say with quite a bit of certainty that your average kid born here of Greek or Italian parents in Montreal, Ottawa or Toronto was not exactly nuts about the World Cup.
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I don't agree. The kids I went to high school with in Hamilton in the early 1980s were manic about football and supporting the teams of their ethnic heritage (mostly Italy, Portugal and Greece, among others), and their older brothers and uncles who were teenagers in the 1970s were no different. Sure, they followed North American sports more closely than the Euro leagues that their parents were fans of, but the World Cup was a different story. It had to do with identity and pride. The teams playing in the lunchtime intramural soccer league in the gym were formed along ethnic lines, and the annual champions would parade around the gym with the flags of their parents' countries in celebration.
This was the scene on St. Clair in 1982 when Italy won:
James Street in Hamilton, which used to be heavily Italian and Portuguese, and is now an indie and artistic darling, was jammed for the celebration, too. That was 1982, sure, but I recall the Italian and Portuguese overflow of fans crowding the bars and cafes on James Street in 1978 for the World Cup. Granted, the winners in the 1970s weren't hotspots for recent immigration at the time--Brazil, West Germany and Argentina--so you didn't get people in the streets all that much, but I'm quite certain that St. Clair would have looked precisely like the photo above if Italy had won in 1974 or 1978.