Flew over to London on Wednesday with three of my cousins. After a
quick pizza, we went up to see Spurs play Chelsea in the league. We
beat them in the Carling Cup final last month, so we knew they would be
out for revenge, and as they’re chasing the league title, the points
were far more important to them than they were to us. So I feared the
worst -- I thought they might put 4 or 5 goals past us. And I was right
-- they scored four times!!!! But so did we!!!!!! We went 1-0, then 3-1
down, then 4-3 down ... but we scored an equaliser a couple of minutes
from the end, and could even have won it in the very final minute! It
was an amazing match, football at its finest. I went through every
emotion imaginable, from deepest darkest despair to unbelievable
elation. It’s not a game I’ll forget in a long time ... and I don’t
think any Chelsea fans will forget it either, though I’m sure they’ll
try their best to!!!!! Heh heh heh heh heh!!!!!
Today we went to
Thorpe Park for a few hours. It’s an amusement park about half an
hour’s train ride out of London. It’s pretty good for the UK, though
it’s no match for the amusment paradises of Florida in the USA!!! It
was busy today, but we got there early and managed to get on all the
rides we wanted, without waiting in line too long. I went to Thorpe
Park many years ago when I was a kid, not long after it first opened to
the public -- it had no rides back then, just recreations of old
villages, Roman buildings and the like!!! I always like going back, as
it’s a trip down memory lane, though Alton Towers is by far the best
theme park in the UK.
In the evening we met my friend from
Japan, Maiko, and my uncle Derek, and went for dinner in the Hard Rock
Cafe on Old Park Lane (the very first to ever open in the world), then
went to see the musical Wicked.
I’ve seen it a few times before, including on Broadway with the
original cast, but it was the first time for the others, and I’m
pleased to say they all fell under its spell, even my usually quite
cynical uncle!!! It’s a play with a weak second half -- pretty much all
the good songs are weighted in the first half, and the political
element is much more pronounced -- but that first half is so good that
you come away not minding too much about the plot holes and the lack of
a great closing song. But in truth it’s a pity -- Wicked
is hugely enjoyable, as reflected by its success worldwide, but if a
bit more care had been paid to the second half, it could have been an
out-and-out classic. Oh well, it’s still one of the best shows around
at the moment, even with its flaws, so if you haven’t seen it yet, and
the chance arises, seize it!!!!