Gonzalo Vilario How Argentinas blind soccer team became champions with English subtitles TED

I opened a blind man’s head.

I didn’t make him think or reflect –
I cracked his head open, literally.

We were walking with him
holding onto my shoulder,

I miscalculated how much space
there was between us,

and I knocked him into a gate.

(Laughter)

Five stitches in his forehead.

At that moment, I felt like
the worst teacher in the world.

I really didn’t know how to apologize.

Luckily, El Pulga is one of those people
who takes things quite well.

And to this day, he says
that I was the coach

who left the most important
mark on his career.

(Laughter)

The truth is, when I started working
at the institute for the blind,

I was surprised by a lot of things.

A lot of the things they did,
I never imagined they could:

they swam, did exercise, played cards.

They drank mate, and could pour it

without burning themselves in the process.

But when I saw them playing soccer –

that was amazing.

They had a dirt field,
rusty goalposts and broken nets.

The blind who attended the institute
would play their games there,

just like I did at a field near my house.

But they played without being able to see.

The ball made a sound
so they could locate it.

They had a guide
behind the rival team’s goal

to know where to kick the ball.

And they used eye masks.

There were guys
who could still see a little,

and they wore eye masks
so everyone was equal.

When I was more at ease with them,
I asked for a mask myself.

I put it on and tried to play.

I had played soccer all my life.

This is where it got even more amazing:

within two seconds, I didn’t know
where I was standing.

I had studied physical education
because I loved high performance.

I started working
at the institute by chance.

My other job was with the Argentinian
National Rowing Team,

and I felt that was my thing.

Here, everything was twice as hard.

I’ll never forget the first day
I did the warm-up with the team.

I lined them up in front of me –

I used to do that with the rowing team –

and I said, “OK, everyone
bend down,” going like this.

When I looked up, two guys were seated,

three were lying down
and others were squatting.

(Laughter)

How could I do here
the same things I was doing there?

It took me a while.

I started looking for tools
to learn from them,

from the teachers who worked with them.

I learned I couldn’t explain a play
on a chalkboard like a coach does,

but I could use a plastic tray
and some bottle caps

so they could follow me by way of touch.

I also learned they could run on a track

if I ran with them, holding a rope.

So we started looking for volunteers
to help us run with them.

I was enjoying it,

and finding purpose and meaning
in what we were doing.

It was hard at first,
it was uncomfortable,

but I decided to overcome the discomfort.

And there came a time

when it became the most
fascinating job I’d ever had.

I think that’s when I wondered:

Why couldn’t we be
a high-performance team as well?

Of course, one thing was missing:

I needed to find out what they wanted,

the real protagonists of this story.

Three hours of training,
playing soccer on that field,

were not going to be enough.

We would have to train differently.

We started to train harder,
and the results were great;

they asked for more.

I came to understand
that they, too, wondered

why they couldn’t do high-performance.

When we felt ready,
we knocked at CENARD’s door.

CENARD is the National Center
for High-Performance Sports

here in Argentina.

It was hard to get them
to hear what we had to say.

But it was considerably more difficult

to get the other athletes training there
to consider us their equals.

In fact, they would let us use the field

only when no other teams were using it.

And we were known as “the blind ones.”

Not everyone knew
exactly what we were doing there.

The 2006 World Championship
was a turning point in the team’s history.

It was held in Buenos Aires
for the first time.

It was our chance to show everyone

what we had been doing all that time.

We made it to the finals.

We were growing as a team.

It was us against Brazil in the finals.

They were the best team in the tournament.

They won every game by a landslide.

Hardly anyone believed
we could win that game.

Hardly anyone – except for us.

During pre-game meetings,

in the locker room,

during each warm-up,

it smelled of victory.

I swear that smell exists.

I smelled it several times with the team,

but I remember it in particular,
the day before we played that final.

The Argentine Football Association
had opened their doors to us.

We were training at AFA,

where Verón, Higuain and Messi trained.

For the first time ever,

we felt like a true national team.

At 7:30pm, the day before the game,

we were in the lounge discussing strategy,

and a waiter knocks on the door,
interrupting our conversation.

He suggested we go to church.

He came to invite us to church.

I tried to get rid of him,
saying it wasn’t a good time,

that we better leave it for another day.

He kept insisting, asking me to please
let him take the guys to church,

because that day, a pastor
who performed miracles would be there.

I was slightly afraid to ask
what type of miracles he meant,

and he replied nonchalantly,

“Coach, let me take
the team to the church,

and when we return, I guarantee
that half of them will be able to see.”

(Laughter)

Some of the guys laughed,

but imagine being a blind person
and someone says that to you.

I didn’t know what to say.

I said nothing; it was an awkward silence.

I didn’t want to make him feel bad,

because he truly believed
this could happen.

One of the players saved me,

when he stood up and confidently said,

“Juan,” – that was the kid’s name –

Gonza already told you
it’s not the best time to go to church.

Besides, let me make this clear:

if we go to that church, and I end up
being able to see when we return,

I will beat you so hard
if I can’t play tomorrow."

(Laughter)

(Applause)

Juan left, laughing in resignation,

and we continued with our pregame talk.

That night when I went to sleep,

I began to dream
about the next day’s game,

imagining what could happen,
how we would play.

And that’s when I noticed
that smell of victory

I mentioned a while ago.

And it’s because
at that moment, I thought:

if the other players had the same desire
as Diego going into the game,

it was impossible for us not to win.

The next day was going to be wonderful.

We got up at 9am, the game was at 7pm,

and we were already eager to play.

We left AFA, and the bus was full
of flags that people had given to us.

We were talking about the game,

and we could hear people
honking and cheering,

“Go Murciélagos! Today’s the day!
The final challenge!”

The guys asked me, “Do they know us?
Do they know we’re playing?”

Some people followed the bus to CENARD.

We arrived and found an amazing scene.

In the corridor leading
from the locker room to the game field,

I was walking with Silvio,

who was holding onto my shoulder,
so I could guide him.

Fortunately, there were
no gates along the way.

(Laughter)

When we reached the field,
he asked me about everything.

He didn’t want to miss a single detail.

He said, “Tell me what you see,
tell me who’s playing the drums.”

I tried to explain what was happening
with as much detail as possible.

I told him, “The stands are packed,
a lot of people couldn’t get in,

there are blue and white balloons
all over the field,

they’re opening a giant Argentine flag
that covers the entire grandstand.”

Suddenly, he cuts me off and says,

“Do you see a flag that says ‘San Pedro’?”

That’s the city where he lives.

I started looking into the stands

and I spotted a little white flag

with lettering done
in black spray paint, that read:

“Silvio, your family
and all of San Pedro are here.”

I told him that and he replied,

“That’s my mom, tell me where
she is, I want to I wave at her.”

I pointed him toward the flag

and showed him with his arm
where they were sitting,

and he waved his arms in that direction.

About 20 or 30 people stood up
and gave him an ovation.

When that happened,

I saw how his face changed,
how moved he was.

It was moving for me, too;

two seconds later,
I had a lump in my throat.

It was strange – I felt both
the excitement of what was happening,

and the anger and the anguish
that he could not see it.

A few days later when I told him
what I had experienced,

he tried to reassure me, saying,

“Gonza, don’t feel bad, I could see them.

Differently, but I swear to you
that I saw them all.”

The game started.

We could not fail; it was the final.

The audience was quiet, like here,

because in soccer for the blind,

the public has to be quiet
so the players can hear the ball.

They’re only allowed to cheer
when the game is over.

And when there were eight minutes to go,

the crowd did all the cheering
they hadn’t done in the first 32 minutes.

When pigeon-toed Silvio
nailed the ball at an angle,

they cheered with all their heart,

in an incredible way.

Today, if you go to CENARD,
you’ll see a huge poster on the door,

with a photo of our team,
Los Murciélagos.

They’re a model national team,
everyone in CENARD knows who they are,

and after having won
two World Championships

and two Paralympic medals,

no one doubts they are
high-performance athletes.

(Applause)

(Applause ends)

I was lucky to train
this team for 10 years,

first as a trainer
and later as their coach.

I feel that they’ve given me much more

than what I’ve given them.

Last year, they asked me to coach
another national team, Power Soccer.

It’s a national team of young men
who play soccer in wheelchairs.

They use motorized wheelchairs
that they drive with a joystick,

because they don’t have
enough strength in their arms

to use conventional chairs.

They added a bumper to the chair,
a safeguard that protects their feet,

while allowing them to kick the ball.

It’s the first time that, instead
of being the spectators,

they’re now the main characters.

It’s the first time their parents,
friends and siblings can see them play.

For me, it’s a new challenge,

with the same discomfort,
insecurity, and fear I had

when I started working with the blind.

But I approach it all
from a more experienced position.

That’s why from day one,
I treat them as athletes on the field,

and off the field, I try
to put myself in their shoes

and behave without prejudice,

because treating them naturally
feels best to them.

Both teams play soccer;
something once unthinkable for them.

They had to adapt the rules to do so.

And both teams broke the same rule –

the one that said
they couldn’t play soccer.

When you see them play,
you see competition, not disability.

The problem starts when the game is over,

and they leave the field.

Then they step in to play our game,

in a society whose rules
don’t really take them into account

or care for them.

I learned from sports

that disability greatly depends on
the rules of the game.

I believe that if we change
some of the rules of our game,

we can make life a little easier for them.

We all know there are people
with disabilities; we see them daily.

But by having no direct contact with them,

we’re not aware of the problems
they face every day,

like how hard it is for them
to get on a bus,

find a job,

take the subway

or cross the street.

It’s true that there is an increasing
social responsibility

regarding the inclusion
of people with disabilities.

But I think it’s still not enough.

I think change needs to come
from every one of us.

First, by leaving behind
our indifference toward the disabled,

and then by respecting the rules
that do take them into account.

They are few, but they do exist.

I cracked a blind man’s head
open – El Pulga’s head.

I can assure you these two teams
opened mine as well.

They taught me that above all,

you have to get out there
and play every game

in this beautiful tournament
that we call life.

Thank you.

(Applause)