Football, Mushrooms, and a Dream That Kept Growing
As the World Cup returns, I find myself traveling back nearly fifty years to a small living room in Egypt.
As a child, we had a television with only two channels. There was no internet, no satellite television, and very little connection to the outside world. Yet every four years, the World Cup brought the world into our home. Watching those matches felt like a dream.
My football journey began with the Netherlands in 1974. I was fascinated by the elegance of Johan Cruyff and the Dutch style of Total Football. I still remember the famous final against West Germany and the excitement it created for football fans around the world. Although the Netherlands did not win, Cruyff’s creativity, intelligence, and vision left a lasting impression on me.
A few years later came the 1978 World Cup. This time my heart was captured by Argentina and the brilliance of Mario Kempes. I can still remember Kempes’ goals and the passion of that Argentine team. Since then, Argentina and the Netherlands have remained my two favorite national teams.
What I did not know then was that football would teach me lessons that later appeared in science.
Many years later, as a Fulbright Scholar in Wisconsin, I had the opportunity to observe mushroom cultivation and bioreactor technology. Standing beside those bioreactors, I saw something familiar. Success in football and success in science both depend on creating the right environment for growth.
A football team develops talent through coaching, teamwork, discipline, and vision. A mushroom culture develops through the right nutrients, oxygen, temperature, and time. In both cases, growth starts from something small and ordinary before becoming something extraordinary.
I often think of the famous goal scored by Johnny Rep in the 1974 World Cup final and the unforgettable goals of Mario Kempes in 1978. Those moments inspired millions of young fans, including one young boy in Egypt who dreamed of seeing the world beyond two television channels.
That boy could never have imagined becoming a clinical biochemist, a Fulbright Scholar, an international speaker, and a lifelong researcher in medicinal mushrooms.
Yet the lesson remains the same.
Whether it is a football team, a mushroom culture in a bioreactor, or a young child with a dream, remarkable things can happen when given the right conditions to grow.
Today, whenever I watch Argentina or the Netherlands play on the world’s biggest stage, I am reminded not only of football, but of a journey that began with a simple television, a World Cup dream, and a belief that growth is always possible.
Dr. Ayman Daba
Fulbright Scholar | Clinical Biochemist | Medicinal Mushroom Researcher
Founder, The Mushroom Medicine Manβ’ πβ½
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