Sports Team have always treated their success as a joke that got out of hand. The indie-rock group launched 2020 debut album âDeep Down Happyâ by taking over their local pub for a gig so chaotic that at least one member of the band needed a trip to the emergency room. Earlier this year on the main stage at Reading Festival, their onstage blimp â essentially, a gigantic balloon â advertised a number for a phone the band had lost weeks before. No matter how big things get for Sports Team (from Number 2-charting albums to a Mercury Prize nod), they refuse to take it too seriously.
Tonight though, somethingâs changed as the six-piece headline a sold out O2 Academy Brixton. Sure, vocalist Alex Rice walks onstage wearing a faux-fur coat and a hat made from at least a dozen wigs, but the driving âHere It Comes Againâ has never sounded better. Likewise, the scrappy âGoing Softâ is transformed into a snarling, marching number while the energetic âMargateâ is rounded off with a burst of confetti. Three songs in and itâs clear Sports Team are throwing everything theyâve got at this gig.
For âM5â, Rice even splits the crowd in half to do the harmonies. He says itâs because heâs had steroid injections to play tonightâs show (in fairness, the band have been on the road since restrictions first lifted) but equally, he seems to be having a great time playing the part of ringmaster. His Mick-Jagger-meets-interpretive-dancer stage presence has always felt eccentric in smaller venues, but tonight, itâs exactly the sort of flamboyance a show like this deserves.

New song âThe Gameâ offers a taste of whatâs to come: a frantic guitar-driven track that veers between Oasisâ explosive singalong choruses and The Hivesâ garage-punk snarl. For the most part, though, tonight is a celebration of Sport Teamsâ journey so far. Producer Dave McKraken is given a shout out for letting the band use his studio for free way back when, and elsewhere, Rice says the years playing small venues werenât bad because he was onstage with his five best friends every night. Spanning the band’s entire journey, the setlist covers everything from wailing debut single âStantonâ to the furious, sarcastic anthem of âHereâs The Thingâ and thunderous recent single âHappy (Godâs Own Country)â.
âThis was the show. This was our dream to play,â says Rice as the confetti settles. âWeâve got the greatest fans in the world and Iâll never patronise you. This means something. This is important.â Later in the set he avoids âcoming up here and lecturing you because you get it. Just look after your mates, ok?â
This might be the biggest show Sports Team have played but they inspire the same sort of carnage that theyâve always had at their gigs. Every song sees fans climbing on each otherâs shoulders, or crowdsurfing their way to the front but itâs all backed by an academy-wide singalong. The band can now afford fancy lights, CO2 cannons and plenty of confetti, but it never comes at the expense of connecting with the crowd.
Sports Team believe that âguitar music can change thingsâ but have never really treated their own music with the same sort of prestige. Until tonight, that is. Maybe itâs down to the weeks spent on the road reconnecting with fans, or perhaps the fact theyâre playing a dream come true headline show. Whatever the reason, tonight Sports Team play like theyâve finally started believing all their own talk about headlining Knebworth. Theyâve never sounded better or (wig hat aside) looked more inspirational.
Sports team played:
âHere It Comes Againâ
âGoing Softâ
âMargateâ
âThe Gameâ
âHappy (God’s Own Country)â
âThe Racesâ
âM5â
âLong Hot Summerâ
âWinter Netsâ
âYou & Me Songâ (The Wannadies cover)
âBorn Sugarâ
âCamel Crewâ
âFishingâ
âStations of the Crossâ
âHere’s the Thingâ
âKutcherâ
âStantonâ
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