A few months ago, I thought it would be cool to find a watch with a football theme (association football, that is) – mainly, one with a bezel for counting the 45 minutes each half of the game is played – for no special reason other than love of the sport. And I wasn't specifically looking for an Orient.
Later,
I found out two things I was not aware of. The first: that most Japanese call
the game Soccer, like Americans, not Football. The second: that once one starts
searching eBay for a Soccer Watch, rather than Football Watch, one might find
the rare vintage piece that is the Orient Soccer Watch.
Okay,
you might ask, what is the big deal? Isn't this just a diver-style watch where
the first 45 minutes on the bezel are colored slightly differently?
Well
yes, and no. Technically you would be correct in asking this. But take the more
romantic approach, which is how watch collecting should generally be viewed,
and you'll see the difference. I mean – it does say "soccer" very
clearly on the dial!
What
we have here is a fairly large, sporty watch. The steel case measures 45mm
across, not including the crowns, and 49mm lug to lug. This model dates back to
the 1970s, and like many sporty Orients was probably considered pretty large at
the time. Even by today's standards, it is quite big and hefty.
The
size definitely does not make it any less wearable. As its overall length is
moderate, this watch should look good on most wrists – referees and
couch-footballers alike.
The
inner rotating bezel can be turned using the crown at 2. Unlike a diver's
bezel, this one is bidirectional. The idea is that you'd simply set it to where
the minute hand points at the start of each half of the match, to know when
time is up.
The
movement inside this watch is caliber 16720. This one never became as popular
as the 469 workhorse – perhaps lacking some of the latter's renowned
reliability – but it does have some advantages, such as setting the date from
the crown. In fact, you can set the date both back and forth, a rare feature.
Winding,
setting the date, and setting the time, are all managed using the crown at 4,
when in first, second, or third position respectively.
A
cool watch with a cool movement, then. Not the rarest Orient ever, but far from
common. These seem to pop up at online stores once in a while, with asking
prices generally in the range of 200-300 USD, which is reasonable for a
well-kept watch.