What a great
2012 it’s been. We’ve had the Diamond Jubilee and the Olympics, and for
football lovers, Euro 2012, a dramatic Champions League, Real Madrid finally
ousting Barcelona in la Liga, and probably the most exciting finish to a
Premier League season ever.
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Top banana |
We have also been
blessed with some prodigious individual performances over the last year, and
these will be celebrated next week at the FIFA Ballon d’Or awards in Zurich.
It’s pretty much impossible to be interested in football and not get drawn into
the debate of who is the better player, Messi or Ronaldo. The Ballon d’Or gives
us all an excuse to continue that debate, even if it does mean an opportunity
for Sepp Blatter to make another messianic appearance and claim FIFA has
significant relevance outside the World Cup.
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FIFA is a clean organisation... honestly... |
The Ballon
d’Or was actually not a FIFA award until an aggressive takeover in 2010, when
they bought the prize from the Amaury Publishing Group and merged it with its
own World Player of the Year award. Apart from
making the awards ceremony a horrible corporate event and an advert for FIFA,
this change actually impacted the award itself.
Unlike the old FIFA World
Player of the Year award, which was voted by the coaches and captains of the
international teams, the old Ballon d’Or, awarded between 1956 and 2009, was
voted for exclusively by football journalists.
Journalists
are naturally closer analysers of the game, and have more limited personal
allegiances to the players involved. The FIFA award, therefore, always had an inherent
bias towards the bigger name players and often had anomalies in the voting
decisions.
One example of this is the fact Paul Scholes, a player Zinedine Zidane described as ‘the complete footballer’, made the 50-man shortlist on five occasions (2000, 01, 03, 04 and 07), but never received a single vote. This wouldn’t seem that strange until you find out that Jan Koller, Papa Bouba Diop and Freddie Kanouté have.
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No idea who voted for me... oh maybe the Mali manager |
In 1996,
Matthias Sammer won the Ballon d’Or for his starting role in Germany’s triumph
at Euro ’96 and a second successive Bundesliga title for Borussia Dortmund. The
top 3 in the FIFA World Footballer of the Year, however, were Ronaldo, George
Weah and Alan Shearer.
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From humble sweeper to Ballon d'Or winner |
Similarly, in
2003, Pavel Nedved won the Ballon d’Or for his instrumental role in Juventus
winning Serie A and reaching the Champions League final. The top 3 in the FIFA
award that year? Zidane, Thierry Henry and Ronaldo.
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Looking good |
The electorate
for the new FIFA Ballon d’Or is now a mix of journalists, national team coaches
and national team captains. Has this altered the winner in the 2 years since
FIFA bought the award?
Well, in 2010
Messi won the first new FIFA Ballon d’Or, ahead of Xavi and Iniesta. However,
the journalists vote that year went to Wesley Sneijder, with Iniesta 2nd,
Xavi 3rd, and Messi only in 4th place.
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Ha you guys win the World Cup but I'm still the best |
Sneijder was
truly outstanding in Inter’s treble winning campaign, and also scored 5 goals
in driving Holland to the World Cup final in South Africa. For him to not even
feature in the top 3 was bizarre to say the least, but points to the problem of
the voting system.
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What more do I have to do? |
Messi, the
Argentine captain, has a vote himself, and recently said, “I will vote for
Xavi, Andres (Iniesta) and definitely one of my countrymen.” This is a clear
admittance that votes from players and managers are clearly influenced by
personal and political motives, and not purely an outside perspective on the
best player for that year.
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What, I win all this just for being Argentinian? |
Before I
reveal my top 3 players of 2012 I should put down a few criteria for what I
will base my selection on. Firstly, this is an individual not a team award, and
therefore should go to the best player, not the player with the most medals in
2012. If that was the case Fernando Torres would have a case for winning the
award given he won the Champions League, Euros and won the golden boot at the
Euros. He also, however, spent most of 2012 unable to hit a barn door, so the
Ballon d’Or will naturally be beyond his reach too.
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Oh bugger, the goal's over there |
Thus, an
individual needs to be judged within the context of what they bring to their
team, and how they have influenced its success. Their performance also needs to
be judged in the context of the importance of the matches – big performances in
big games, in high pressure situations, against tough opposition, should always
carry more weight. Yes, consistency is also important, but it is those critical
moments that are the difference between winning and losing, between great and
very good.
For this
reason, Lionel Messi does not feature in my top 3 players of 2012.
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Don't worry Leo, I still love you |
Messi is
arguably the best player in the world currently, and potentially one of the
greatest of all time. He has also had a superb 2012, scoring a record goals
haul and breaking numerous individual records along the way.
But, as
brilliant and as consistent as he has been, he wasn’t able to raise his game
when required and help Barcelona win a major trophy in 2012. And this is
Barcelona team with a midfield of Xavi, Iniesta, Busquets and Fabregas
controlling the ball and supplying the bullets for Messi to fire. A team
described as potentially the greatest team of all time.
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I pass, he scores |
In 2012
they lost their la Liga crown to Real Madrid by 9 points and crashed out of the
Champions League to Chelsea in the semi-finals. While Messi scored numerous
goals during the year, in Barcelona’s season defining games, the April Classico
and those 2 semi-final matches against Chelsea, he failed to find the target,
even missing a crucial penalty.
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Ouch |
Yes he was the
Champions League top scorer last season with 14 goals, but 5 of those goals
came in a virtually dead last-16 2nd leg against Bayer Leverkusen
and another 5 in group games against BATE Borisov and Viktoria Plzen. He
was also the top scorer in la Liga with 50 goals, and had the 2nd most assists behind Mesut Ozil (16 to Ozil’s 17).
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High 5 |
But in the
end, with all the talent in that Barcelona team, he wasn’t able to find raise
his performance in those season-defining moments.
The other
reason Messi misses out on my list is because he didn’t have a major
international tournament to participate in this year. If big game performances
count more then every player in Euro 2012 had an edge – every game in a major
international tournament is a big game.
His
achievements in 2012, in the harsh light of day, end up being scoring a lot of
goals against teams that are far weaker than his majestic Barcelona. Some of
those performances were outstanding, but there were three even more outstanding
players in the last 12 months.
3. Andrea
Pirlo
For fans of
midfield wizardry, there was no greater pleasure than watching Pirlo
orchestrate the Italians towards the Euro 2012 final. In an era where
athleticism and power are so prized, Pirlo showed that you didn’t need to have
pace or be a great tackler to command the midfield zone. His range of passing
was sublime and he effortlessly controlled the tempo of matches, while
defending intelligently without needing to tear around the pitch.
Pirlo was
central to almost everything good Italy did. He set up Di Natale’s goal in the
opening game against Spain, he put Italy ahead in their next game against
Croatia with a superb free-kick, and took the corner from which Cassano’s
scored the opening goal in a tense final group game against Ireland. In the
knock-out stages he totally ran the games against England and Germany, with a
fine display of passing in both matches. Yes, he was overrun in the final but
he was the tournament’s most consistent performer, and the reason Italy
progressed much further than anyone had expected.
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Try and get it lads |
The Serie A
season also came to be defined by Pirlo’s switch from Milan to Juventus. While
Pirlo was obviously very highly rated at Milan, they preferred to move forward
with industry, energy and youth. His consistency for Juventus was remarkable.
With Claudio Marchisio and Arturo Vidal closing down opponents higher up the
pitch, Pirlo had time and space in deeper positions, and dictated nearly every
match he played in. Juventus not only won their 28th scudetto, but
they also did so unbeaten, only the 3rd time that has even been
achieved, and the first in a 38 game season. Not just did Pirlo control those
games, he also topped the Serie A assists charts with 13.
2. Andrés
Iniesta
Iniesta had
another superb season for Barcelona and Spain. He has always been a brilliant
talent and a joy to watch, but he previously had a tendency drift in and out of
games, and not be a central figure in his team’s successes. In the last few
years, however, his consistency and influence have moved him from being a
brilliant player to an important player, for both club and country.
The fact
Iniesta was voted the player of the Champions League and Euro 2012 shows just
how much of a big game player he has become. In the Euros he was Spain’s key
player from game 1, combining superbly with Jordi Alba on Spain’s left, and
providing an incisiveness and drive that was often lacking in other parts of the
pitch.
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Hmm, how many players can I take out of the game? |
Although
Spain didn’t truly light up the tournament as most neutrals had hoped, he was their brightest
diamond, and the most influential player in their attacking play. Although he didn't score in the tournament and only produced one assist, he was man-of-the-match in three of Spain's six matches, including the final against Italy.
There was
nothing to split my top two choices and it was only a penalty shoot-out that
was the difference between Spain and Portugal reaching the Euro final. But for
pure individual brilliance and for producing some outstanding displays in
critical matches - there can only by one winner.
1. Cristiano Ronaldo
Ronaldo is the
complete footballer, the modern day machine. Big, strong, quick, he can
dribble, he can shoot, has a powerful header, takes free-kicks. He drives
through the pitch with the glide of a shark and the power of a bull, and then
shimmies, faints and twinkles his restless toes like a flamenco dancer. He is
unmanufactured, a street footballer, producing explosive moments from nothing,
with each moment in possession seemingly destined to result in a free-kick, a
shot or a goal.
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Speed of a shark and looks like one too |
Although
Ronaldo has often been put in the shade by Messi’s achievements, it has been as
much a case of Real Madrid being outshone by Barcelona. Ronaldo scored an
outstanding 46 goals in la Liga last season to finally bring the title back to
Madrid after 3 consecutive Barcelona triumphs.
He has
previously been described as a ‘flat-track bully’ for not contributing enough
in bigger games, especially El Classico. However, in 2012, in matches against
Barcelona, he scored in both legs of the Copa del Rey quarter finals, both legs
of the Spanish Super Cup and both matches in la Liga, including the crucial
title decider in April. That’s goals in 6 consecutive classicos, the first
player ever to achieve that feat.
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It's my time |
What makes his
achievements more astonishing is that his Real Madrid team is undoubtedly not
the perfectly formed creative unit that Messi’s Barcelona is. As Jose Mourinho
put it, "It is harder to be Cristiano than Messi. Messi grew up in the
team where he plays, with the players with whom he plays. Not Cristiano. He was
in England, then they put him here in a losing team. He had to grow over the
last two years with this team which has been forming."
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This is what I say to people who think Messi is best... He's no.2... |
The whole Barcelona team is set up to maximize
Messi’s genius and just about every player is creatively inclined, Jose
Mourinho’s Real Madrid are built on the foundations of organisation and
strength. This has doomed Ronaldo, unfairly in my opinion, to be seen as the
inferior player, who plays a less attractive brand of football.
Remarkably Ronaldo has also achieved his incredible goal
scoring record while playing from the left wing. While he scored an outstanding
60 goals for Real Madrid last season, their 2 central strikers, Karim Benzema
and Gonzalo Higuain also contributed 32 and 26 goals respectively. The
Barcelona team, however is built around Messi, so while he scored a remarkable
73 goals for Barcelona last season, their second highest scorers where Alexis
Sanchez and Cesc Fabregas with only 15 goals apiece.
As the special one said, "One (Messi) plays as
a 9 and roams around in those 50 square metres where the distance to goal is
smaller and defence less intense. The other (Ronaldo) plays as a winger. How
does a winger score as many goals as a number 9?”
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...and Ronaldo is no.1 |
While Real got knocked out at the semi-finals stage
of the Champions League, Ronaldo was in superb goal scoring form, netting 3
times in the last 16, twice in the quarter-finals and twice again in the
semi-finals. His only blemish was missing his spot-kick in the penalty
shoot-out that saw them fall to Bayern Munich.
And he faced déjà vu in Euro 2012, as his Portugal
team fell at the semi-final stage after a penalty shoot-out, this time Ronaldo
not even making it to the spot. Although he was largely disappointing in
Portugal’s first two matches of that tournament, he produced an outstanding
performance in their last crucial group match again Holland, and then scored a
fantastic winning goal in the Quarter-final against the Czech Republic. While
Portugal threatened Spain for large parts of their semi-final, they were unable
to find the killer blow, and Ronaldo missed out on what could have been a
career defining moment.
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Oh crap I should've taken the first one |
Nevertheless, it has been a remarkable year for
Ronaldo. For individual brilliance, for contribution to team success, for
incredible levels of consistency and for big performances in big matches, he
truly deserves his year to be capped off by being acknowledged as the best
performer of 2012.
Unfortunately,
because everyone loves Messi, it probably won’t happen. Should a personal
affection for someone or a dislike of another influence the result?
Ronaldo isn’t
a dirty footballer. His disciplinary record is exemplary; he works unbelievable
hard in training, and gives everything in matches. He shakes hands with his
opponents after the game, win or lose, respects his managers, and you rarely
see him arguing with a referee even when he’s being kicked from every angle.
So yes he does
pout a lot, use what seems an excessive amount of hair product, and likes to concentrate intensely before he’s taking a free kick. Are these reasons not to
vote for someone as a footballer?
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Missile armed and ready to fire sir |
If Ronaldo
loses we know he’s going to look furious and sulky, we know he wants people to
recognise his brilliance, we know he wants to win for the sake of winning, for
the sake of ego and so he can shove the Ballon d’Or in Messi’s face (or other
bodily part). But really isn’t that what we would all do, isn’t this just
normal competitive human behaviour?
If Messi loses
we’ll have to deal with magnanimous congratulations, transcendent niceness and
child-like angelic congeniality. If he wins he will most likely say it was all
because of his team-mates, his coaches, his school teachers, his sponsors, and
the doctors who injected him with growth hormones as a kid.
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Less hair product = more friends = more votes |
In the highly
corporatized, politically correct world we live in, Messi is the footballer an
elite team of FIFA and Adidas engineers would programme into a system to design
their perfect brand-conscious footballer. Equally, Barcelona with their fetish
for possession and their good football that keeps telling you that it’s good
football, is equally attractive to purist and casual fan alike.
Barca will likely
go down as the best team of this generation, Messi its best player, and in
tendem maybe the best ever. Does this mean
Messi was the best player of 2012? Not to me. But he wasn’t the best player in
2010 either so don’t be surprised if he wins this one too.
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