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    Size Doesnt Matter ...

    1- SIZE 2- AGE

    #2
    Payman Jaan...............


    Size does matter.....and age does matter....
    How ever,the best way to generalize would be .

    SIZE IS NOT EVRY THING !
    AGE IS NOT EVERY THING !

    Comment


      #3
      This is soccer not American football, so size for certian positions doesn't matter. Like anything else in life, football is not a single variable thing anyway. So looking at it as if one and only one thing, size, coach, speed, etc. etc. can win championship is worng IMO.

      A lot of things has to come togeher in order for a team to click and play Joga Bonita like Barca.
      "When I see the good in you, you get motivated, feel good about yourself and that creates synergy. It creates an environment where everybody can work better together. I think in the Iranian culture it becomes very ordinary to always see the bad in each other."
      Afshin Ghotbi ( Former TM Head Coach)



      Nasser Hejazi was the Takhti of our football.
      Mohammad Panjali (Former PP and TM Captain)
      sigpic

      Comment


        #4
        I found this article in Goal.com, It's related to this topic and interesting to read. Enjoy:

        What has happened to the beautiful game? There used to be a time when the first thing a footballer was judged by was his technical ability.

        After this, the order of importance would be tactical, mental, and then finally physical qualities. This was the process that was used in most European countries, although not in all. England has always been an exception, something I can vouch for personally as I was released by Luton Town (who had then just been relegated from the top-flight) as a skillful teenager because I was told I was “too small, short, and weak”.

        Ever since this time I have always held the view that, not only the English youth system, but English football as a whole, has totally neglected skill and natural talent, in favour of pace, power, strength and other physical attributes. Indeed this helps explain why the country has always been so dreadfully poor on a technical level.

        While England has always placed physical attributes as the primary consideration when judging a player, other European countries, such as Spain and Italy, have traditionally favored the aforementioned technical aspect.

        Sadly, the way the game is evolving, it seems that there is an inevitable process in place whereby the blood-and-thunder English way is becoming the norm throughout Europe.

        “It is all much faster and more difficult now," blasted Baggio.

        "In the 1990s it was more than the 80s, now even more than the 90s. It is the evolution of the sport and we have to follow it. However, one cannot criticize a player for trying a backheel during a game. Are we crazy?”

        People that play today are - in most cases- athletes first, and footballers second. The desire to become quicker, fitter and stronger is destroying the game. All the skill, as Baggio says, is disappearing.

        The classic ‘number 10’, the shirt and the position that every footballer growing up used to desire, is virtually extinct. The Italian national team exemplifies this perfectly. Over the years they have produced numerous world-class number 10s, the likes of Gianni Rivera, Sandro Mazzola, Baggio, and most recently Francesco Totti. At this summer’s European Championships, Coach Roberto Donadoni is set to employ a 4-3-3 formation, meaning that Italy will be playing with no creative support striker.

        You look at the major teams around Europe, and many seem to favour a big, strong, man-mountain of a target man. Arsenal have Emmanuel Adebayor, Chelsea have Didier Drogba, Inter field Zlatan Ibrahimovic, and I predict that within five years it will be rare to see a top club or country with a striker who is below six foot.

        Height is becoming important. A team with short players is liable to concede goals off set-pieces and crosses – thus once again the lumbering giant is preferred to the shorter, skilful player. Take the Chelsea or Inter Milan teams who are absolutely full to the rafters with 6 foot-plus machines.

        Today, squads are also considered to be fragile unless they have two defensive midfielders in the middle-of-the-park. To be a good centre midfielder is to be able to run, run and run some more. A player like Momo Sissoko, wouldn’t have even made it into the semi-professional league in Italy a few decades ago, yet today he is being tipped by some to become one of the best midfield men in the whole of Serie A.

        In modern football you can have the flair and natural talent of Diego Maradona, but if you have no pace, nobody wants to know you. Take Juan Roman Riquelme for example. If he was around in the 1980s, he would have had every top team in Italy and Spain queuing up to build their team around him. Riquelme is a genius, he sees passes that athletes like Sissoko would take 30 years to spot, yet he is unwanted because he is considered too slow for the modern game.

        Former Spain and Barcelona star Josep Guardiola was a fantastic holding playmaker, but he had the pace of a snail. The player’s career can be split into two parts. During the first half, when football was still pure, he was simply world class and one of the best midfielders in the world. However towards the end of the 1990s, there was a sudden decline in his performances (injuries also played a part). The game had simply become too fast and physical for him, something he admitted himself, and Barcelona eventually let him go in 2001 at the age of just 30.

        Of course there are always phenomenon’s who disprove this theory, but these are becoming rarer all the time. The best example of course is Zinedine Zidane, an old-school player like Riquelme, with very little pace or physical quality, yet who was far and away the best player of his generation, and was still sensational at the 2006 World Cup at the age of 34. The fact that Zidane excelled in such an era proves what a legend among legends he is. Andrea Pirlo is another exception, but even he has found himself in situations where he has been physically bullied, such as against Arsenal in the Champions League recently.

        Baggio believes that the only place in the world where football is still football is South America, a continent where players are footballers first, and athletes second.

        “In South America more than Europe they are much closer to the authentic spirit of football,” said the 1994 World Cup star. “This is why I adore Leo Messi.”

        Cristiano Ronaldo and Thierry Henry are two excellent examples of the modern day player. Both, when in form, are world class performers, but ask yourself how good they would be if you remove the pace and physical features from their games. Some would also place Kaka in this category.

        Wayne Rooney, over the weekend, compared Manchester United to the old Brazil due to the way the teams play. The difference is that the great Brazil teams have played with irresistible skill, technique and panache, while The Red Devils' game is at a high intensity, quickly zipping the ball about, and counter-attacking at a lightning pace.

        I am unconvinced that either Ronaldo or Henry would have been world-class in the slower, and more technical/tactical oriented 1980s. On the same token you could probably find numerous players from that generation who wouldn’t have coped today – Brazilian legend Socrates is perhaps one.

        The question is though – who would you consider more of a real footballer – Socrates or Henry?

        Call me old-school, but I am sure that most football purists will agree that football was much better when it was slower and less athletic.

        What are your views on this topic? Is Roberto Baggio right - has skill disappeared from modern football? What examples, like Riquelme, can you find of brilliant players who are being forced out because of their physical deficiencies? Was football better when it was slower? Goal.com wants to know what YOU think…

        Carlo Garganese

        Comment


          #5
          Hajagha jaan........thanks...very interesting article.......
          .................................................. ........................
          I believe, today's developements, are mostly due to " advancements in coaching "......in which, the coaching can and does make big differences.

          there are many example in other sports :

          I remmember, Our ping pong champion,in the 70 's was a father and son by the name of ehteshamzadeh, whose techiques were slow, and time consueming, yet high control over racket,and command of the ball...rather than chines fast pace ping pong, which is so dominant now.

          in basket ball, The majic johnson, Dr.jay, or even micheal Jordans, are less and less avaieleble, and the number of talents are much higher than it used to be, yet...with all these masterful techniques, they lose in the olympics to the like of argentina, or croacia......to players with less techinques but faster, and better coached.

          In chess, there used to be , champions who were , phylosophers in real life, and they had high analytical powers they used against thier opponants....
          But, today's chess, with the use of computer, that provides data and massive archives of previouse games, the chess players are more of "smart " players rather than intelectuals...and fast pre-analysied varieations have taken over the over the board analysis.
          .................................................. .........
          The botton line, is, in football, if you can invision a set up passes with a cooeration of two other team mates,or if you have practiced a set formations with some smart passes...there no time to use your individual football talents..............................
          The individualities , now a days, will lose to collective pre-worked team efforts.....more over, it can not be coached......
          and something that can not be coached, is rare, and hence lesser fans are satisfied.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Hajagha View Post
            What has happened to the beautiful game?
            The NINETIES ( 90's ) happened !
            the nineties where teams like germany heavily based their teams and triumphs on physical attributes of their teams, italians became even more defensive, africans emerged as ... well, an emerging power, almost chiefly due to their physical characteristics, .... etc.

            edit: I guess I hurried to answer when I read only the first sentence and wanted to make the point. the rest of the piece says the same !
            serves me right for not reading the whole thing first and then attempting to reply !

            ==============

            bahram jan, I was going for the usual cliche' title not to be gramatically correct.

            Comment


              #7
              AC milan finally hit the wall with its old defenders and arsenal with its young and untested side were held. I really think in many instances in sport age does matter

              PFDC 10 Years & Counting
              We thank and support Mr.Kamran Delan for many years of dedication and service to Iranian Football Community.
              For some nice Lounge & Chillout head to -->http://www.youtube.com/user/mkbf86

              Comment


                #8
                Thanks Haji. Very interesting analysis and view point.
                "When I see the good in you, you get motivated, feel good about yourself and that creates synergy. It creates an environment where everybody can work better together. I think in the Iranian culture it becomes very ordinary to always see the bad in each other."
                Afshin Ghotbi ( Former TM Head Coach)



                Nasser Hejazi was the Takhti of our football.
                Mohammad Panjali (Former PP and TM Captain)
                sigpic

                Comment

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