i dont entirely agree. If Clattermole had been in the class of 92, surrounded by a team that referees loved, he would have been remembered differently. And if Scholes had come through in Plunderlands class of 2008, ditto. Im not saying they are the same player, just ratd differently due to circumstances. Look at John O Shit and Wes-give-the-ball-away-Brown. Lucky players to have come through surrounded by excellence. Now....not so great
Quote from: OCD on January 20, 2014, 04:51:49 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on January 20, 2014, 04:41:00 PMEven though he got massive respect from pretty much everyone, I still don't think he got as much as he should have, he still managed to be underrated.He seems to be more respected now in retrospect than he was during his career. For instance he was wasted as an England player by being stuck out on the left for most of the time in favour of a 4-4-2 system with Gerrard and Lampard in the centre. Really we should have either played 3 in the centre or picked and chose for the occasion or opponent whilst making sure Scholes wasn't wasted. Or that he felt valued so that he didn't retire early. And there in a nutshell is why England are lightyears behind at international level.Even now we're for the most part stuck dogmatically with 442, for as far as I can see no better reason than it worked for Ramsey 48 years ago.At the time we were pissing about with Scholes on the left of a 442, he was playing just of either a front one or front two for his club and looking like one of the best link-men / midfielders in Europe and being a constant goal threat himself.Re his retirement from international football, I think it was intimated that Fergie had told him that if he wanted a new big fat contract he'd needed to stop playing for England. After years of banging his head up against a wall, could you really blame him if that was the case?For years, if we could have looked beyond 442, and possibly even today, you could if you really wanted to, find a formation that could accommodate Lampard and Gerard without completely buggering the rest of the team up. If you were to use both 4-2-3-1 would probably work best, with Gerard one of the two to limit the amount of running he'd have to do.As for Delph, he could make either a central or wide left position in 4-3-3- or 4-2-3-1 his own. Great that we're finally getting to see what all the fuss was about 5 years ago.Hard to believe that he's only just turned 24. Hopefully we'll see him at his best over the next 6-7 years when he's at his peak.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on January 20, 2014, 04:41:00 PMEven though he got massive respect from pretty much everyone, I still don't think he got as much as he should have, he still managed to be underrated.He seems to be more respected now in retrospect than he was during his career. For instance he was wasted as an England player by being stuck out on the left for most of the time in favour of a 4-4-2 system with Gerrard and Lampard in the centre. Really we should have either played 3 in the centre or picked and chose for the occasion or opponent whilst making sure Scholes wasn't wasted. Or that he felt valued so that he didn't retire early.
Even though he got massive respect from pretty much everyone, I still don't think he got as much as he should have, he still managed to be underrated.
But 3-5-2 for the Villa, '95-'98 saw us play our best football between '93 and now.
Much, much better?Premier League players are much, much better than League 2 players. You're comparing a load of England Internationals who are all pretty similar standard. IMO they are all close in ability but i would rank them in the following order;1 Beckham2 Gerrard3 Scholes4 Lampard