Works hard, gives his all but doesn't score even close to enough (ditto Gabby)
"They have got everything that you love in footballers - the pace, power, speed, work-rate. That's what you look for in players."
Quote from: sirlordbaltimore on April 11, 2014, 02:11:44 PMWorks hard, gives his all but doesn't score even close to enough (ditto Gabby)Work rate at the expense of actual ability, the Paul Lambert ethos: Quote"They have got everything that you love in footballers - the pace, power, speed, work-rate. That's what you look for in players."
The best footballers in the world all have pace, power, speed and a great work ethic. What is the problem?
I would say the thing that makes Messi a cut above the likes of Ronaldo is that his work ethic is another level above and he has enough physical presence to get lumps kicked out of him, yet he stays on his feet. He is a remarkable player. Lambert not listing every quality that makes a player as wonderful as Messi does not mean he eschews those qualities.I find criticisng him on the implication that his list is exhaustive and not a quick response to a benign question to be on shaky ground.There are plenty of things to criticse Lambert on this season outrage of excellent qualities in footballers is not one. In respect of the list of players you have mentioned, they're all lightening quick between the ears.
Quote from: Ads on April 11, 2014, 03:52:06 PMThe best footballers in the world all have pace, power, speed and a great work ethic. What is the problem?The best players in the world aren't the best due to physical attributes though, rather technical ones. To prioritise the former is truely retrograde and such a mindset belongs in the 90's.
Well work-ethic is a given, and pace and speed are the same thing. But Xavi, Iniesta, Silva, Fabregas, Coutinho, Pirlo, Gotze, Kroos aren't that quick and have no real 'power', while Messi, Mueller, Reus, Pedro, Suarez, Aguero, Neymar, Robben, Ribery are all quick enough - some of them very - but aren't exactly what you'd call powerful. Yaya Toure, Ronaldo, Bale, Schweinsteiger, Javi Martinez are all quick and powerful, sure, and it certainly helps them in how they play, but the real thing which makes them top players, which they have in common with all the others, is that they can kick a ball pretty well. Lambert appears to have overlooked this aspect, and sounds really MONish in that 'physicality above quality' soundbite there.
Quote from: Montbert on April 11, 2014, 04:01:54 PMWell work-ethic is a given, and pace and speed are the same thing. But Xavi, Iniesta, Silva, Fabregas, Coutinho, Pirlo, Gotze, Kroos aren't that quick and have no real 'power', while Messi, Mueller, Reus, Pedro, Suarez, Aguero, Neymar, Robben, Ribery are all quick enough - some of them very - but aren't exactly what you'd call powerful. Yaya Toure, Ronaldo, Bale, Schweinsteiger, Javi Martinez are all quick and powerful, sure, and it certainly helps them in how they play, but the real thing which makes them top players, which they have in common with all the others, is that they can kick a ball pretty well. Lambert appears to have overlooked this aspect, and sounds really MONish in that 'physicality above quality' soundbite there.I think the penultimate word in your post is the telling one. It is a few words from which you have spun a whole theory. Are players like Delph, Westwood and Bacuna selected for their physicality?
Quote from: Ads on April 11, 2014, 04:08:59 PMI would say the thing that makes Messi a cut above the likes of Ronaldo is that his work ethic is another level above and he has enough physical presence to get lumps kicked out of him, yet he stays on his feet. He is a remarkable player. Lambert not listing every quality that makes a player as wonderful as Messi does not mean he eschews those qualities.I find criticising him on the implication that his list is exhaustive and not a quick response to a benign question to be on shaky ground.There are plenty of things to criticse Lambert on this season outrage of excellent qualities in footballers is not one. In respect of the list of players you have mentioned, they're all lightening quick between the ears. I actually think that the off-the-top-of-the-head nature of the comments rather reveals his instincts. Certainly his tactics reflect this sort of mentality.You're certainly right on the work-rate point, however, and I would add that a sense of team-ethic also puts Messi above Ronaldo. When Messi wins the Balon d'Or, he smiles and says thank you. When Ronaldo won it, he cried like an actress. That's the difference.And you're certainly right about the footballing brain. Whether its the reaction time of dribblers like Neymar or the ability to see the whole game instantly like a picture in your head, like Xavi or Pirlo, or a sense of position and knowing where to be at which point, like Aguero or Javi Martinez, all the best players have something unimaginably fast going on in their brains.
I would say the thing that makes Messi a cut above the likes of Ronaldo is that his work ethic is another level above and he has enough physical presence to get lumps kicked out of him, yet he stays on his feet. He is a remarkable player. Lambert not listing every quality that makes a player as wonderful as Messi does not mean he eschews those qualities.I find criticising him on the implication that his list is exhaustive and not a quick response to a benign question to be on shaky ground.There are plenty of things to criticse Lambert on this season outrage of excellent qualities in footballers is not one. In respect of the list of players you have mentioned, they're all lightening quick between the ears.
While I don't subsribe to the view that you have a player to do "X" job and another to do "Y" job; they should all be nippy, capable of passing it well, moving into space etc. However, it really isn't Andi's fault at all that he is not capable of doing a job that he is neither physically or technically equipped to do.