Cocacolajojo wrote:After we signed Fernandinho, I was thinking about prominent Brazilian football players. So we have him, who supposedly is somewhat of a never ending, always running, powerhouse. And he passes the ball as well. Chelsea have Ramires. Tottenham have Sandro. It seems Brazil, who at least in Sweden were thought of as technical and fast but pretty undisciplined tactically, are providing more.... for lack of vocabulary, harder players and not as many "samba"-players as they used to. The same thing is happening with players from the African continent. If you had an african player in a Swedish team in the eighties or nineties, they were there to provide flair and not graft. But fast forward to the first ten years of this milennia and for a while, it seemed that each top club had a physical african, sub-saharan it should be added, player bossing their midfield.
On the other side of border from Brazil, the argentinians on the other hand still provide players who will play their hart out for 90 minutes but who are not as brutal as they used to be. I'm not too familiar with Argentinian football history, but it seems that they've become more like Brazil used to be and are now churning out top strikers and attacking players but perhaps not so many physically present midfielders or centre backs.
Now these are all stereotypes and they are never true, they never where and they never will be, but am I the only one who's seeing changes in what type of players that different countries and regions of the world are producing nowadays compared with how it used to be like 20-30 years ago.
Just a thought, I'm intested to see if anyone else has thought about this recently.
Benjay wrote:Cocacolajojo wrote:After we signed Fernandinho, I was thinking about prominent Brazilian football players. So we have him, who supposedly is somewhat of a never ending, always running, powerhouse. And he passes the ball as well. Chelsea have Ramires. Tottenham have Sandro. It seems Brazil, who at least in Sweden were thought of as technical and fast but pretty undisciplined tactically, are providing more.... for lack of vocabulary, harder players and not as many "samba"-players as they used to. The same thing is happening with players from the African continent. If you had an african player in a Swedish team in the eighties or nineties, they were there to provide flair and not graft. But fast forward to the first ten years of this milennia and for a while, it seemed that each top club had a physical african, sub-saharan it should be added, player bossing their midfield.
On the other side of border from Brazil, the argentinians on the other hand still provide players who will play their hart out for 90 minutes but who are not as brutal as they used to be. I'm not too familiar with Argentinian football history, but it seems that they've become more like Brazil used to be and are now churning out top strikers and attacking players but perhaps not so many physically present midfielders or centre backs.
Now these are all stereotypes and they are never true, they never where and they never will be, but am I the only one who's seeing changes in what type of players that different countries and regions of the world are producing nowadays compared with how it used to be like 20-30 years ago.
Just a thought, I'm intested to see if anyone else has thought about this recently.
Not really, no
Cocacolajojo wrote:
That's a pity. Any thoughts now?
Mikhail Chigorin wrote:A most interesting thread, however, I don't think Brazil's recent harder/more functional image is, necessarily, a latter day 'state of play'.
I remember going to Hampden Park in 1973 to watch Scotland play Brazil (it was the Scottish FA centenary year). Brazil were doing a European tour, at the time, in preparation for the 1974 World Cup (to be held in Europe) and were attempting to 'acclimatise' themselves with conditions and styles of play they were likely to encounter over here.
The 1970 side had broken up, leaving Clodoaldo, Rivelinho and Jairzhino as the three main 'survivors' and we saw a very different outfit and philosophy to what we had come to expect (or even been led to expect) from that nation; they were hard, very disciplined and quite defensive with a fantastic centre-back in Luiz Pereira (he was sent off in one of the games in Germany the following year, for persistent fowling). They had one or two neat, busy players like the left winger (they played 4-3-3) Valdomiro, who scored the only goal in the game we went to see in Scotland, but they looked a totally different side to the one which had sparkled in Mexico in 1970.
I mentioned this change in style and outlook to a friend of mine at the time, who commented that the Brazilian reputation for flair and ball playing skill hadn't really existed before 1958 and they had been a real "clogging" outfit up to that time.
Don't know if we're seeing a sort of Brazilian reversion, or just one of the cycles that seem to come along in various decades.
mr_nool wrote:Nah. Argentina always had their fair share of brutes, but they've also fostered two of the most technically gifted players ever in Messi an Maradona. Brazil of yorn often had area very gifted "flair players" who could do what they did thanks yo the rest of the squad doing the hard work.
One could argue that Goetze, Reus, ans even Lahm are a new breed of German players, but don't forget the Pierre Litbarskis and Andreas Brehmes of yesteryear.
mr_nool wrote:Nah. Argentina always had their fair share of brutes, but they've also fostered two of the most technically gifted players ever in Messi an Maradona. Brazil of yorn often had area very gifted "flair players" who could do what they did thanks yo the rest of the squad doing the hard work.
One could argue that Goetze, Reus, ans even Lahm are a new breed of German players, but don't forget the Pierre Litbarskis and Andreas Brehmes of yesteryear.
Mikhail Chigorin wrote:mr_nool wrote:Nah. Argentina always had their fair share of brutes, but they've also fostered two of the most technically gifted players ever in Messi an Maradona. Brazil of yorn often had area very gifted "flair players" who could do what they did thanks yo the rest of the squad doing the hard work.
One could argue that Goetze, Reus, ans even Lahm are a new breed of German players, but don't forget the Pierre Litbarskis and Andreas Brehmes of yesteryear.
I'm still thinking about this thread (it is a long, boring summer after all) and the views that people seem to have about Argentina.
Archetypically, they are credited with always having hard, dedicated, disciplined, cynically thuggish defenders (and possibly, to some extent, some of their midfielders) who would be fully prepared to cleave opposing forwards in two, rather than look at them. The reputation of Rattin in the 1966 World Cup would seem to substantiate this opinion.
However, in the 1974 World Cup in Germany (they failed to qualify for the 1970 tournament), they played some beautiful football and were just about the cleanest side in the competition (although, to be fair, they didn't progress beyond the group stage). Unfortunately, in spite of their pretty football in midfield (as exemplified by a young Rene Houseman) and having a decent forward in Rueben Ayala, they didn't score many goals but, more worryingly from their viewpoint, the defence was very brittle and had a propensity for conceding an alarming number of 'soft' goals.
They had a good, ball playing centre-back in Heredia but, by and large, the back four looked as though they had never met each other before and the full backs were particularly poor. All in all, they were completely the opposite of how they are traditionally regarded.
By 1978, things had changed markedly; up front they had had a venomous striking duo in the great Mario Kempes and his far more limited, but still useful and supportive partner, Leopoldo Luque. They scored goals by bucketful.
They played some terrific football in midfield, mainly courtesy of the little genius Osvaldo Ardiles (Ricardo Villa was more of a bit-part player at that stage) but, in defence, there were still problems. The main centre-back was the impressive Daniel Passarella but they had to draft a midfielder, Luis Galvan, into the heart of the defence alongside him and he (Galvan) started the tournament very shakily. Although he improved with each game, he always looked tense and error prone. Moreover, the two full backs (Olguin and Tarantini) were quite elegant ball players and fine attackers but, defensively, they left a lot to be desired individually, as well as collectively and organisationally.
I think it would be fair to say that Argentina excitingly won the 1978 World Cup because of their terrific forward play and in spite of their shaky defence which, once again, bore no resemblance to the way they are normally viewed. I think it's also fair to say that their 'foul-count' in that competition was no worse than some others and better than most.
Mikhail Chigorin wrote:
I'm still thinking about this thread (it is a long, boring summer after all) and the views that people seem to have about Argentina.
Archetypically, they are credited with always having hard, dedicated, disciplined, cynically thuggish defenders (and possibly, to some extent, some of their midfielders) who would be fully prepared to cleave opposing forwards in two, rather than look at them. The reputation of Rattin in the 1966 World Cup would seem to substantiate this opinion.
However, in the 1974 World Cup in Germany (they failed to qualify for the 1970 tournament), they played some beautiful football and were just about the cleanest side in the competition (although, to be fair, they didn't progress beyond the group stage). Unfortunately, in spite of their pretty football in midfield (as exemplified by a young Rene Houseman) and having a decent forward in Rueben Ayala, they didn't score many goals but, more worryingly from their viewpoint, the defence was very brittle and had a propensity for conceding an alarming number of 'soft' goals.
They had a good, ball playing centre-back in Heredia but, by and large, the back four looked as though they had never met each other before and the full backs were particularly poor. All in all, they were completely the opposite of how they are traditionally regarded.
By 1978, things had changed markedly; up front they had had a venomous striking duo in the great Mario Kempes and his far more limited, but still useful and supportive partner, Leopoldo Luque. They scored goals by bucketful.
They played some terrific football in midfield, mainly courtesy of the little genius Osvaldo Ardiles (Ricardo Villa was more of a bit-part player at that stage) but, in defence, there were still problems. The main centre-back was the impressive Daniel Passarella but they had to draft a midfielder, Luis Galvan, into the heart of the defence alongside him and he (Galvan) started the tournament very shakily. Although he improved with each game, he always looked tense and error prone. Moreover, the two full backs (Olguin and Tarantini) were quite elegant ball players and fine attackers but, defensively, they left a lot to be desired individually, as well as collectively and organisationally.
I think it would be fair to say that Argentina excitingly won the 1978 World Cup because of their terrific forward play and in spite of their shaky defence which, once again, bore no resemblance to the way they are normally viewed. I think it's also fair to say that their 'foul-count' in that competition was no worse than some others and better than most.
Dronny wrote:Mikhail Chigorin wrote:
I'm still thinking about this thread (it is a long, boring summer after all) and the views that people seem to have about Argentina.
Archetypically, they are credited with always having hard, dedicated, disciplined, cynically thuggish defenders (and possibly, to some extent, some of their midfielders) who would be fully prepared to cleave opposing forwards in two, rather than look at them. The reputation of Rattin in the 1966 World Cup would seem to substantiate this opinion.
However, in the 1974 World Cup in Germany (they failed to qualify for the 1970 tournament), they played some beautiful football and were just about the cleanest side in the competition (although, to be fair, they didn't progress beyond the group stage). Unfortunately, in spite of their pretty football in midfield (as exemplified by a young Rene Houseman) and having a decent forward in Rueben Ayala, they didn't score many goals but, more worryingly from their viewpoint, the defence was very brittle and had a propensity for conceding an alarming number of 'soft' goals.
They had a good, ball playing centre-back in Heredia but, by and large, the back four looked as though they had never met each other before and the full backs were particularly poor. All in all, they were completely the opposite of how they are traditionally regarded.
By 1978, things had changed markedly; up front they had had a venomous striking duo in the great Mario Kempes and his far more limited, but still useful and supportive partner, Leopoldo Luque. They scored goals by bucketful.
They played some terrific football in midfield, mainly courtesy of the little genius Osvaldo Ardiles (Ricardo Villa was more of a bit-part player at that stage) but, in defence, there were still problems. The main centre-back was the impressive Daniel Passarella but they had to draft a midfielder, Luis Galvan, into the heart of the defence alongside him and he (Galvan) started the tournament very shakily. Although he improved with each game, he always looked tense and error prone. Moreover, the two full backs (Olguin and Tarantini) were quite elegant ball players and fine attackers but, defensively, they left a lot to be desired individually, as well as collectively and organisationally.
I think it would be fair to say that Argentina excitingly won the 1978 World Cup because of their terrific forward play and in spite of their shaky defence which, once again, bore no resemblance to the way they are normally viewed. I think it's also fair to say that their 'foul-count' in that competition was no worse than some others and better than most.
Tarantini, didn't he play for Birmingham if memory serves? I seem to remember he sort of did a Cuntona and smacked some fan or something!
Peter Doherty (AGAIG) wrote:Cocacolajojo - get yourself onto youtube and watch the 1974 World Cup semi-final between Holland and Brazil. Holland play the beautiful game, Brazil play like a bunch of dirty c****.
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