[專欄] Barcelona rightfully recognized as o …
看板FCBarcelona作者kevinishia (love will keep us alive)時間14年前 (2011/06/07 10:58)推噓1(1推 0噓 0→)留言1則, 1人參與討論串1/1
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Sid Lowe > Inside Football
A couple of days after the Champions League final, while the repeats were
still running, the game every bit as brilliant as it had been live, an old
episode of Family Fortunes was being broadcast over on another channel. For
those unfamiliar with the program, Family Fortunes was the British quiz show
in which families wearing extremely garish shirts and gigantic shoulder pads
compete for the chance to win £5,000 ($8000) and a car -- and, more
importantly, the opportunity to give the stupidest answer ever and thus be
immortalized on a highlights reel and put up somewhere on the web.
A survey is carried out among 100 members of the British public, who provide
the answers to questions which are then put to the contestants. So, they
might ask: "name a sport you play with a ball," to which the answers will
probably be football, tennis, cricket, etc. The guests will have to guess
what the answers are. The number of people who said each answer in the survey
is the number of points you get for getting it right and every point is a
pound. Simple. And that's just the contestants such as the man who, rather
than saying "swan," responded to the question "name a bird with a long neck"
by blurting out: "Naomi Campbell."
Anyway, this particular evening, one of the questions was even more simple
than normal: "We asked a 100 people to name a word that means 'great'." Along
the line the presenter went, asking the members of the family one by one and
along came the answers: Fabulous . Wonderful . Marvelous . Brilliant .
Fantastic. One of them even went for Wicked (which wasn't there). The
experience, final fresh in the memory, Barça-lauding newspapers still on the
table, was a strange one. There was a kind of parallel between the repeats.
Family Fortunes could have been homage to Barcelona and those who witnessed
them clinch the European Cup at Wembley on May 28.
In the aftermath of its 3-1 victory over Manchester United, the media
appeared to be going through the same exercise, as if they too were on the
quiz show, as if they had swallowed a thesaurus, looking for ways of saying
"great." Not for the first time, there was a serious shortage of
superlatives. Barcelona has been so brilliant so often and now it had been
even more brilliant. For them and for Leo Messi, you were lost for words.
Now, it felt like there was nowhere else to go. How do you say something new?
They called it magical, wonderful and sensational. Barcelona was the best,
from another world, fantasists. The media also took it on a step and made it
about more than just this game, which of course it was, to call it legendary,
momentous, and historic. It was epoch defining, a performance for the ages.
Even AS and Marca, supporters of Real Madrid, were at it. AS called it "Super
Barça," while Marca called them "FÚTBOL club Barcelona" -- the embodiment
of the game itself. The final had been great, super, smashing. But the word
that perhaps describes it best, the one that helps to explain why the
eulogistic headlines had gone beyond the norm, is:
Impeccable.
Perfection is impossible in football, but that does not prevent some
demanding it. This was as close as you are likely to get. There could be no
arguing with the result. The destruction of Manchester United was
unanswerable, Barcelona killed United softly, almost imperceptibly but
defeated it absolutely. It had 64 percent of the possession and completed
more than twice as many passes as United, 777 to 357. By the end, Barcelona
had 12 shots on target to United's one. In total the tally was 22-4. United
goalkeeper Edwin Van der Saar made eight saves, his Barcelona counterpart
Victor Valdés did not make one. United did not even get a corner. It was
almost literally impeccable: Barcelona committed just five fouls. Xavi didn't
commit any at all. He finished the season without committing one in the
entire tournament.
Because it was not a one-off, it was even more significant. This was not
Barcelona doing something it has never done before, but Barcelona doing what
they often do -- only even better and on the greatest possible stage. This
was not Barcelona getting a game right, it was Barcelona getting its game
right. Rarely, if ever, has there been a team with so clear an identity --
for better or worse -- as this team. And as a result, it carried more weight.
This was, to borrow a Spanish phrase, Barcelona in estado puro. Barcelona, in
pure form, untainted.
It was also felt a little like an act of vindication. The performance from
Barcelona was impeccable. It was -- hang on a minute while the thesaurus is
called upon again, while a survey of a 100 people is conducted --
unanswerable, unquestionable, unimpeachable. It felt like it needed to be, as
if there was an act of cleansing required, of purification. This was not just
the assault upon on title, it was the defense of a an identity. It was about
the need to convince people that it really was worthy. In London, Barcelona
did so. There is always a "yeah, but." This time there was not.
When Barcelona are talked about as one of the great sides, there is a natural
-- and healthy -- desire to raise questions and objections. Barcelona plays
nice football, but it's not exactly pragmatic football, they say. What really
matters is winning and winning the big tournaments. It's only Spain; La Liga
is weak. Messi hasn't scored against an English team. This team has only won
one European Cup; as a club it has only won three. In 2009 United was caught
unawares and a little unluckily -- it had dominated the opening nine
minutes(!), United won't make the same mistake again; Barcelona's success of
two years ago will prove hollow.
Saturday night answered all of those emphatically, washing them away.
A solitary game cannot do that of course. But when it is the culmination, it
can. When it is the Champions League final -- the stage upon which wonderful
performances are so rarely delivered but those that are burrow deeper into
the collective conscience. When Messi becomes the competition's top scorer
for the third successive year, when Barcelona wins its second in three
season, its third in six. When it wins. When it wins against England's best
team. In an English stadium. And when it wins the way it won, unquestionably.
The fact that it was impeccable answered other doubts. Jose Mourinho had
famously claimed that he would be ashamed to win the Champions League the way
Pep Guardiola had won it in 2009 and the way he might win it this year. After
the final, they could not be more proud.
When Barcelona celebrated, Gerard Piqué took the mic. and declared: "We
don't take drugs, we don't buy the ref and we don't dive, we just play
football."
The fact that he was moved to say so was telling; this season has worn
Barcelona down, affected the team. The semifinal against Madrid damaged it.
It dented Barcelona's image and turned people against it, lessening its claim
to greatness. Mourinho's conspiracy talk was dismissed as delusional but many
thought he had a point. The moral high ground was occupied: they might be
brilliant but they are cheats; they might play nice football, but they master
the dark arts too -- and they have the referees on side.
Not this time. At Wembley, Sergio Busquets went down holding his face. But he
did it only once and there could be no accusations of theatrics, the ball
hitting him square on the jaw; the referee gave a goal he perhaps should not
have done -- against Barcelona. No ifs, no buts, no arguments. Barcelona even
won back a little of the lost ground when it came to morality, with the guard
of honor for United and, above all, Carles Puyol's gesture in sending Eric
Abidal up to get the Cup. Impeccable.
This was the most convincing of victories and nothing convinces like victory.
Except of course victory after victory. People keep asking for more from
Barcelona, so it has kept delivering more. They say Barcelona is not
pragmatic but what is more pragmatic than winning? There is principle, sure,
but success is what really drives Pep Guardiola. Yes, it could have been
knocked out earlier; yes, decisions went its way, but how many champions have
ever won any competition unquestioned? Those doubts required it to win
without doubts at Wembley. The reaction in the media reflected that.
Suddenly. It was as if people were allowed to say it: for many, Barcelona
became the best team there has ever been.
The best ever? Maybe not -- it is, after all, a heck of a claim. But this
genuinely is historic, no matter what happens next.
Valdés, Messi, Xavi and Iniesta have now won three European cups -- as many
as Beckenbauer, Cruyff or Raúl. In the last 20 years no team has won more
than Barcelona. Guardiola is the youngest coach to win two European Cups. He
has won 10 of a possible 13 trophies. Messi, who spent the flight home
playing a football computer game, has now won 15 titles, including five
leagues and three European Cups. He is only 23. At his age, Diego Maradona
had won four, Di Stéfano three and even Pelé was two behind. If he wins the
Balón d'Or in the winter, which he will, he will equal Michel Platini as the
only player ever to do so three times in a row.
Then there is Xavi, the living expression of Barcelona's football. Maybe even
more than Messi. The man who reinforces the validity of its game; who
embodies the centrality of possession. He is the ideologue at the heart of
the Barcelona team -- and the Spanish national team.
This season he has averaged over 125 passes a game. For so long people
responded with a simple: "ah, but what passes? Backward ones? Sideways ones?"
On Saturday, surely even they saw which passes. Vital ones. On Saturday
night, Xavi completed 148 passes -- the very building blocks of the
possession game, of his team's domination. Even when it is not so sparkling,
passing is the key. Possession was not just about the chances that Barcelona
created but the chances that Manchester United didn't. It always is. Some
teams are lauded for stifling opposition, yet few note that quality in
Barcelona's game or in Spain's. They are aesthetes but there are
anaesthetists too. Xavi's passing is, the critics say, pointless. Earlier
this season, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger talked about "sterile domination"
after losing to Barcelona.
In each and every one of the last four years, Xavi has been at the heart of
the team that won the world's most significant competition -- the man that,
more than anyone else, imposed a style upon those teams. In 2008, he was
European Champion with Spain. In 2009, he won the Champions League. In 2010,
he won the World Cup. And in 2011 he won the Champions League again. Sterile?
Impeccable.
--
Visca el Barca i visca Catalunya !
--
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※ 編輯: kevinishia 來自: 112.104.158.32 (06/07 10:58)
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