The phenomenon that is Lionel Messi
Lionel
Messi has, by anyone’s standards, defied all logic in the footballing world
over the last few years.
Ever
since his La Liga debut against RCD Espanyol on 16 October 2004 (at 17 years
and 114 days of age) during the Frank Rijkaard era at Barça, it was clear that
here was a player whose impact and legacy on the game would be immeasurable.
When
such luminaries as Cruyff, Platini, Maradona and Di Stefano tell you the boy is
a bit special, then you sit up and take notice. Comparisons with Pele and
Maradona as the best player to have ever played the game have dogged Messi ever
since, but such an argument remains completely subjective.
What
should analysis be based upon? Trophies won, records broken, goals scored,
quality of opposition, how often the player has provided a pivotal moment for
his team? It really is impossible to come to any sort of meaningful conclusion.
Those
who have been lucky enough to see Messi play live however, including myself,
will tell you that it is the Argentinian’s genuine childlike enthusiasm for the
game which marks him out from the rest. It is completely natural, intoxicating
and unique. Simply put, he is happiest with a ball at his feet. That he happens
to be very, very good and recognised as such genuinely seems to be a (welcome)
side note for him.
As
fiercely competitive as any elite sportsman of course, one still derives a
feeling that ‘La Pulga’ would be just as comfortable at home on the streets of
Rosario as he is with the eyes of the footballing world upon him.
Perhaps
it is this element of his personality that elevates him above Real Madrid’s
Cristiano Ronaldo in the opinion of many. The propensity of the Portuguese for
posturing and to crave attention at all times gives him the air of the
pantomime villain – which ultimately detract from his obvious footballing
prowess.
With
a scoring record of more than a goal a game for Real Madrid and too many match
winning performances to recount, including a number of recent decisive El
Clásico contributions, Cristiano along with Messi often sets the benchmark.
To
dismiss his standing in the game is facetious and immature at best, and
certainly not befitting of another natural talent that will leave an indelible
imprint on world football.
Watching
the duel played out in La Liga fixtures each week between these two giants of
the modern era is to witness the football equivalent of McEnroe v Borg. A
relentless pursuit of glory and footballing perfection that is both beautiful
to watch and often artistic in its execution.
Cristiano
is supposedly now in his footballing ‘prime’ at 28 years of age and it’s very
easy to forget that Lionel Messi is still only 25. If he stays injury free he
is likely to have his best playing days still ahead of him, which is a
tantalising prospect for cules who have become accustomed to seeing the
impossible made manifest via the twinkle toes of this South American genius.
His
goalscoring prowess – 334 official career goals (including 303 for Barça) in
just over 8 years is an astonishing achievement. To put this into some sort of
context, look at the career totals of the following players and bear in mind
that Messi potentially has between another 7-10 years left in the game:
Alan
Shearer – 409 career goals over an 18 year period. Alfredo Di Stéfano – 406
career goals in a 21 year period. Diego Maradona – 292 career goals in a 21
year period. Eusébio – 681 career goals in a 22 year period. Pele – 697 career
goals in a 21 year period.
Messi
prefers to play the ‘false nine’ role and as such cannot be considered a
natural centre forward, which makes his goals ratio even more impressive.
Of
course there will always be elements of football society, be they pundits,
supporters etc., that will try to sully Messi’s achievements. Many will point
to the fact that La Liga is a duopoly between Barça and Real and that the
quality of opponents Messi faces most weeks is not of a particularly high
standard, that he couldn’t maintain his level of performance in the English
Premier League.
However
that school of thought flies in the face of the evidence presented. Messi
scores with alarming regularity against the likes of Valencia, Atletico Madrid,
Athletic Bilbao et al, and these are Spanish club sides that have often shown
English teams (and others) the way in recent European ties. Who can forget
Falcao’s single handed demolition of Chelsea in the European Super Cup at the
beginning of this season for instance.
Indeed,
Messi himself can also point to match winning performances and goals scored
when up against English opposition. His four goal salvo against Arsenal in the
Champions League and the two Champions League Final goals (2009, 2011) against
Manchester United readily spring to mind.
One
shouldn’t underplay the part that former Barça manager Pep Guardiola has played
in the trajectory of Messi to the top of the football tree. Lore has it that
Messi’s head was being turned whilst still an impressionable young man by the
influential ex-World Player of the Year Ronaldinho.
Guardiola
as we know was no fan of the fading Brazilian and his party loving lifestyle
and perhaps Pep’s biggest legacy isn’t that of the 14 trophies or of the
unbelievable twist on the total football philosophy – ‘tiki taka’.
Perhaps
it was to take Messi to one side and tell him that he would one day fill
Ronaldinho’s shoes, both domestically and internationally. That Barça would
build a team around him. That one day, with the right attitude and application,
Lionel Messi would write himself into the history books. Forever.
Whatever
was said at that time – mid 2008 – it clearly had the desired effect. Along
with strong discipline, incessant work ethic, unsurpassed coaching ability and
meticulous attention to detail, Messi was convinced that he would be going
places and flourish under the stewardship of the man from Santpedor.
FC
Barcelona, Argentina and football per se are now reaping the rewards. In my
opinion it is only a matter of time before a Messi inspired Argentina go onto
World Cup Glory. Where better than the backyard of their eternal rivals Brazil
in 2014?
So,
as we ponder that, and think about what delights we are yet to behold from this
extraordinarily gifted young man, let me leave you with some mesmerising stats
from Messi’s career so far. Is he/will he be the best ever? I’ll leave you to
make up your own minds:
Trophies won
Barcelona
- La Liga (5): 2004–05, 2005–06,
2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11
- Copa del Rey (2): 2008–09,
2011–12
- Supercopa de España (5): 2005,
2006, 2009, 2010, 2011
- UEFA Champions League (3):
2005–06, 2008–09, 2010–11
- UEFA Super Cup (2): 2009, 2011
- FIFA Club World Cup (2): 2009,
2011
Argentina
- Olympic Gold Medal: 2008
- FIFA U-20 World Cup: 2005
Runner-up:
- Copa America: 2007
Third
place:
- U20 South American Youth
Championship: 2005
Individual
- FIFA Ballon d’Or (3): 2010,
2011, 2012. Created in 2010.
- Ballon d’Or (1): 2009. Ceased
to exist in 2009.
- FIFA World Player of the Year
(1): 2009. Ceased to exist in 2009.
- World Soccer Young Player of
the Year (3): 2006, 2007, 2008.
- World Soccer Player of the Year
(3): 2009, 2011, 2012.
- Onze d’Or (3): 2009, 2011,
2012. No winner in 2010.
- IFFHS World’s Top Goal Scorer
(2): 2011, 2012.
- IFFHS World’s best Top Division
Goal Scorer (1): 2012.
- Goal.com Player of the Year
(2): 2009, 2011.
- El País King of European Soccer
(4): 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012.
- ESPY Best International Athlete
(1): 2012.
- European Golden Shoe (2): 2010,
2012.
- UEFA Best Player in Europe
Award (1): 2011. Created in 2011.
- UEFA Club Footballer of the
Year (1): 2009. Ceased to exist in 2010.
- UEFA Team of the Year (5):
2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012.
- UEFA Champions League Top
Goalscorer (4): 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012.
- UEFA Champions League Forward
of the Year (1): 2009. Ceased to exist in 2010.
- UEFA Champions League Final Man
of the Match (1): 2011.
- FIFA U-20 World Cup Player of
the Tournament (1): 2005.
- FIFA U-20 World Cup Top
Goalscorer (1): 2005.
- FIFA Club World Cup Golden Ball
(2): 2009, 2011.
- FIFA FIFPro World XI (6): 2007,
2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012.
- FIFPro World Young Player of
the Year (3): 2006, 2007, 2008.
- ESM Team of the Year (6):
2005–06, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2011–12.
- Pichichi Trophy (2): 2010,
2012.
- Copa del Rey Top Goalscorer
(1): 2010–2011.
- La Liga Player of the Year (3):
2009, 2010, 2011.
- La Liga Foreign Player of the
Year (3): 2007, 2009, 2010. Ceased to exist in 2010.
- La Liga Ibero-American Player
of the Year (5): 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012.
- LFP Best Player (3): 2009,
2011, 2012. No winner in 2010.
- LFP Best Forward (3): 2009,
2011, 2012. No winner in 2010.
- Marca Leyenda (1): 2009.
- Bravo Award (1): 2007.
- Copa América Young Player of
the Tournament (1): 2007.
- European Golden Boy (1): 2005.
- Olimpia de Oro (1): 2011.
- Olimpia de Plata (7): 2005,
2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012.
Records
Correct as of 2 March 2013
World
- Most FIFA Ballon d’Or awards: 4
- Guinness World Records title
for the most goals in a year: 91 goals
- Most international goals in a
year (club and national team): 25 goals (shared with Vivian Woodward)
- Most goals scored in FIFA Club
World Cup: 4 goals (held jointly with Denilson and Mohamed Aboutrika)
Europe
- Most goals scored in a season
(club): 73 goals
- Most goals scored in a year
(club): 79 goals
- Most goals scored in a European
Cup season: 14 goals (held jointly with José Altafini)
- Most European Cup top scorer
awards: 4 (shared with Gerd Müller)
- Highest scorer in a European
Cup game: 5 goals (held jointly with ten other players)
Argentina
- Most goals scored in a year
(national team): 12 goals (shared with Gabriel Batistuta)
Spain
- Most goals scored in La Liga in
a season: 50 goals
- Most La Liga hat-tricks in a
season: 8 hat-tricks
- Most goals scored in the
Supercopa de España: 10 goals
- Most consecutive La Liga
matches scored in: 16 matches
- Most goals scored in El Clásico
matches: 18 goals (shared with Alfredo Di Stéfano)
Barcelona
Top scorer in official
competitions: 303 goals- Top scorer in La Liga: 208
goals
- Top scorer in UEFA Champions
League: 56 goals
- Top scorer in European
competitions: 57 goals
- Top scorer in international
competitions: 61 goals
- Most all competitions
hat-tricks overall: 22 hat-tricks
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