feggydinho
Senior Member
Great game today. Was playing advanced for the most part. Keep benching him in easier games and put him on for the second 45 minutes if we are not leading by 1-2 goals.
Exactly, this would be perfect
Great game today. Was playing advanced for the most part. Keep benching him in easier games and put him on for the second 45 minutes if we are not leading by 1-2 goals.
There was a stat but I do not remember the exact number. It seemed higher than 50% of his usual 7-8km game.
Ok, I take it back. Did not want to offend you.
This is a relativistic thesis about history which holds partly only true when it comes the whole of human history.
But when we talk about football, sorry but things are getting less chaotic.
Strong changing rooms is a fact in football history, and there are sociological theories that try to explain why it happens.
And I don't buy that it's an exception. Maybe it's not the majority, but it's empirically observed even outside the top level.
I did not say it's univocal. I said there is strong evidence about it, and the most likely scenario based on the totality of evidence we have.
And I never said 'Messi is a tyrant' nor 'Messi is the evil of the team'
These are exaggerative caricature statements that essentially undermine the more nuanced statements that Messi critics make here about his power.
(Ok, there are some users who express themselves in that language, and serious posters can slip some times when they are emotionally unstable -which can happen to everyone btw - , but in their longer posts of analysis they avoid that kind of language and argue seriously. I am sure you can acknowledge that).
Now I don't like this self-referential information, because it attributes authority that should not play any role this forum (If I tell you also what I teach, you will take it back).
Just stick to the fact that I am putting the effort to follow all your points and answer them.
About your point, we are talking about empirical facts here, not a full blown theory that tries to uncover any laws of how reality works.
If a Messi coach says he is hard to manage, this is not a theory nor any concept that is theory-laden, it can be broken down to plain facts and recorded action: when he says Messi does not speak a lot, just looks, he expresses his complains in a specific way etc etc. There is nothing subjective here.
Player power is a concept that is grounded on plain facts about the behavior and attitude of a player, which is essentially an accumulation of anecdotal and testimonial evidence that includes events, dialogues, habits etc
You have misunderstood what the whole discussion is about. The debate whether Messi has power is about accumulation and presentation of empirical evidence that shows that or the contrary. We cannot even talk about theory at this level (it's an overstatement, apart from the casual use of the word), we are talking about common life events.
The only difference today was that he scored, yall are just sleeping
That is what he is struggle this season till now.
Once he is sharp in front of goal, he is an one man army.
Some aspects in his game haven't declined as much as his dribbling in acceleration. For example, he can still shoot well, and he can still spot a great pass, and he can still play excellent one-touch football, he can still execute set-pieces. So he can still be effective if he does these adjustments to consider his obvious decline in some areas. And this decline is especially his dribbling in crowded areas because his burst of pace is not even half of what it was. It was once unbeatable in the first few meters.
Some aspects in his game haven't declined as much as his dribbling in acceleration. For example, he can still shoot well, and he can still spot a great pass, and he can still play excellent one-touch football, he can still execute set-pieces. So he can still be effective if he does these adjustments to consider his obvious decline in some areas. And this decline is especially his dribbling in crowded areas because his burst of pace is not even half of what it was. It was once unbeatable in the first few meters.
I don't find myself very much in agreement.
In tight and crowded spaces, where technique and leg speed count, Messi is still unattainable.
On take ons which implie speed and long runs in the open field, he has less strength to avoid being recovered
Thats why I dont buy the hes finished comments. We have suffered the most because of his bad finishing. But finishing is not something you lose with decline, its more of a mental thing. Dementia kicked in?