Whoever you are, "BusiTheKing", did you watch Valverde's last game, the match we lost to Atletico Madrid in Saudi Arabia? The match where Messi played out of his mind but was punished repeatedly by VAR? Remember, it was jus a few months ago, just before the COVID mess.
Messi single-handedly destroyed Atletico but - at the end - because of VAR Bar?a lost a game where they played great entertaining football.
If Messi was able to dominate Atletico a few months ago and dominated Osasuna today, how can you denigrate him today, when he scored a beautiful goal and then paid a classy tribute to his Argentina predecessor as #10, as the world's best player?
You're talking like I'm attacking the man. I have no agenda, just being realistic about him.
What I'm saying is that while his genius has full outlet in games like Osasouna, it will have very diminished platform in tough, intense games unless he starts running for real. Games where the spaces aren't just there but where you have to seek them out. Invent them. Move persistently to discompose the opposition until they appear and then grab them with no hesitation.
What I'm looking for are signs that he's willing to put that kind of work in.
And no, it's clearly not just a case of physical limitations, old age, fatigue. Leo has no issue expending energy in alternate ways. Trying runs from deep, fighting vigorously for balls if he feels personally squared up.
This is very much a mental thing. It's about putting yourself in situations where you can fail. Daring. It's clear that he actively avoids working to get in situations that might lead to dissapointent. Instead of getting the ball in momentum, he wants to get it while the attack is dead. He wants to create something out of nothing more than he wants to put himself in advantageous positions from where something is expected from him, where he can fail.