Who remembers whom based on what kinda incident is really his own personal choice...
For ex. Liverpool supporters obviously remember Sheva's miss more fondly
And I thnink you can't really say it's English thing either... I'm positive Chelsea fans would try to remember more of Terry's goal line clearance of a Giggs' shot into open goal rather than his slip!!
Yeah, I got the point but we are talking about ZIDANE and Sheva of all players. I mean those guys, especially Zidane had so many career highlights that it's not even funny. I really struggle to believe that the
majority remember him more for his headbutt than his amazing career.
It also make no sense based on the interest on Youtube and general discussions. I have never talked about Maradona, Zidane and other legends of the game and first mentioned their failures, have you? When I think about Maradona I don't think about his cocaine addiction first or his fight against Bilbao in the 1980's and other career lows.
Imagine sitting with a few of your friends and talking about football, including individual players. Would you seriously start your conversation/arguments by starting to talk about his headbutt if you talked about Zidane?
Or if Messi never wins a World Cup would you talk about him being a failure for Argentina rather than one of the best players in football history? Or what about Messi now? He has had his best season in his life and scored about 80 goals for club and country (Can't remember the exact number).
But do you really think that
most (we are discussing what they will be remembered for
the most) would talk about his missed penalty against Chelsea in the CL-semifinal or his season overall and amazing records?
I just don't get that logic if that's REALLY the case with most as AnfieldED and Jenks claims (both English and both fans of English football so of course they will remember Sheva's miss against Liverpool (an English team) more than anything else, especially when they have no wide interest in Italian football or are fans of a Italian club. Remember it's the overall perception not a perception of a limited groups of football fans (in this case an Liverpool fan form England and an fan of English football)
It's an interesting discussion because I think it would be sad if legends of the game REALLY are remembered more for their failures than actual success (which the overwhelming part of their career's have been). No, that can't be right. And should that really be the case then that's a sad, sad thing.