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O FENOMENO

Saturday, 23 February 08, 07:34 PM


It’s a shame really. You know him as the fat-nomeno, a caricature of a carioca forward, butt of a thousand Real Madrid jokes, last remnant of a Galactico winter, but those like me who remember 1994, when Brazil won the World Cup against favored Italy, the name Ronaldo still carries weight.

For me, he was the paciest player I have ever seen. At PSV he was, a gangly center forward, just off the shuttle from Brazil, spending two fruitful years in Eindhoven bagging 42 goals in 46 appearances and drawing notice from Barcelona, leaving for the waiting arms of Sir Bobby Robson and big time European football.

We often forget how dominant a forward he really was at his heights. He pulled Brazil almost singlehandedly into the 2002 World Cup, won the Golden Shoe scoring eight goals, and lifting the trophy for the selecao. He was called up for the last 4 World Cups, playing in three, becoming the greatest goal scorer in the history of the World Cup. He trails only Pele and Zico as the greatest international goal scorers in the history of the Brazilian national team. In 11 years playing on the biggest stage, for three of the biggest clubs in the world (Inter Milan, Barcelona and Real Madrid), Ronaldo scored 166 goals.

Despite all the accomplishments, we often note that he never won the Champions League and that his clubs often struggled to win league titles with him. We remember him for the weird soul-patch haircut on his forehead, the weirder chia-pet one for Milan, the epileptic seizures that took him before the 1998 World Cup final against France, and the devastating knee injuries that robbed him of most of his pace, but none of skill and panache on the ball. Instead of remembering him for his perseverance, returning to play for Inter after many had written him off, we call him a mercenary for repaying Moratti’s loyalty by taking Real Madrid’s money and leaving for Spain. We call him an destabilizing force, a poor teammate, undedicated, and the worst of the Galactico policy.

We even remember him more for his personal life, filled with a litany of Brazilian supermodels, television presenters, singers and actresses. We see the fast cars, the easy money, and the high life. We see him slow down, gain weight and we call him lazy. Even the President of Brazil calls him fat and lazy.

We all age and change, but a phenomenon has no business being human, he is constantly compared to the player he was, even if he has a lot left to give. It would be so much easier if he went away, if we could just remember the good times, then he could be a legend one that burned brightly and flamed out, rather than the one who lagged about and overstayed his welcome.

Now he has injured himself again. A twin injury to his first, one in rossoneri compared to one in nerazzurri. We blame Milan labs, or the PSV doctors, or the Brazilians themselves, and again we ignore the player. We continue to ignore the man for the myth. We break down our idols after building them up. Will we be able to appreciate his skill only after he has retired?

I think he still has a great deal to play for and to play towards. Is it in Brazil or in the U.S.? Who knows. Remember, he is younger than Hernan Crespo, David Beckham, Alessandro Del Piero, Clarence Seedorf and Fernando Morientes. He is only slightly older than Thierry Henry and Raul Gonzalez, and he is the same age within days of Francesco Totti. I think he has earned a right to choose for himself.

He is not just a commodity, a manufactured image, a poster on a wall. Nike’s football savior, until they find another one, a younger, slimmer model with rock star good looks, and pretty step-overs, but none of the definition and serene finishing. Despite sharing the same name, and a common language, this new Ronaldo (Cristiano) will never fill the shoes of Ronaldo Luis Nazario da Lima. Ronaldinho before Ronaldinho.  O Fenomeno.

Mando from Forza Futbol 

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Like A Duck in a Thunderstorm - Pato to Milan

Wednesday, 16 January 08, 12:48 AM

Give Alexandre Pato credit. He has said all the right things, he has impressed all the right people and tomorrow he’ll be introducing himself to the rossoneri faithful after almost 5 months in the shadows. The kid, likened to a young Ronaldo when he was at Cruzeiro (listen to our interviews, you’ll hear the most interesting comments), one who will score 30 goals by this June.Let’s take a step back folks. The kid is no saviour. Yet. Alexandre Rodrigues da Silva from Pato Branco (that’s why he’s got the nickname) has played 26 times for Brazilian club Internacional of Porto Alegre.

Inter. . . how ironic and, yes as usual, like that broken toy that talks aloud when nobody even touched him, Inter honcho Massimo Moratti said yet again, “Pato? We could’ve had him too!” Well, Pato scored 5 goals at the South American Youth Championships to help qualify Brazil for the Olympics. He helped Inter to the Brazilian Sub-20 Championship, the Recopa Sudamericana, and led them to the 2006 Fifa Club World Cup title beating the European champs Barcelona: a game that he was taken off in if memory serves me correct, and one that he had little to measure himself by.

Still, the kid can play. He’s a phenomenal talent and the sort of player that the Milanistas have been craving for, dying for as they’ve seen one talented South American player after another travel across the courtyard to the nerazzurri side of town.Calm down folks. He just barely turned 18. Kaka was two years older than Ducky when he reached Milano in 2003, and didn’t crack the starting lineup until a month later. Ricky started off slow, playing comfortably in a five man midfield just behind Shevchenko as a trequartista and alongside Pirlo, Gattusso and the like. Alex won’t have that luxury.

Sure, he’ll have Kaka and whatever the club can squeeze out of O Fenomeno, but this isn’t your older brother’s Milan (let alone your dad’s). He’ll do well. He might even score that brace that he predicted against Napoli tomorrow, but he can’t do it alone. There is no midseason Brazilian miracle for Milan this year, unless it also come with the names Lucio, Ronaldinho, Amauri and Dida attached.Well, maybe not Dida.

Mando from FF

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A Prayer Before Firing - Rafa and Liverpool

Saturday, 12 January 08, 01:20 PM


When Guillem Balague wrote his book Season on the Brink, a tale of the unlikely victory by Liverpool in the Champions League Final, no one expected that title to hold sway on the Reds again so quickly, and for such different circumstances.All season, Benitez has been under fire by the American owners, by the Liverpool faithful, and by pundits who generally give Liverpool a wide berth, but much of the criticism is of his own making.I won’t get into his rotational policy. All European managers, or at least the successful ones, rotate players in and out for different competitions. His problem lies simply in that he has failed himself.Rafa Benitez did not beat AC Milan by himself. He had a backroom staff that he brought over from Valencia, led by Chief Scout and ex-Merida and Albacete coach Paco Herrera, assistant and fitness coach Pako Ayesteran, and goalkeepeing coach Jose Ochotorena, who have all left since that victory in Istanbul.Ochotorena returned to Valencia to become their goalkeeping coach under apparently amicable circumstances, and Pako Ayesteran famously left under a cloud, as his friend and confidante Benitez threw him under the bus, taking away much of his authority as an administrator and trainer for the club. Ayesteran was also widely seen as a good cop to Rafa’s bad cop to the players, and his presence or lack thereof has been mentioned by some as a reason why the club have underperformed, but frankly these are professionals. They shouldn’t need coddling by an understanding and sympathetic assistant.I believe the primary reason why Benitez is under fire is that he never adequately replaced Paco Herrera who left to become Sporting Director at RCD Espanyol, and with ex-Periquito Ernesto Valverde, he has taken the Barcelona club to within a breath of the La Liga leaders. Benitez on the other hand has been in charge of a revolving door of washed up players like Bellamy, exuberant workmen like Dirk Kuyt, and not-ready for prime time players (yet) like Ryan Babel. He lucked into Mascherano and had the brilliant signing of the new decade in Fernando Torres.Now, obviously I’m no Liverpool fan, and I’ll probably get the most flack I’ve ever gotten with this post. Just know that I’ve been following Benitez since before his Valencia days, as he was about to take over from Cuper, and I sided with him in his battles against Mourinho (see one of my early posts on this blog in fact), but I can’t see where this will end well for him.We can blame the media for a perceived bias against Scouser Nation, or the lack of support from the new foreign owners, but ultimately Benitez has failed himself. He had a staff in place to deflect criticism and share responsibility which allowed him to do what he does best: develop tactics to defeat his opponents. Rather than continue with his winning formula, he never adequately replaced his backroom staff.

Mando from FF

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Forza Futbol podcast week 14 is available to listen!

Monday, 16 July 07, 10:50 PM

In this episode we discuss:

o IN FOCUS - Footy Bling Lists - the World's Richest Football Players, the World's Top Power Clubs, the World's Richest Coaches, etc.

o The Neverending Silly Season in Serie A and La Liga

o Copa America and U20 World Cup round up

o A new segment - BLOG THIS! with Mando

o Mando on Becks' Press Conference!


You can listen to us on our myspace, podbean.com, itunes, and our zigazoga.com page.  Let us know what you think.  Comment, blog or email us at forza.futbol@yahoo.com.

Gracias y Ciao bellas**

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Forza Futbol episode 7 - weekly podcast - is now available to take a listen!

Wednesday, 30 May 07, 10:58 AM

The seventh episode of Forza Futbol is now up. You can get it at Itunes or at PodBean.

Have a question or a comment? Send us an email at forza.futbol@yahoo.com

This week on Forza Futbol we discussed Champions League Final.

We also took a look at the final week in Serie A Week 38. Games we highlighted are Reggina - Milan and Catania - Chievo.

In Spain we headed to Valencia - Villarreal, Real Madrid - Deportivo, Sevilla - Zaragoza and Barcelona v Getafe in round 36 of La Liga.


And as always we brought you the latest in transfer gossip and news.

Have something to say? Have a question, comment or opinion? Want more coverage of your team? Want to talk about players? Then email us at forza.futbol@yahoo.com

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Coming up on Forza Futbol episode 7 - weekly podcast!

Tuesday, 29 May 07, 02:23 PM

We discuss-
Champions League Final - Milan v Liverpool.  Milan finally gets revenge.

Final Round 38 Serie A -  Reggina v AC Milan, Catania v Chievo Verona, best of the rest, table review and transfer rumors and gossip.  The relegation battle is finally settled on the last day.

Round 36 La Liga -  Valencia v Villarreal, Real Madrid v Deportivo, Barca v Getafe, Sevilla v Real Zaragoza,  best of the rest, table review, and transfer rumors and gossip.  Los Ches are out of the title race and Ronnie gets a red.  Ouch!

You can listen to us on myspace, podbean.com and itunes. Email us at forza.futbol@yahoo.com. We'd love to hear from you or check out our blog on myspace, oleole.com and facebook or our groups on google and myspace.

A sharper lens of the top two leagues in Europe.

Ciao y gracias**

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