The Best Right Backs Ever To Play Soccer

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Posted by admin | Posted in Football Talk | Posted on 15-03-2010

Often the most underrated performer in a soccer team, the right back plays on the right-hand side of the defence. The primary function for the traditional right back is to defend and play their part in the defensive unit. Great right backs in the modern game have evolved to also pose an attacking threat as well as being defensively solid.
Over the last thirty years, the role of the right back has changed into a combination of defence and winger. Despite this, there is still a role in the modern game for purely defensive right-sided defenders. These include Cameroon’s Rigobert Song, Italy’s Christian Panucci and Crystal Palace’s Matt Lawrence. However, the right backs I have selected all possess skills of attack and defence.
Gary Neville is often the subject of abuse and ridicule from opposition fans while playing for Manchester United. Although Neville is not the most gifted player to wear the famous red shirt, he has been one of the most consistent for both United and his country, England.
Neville began his United career in 1992 in the first season of the newly-formed Premier League. In his sixteen years of professional football, he had become one of the successful right backs in soccer history. He has collected seven Premier League titles, three FA Cup winners’ medals as well as being part of two Champions League winning squads.
Neville’s consistency and determination have enabled him to appear in 85 international matches, including performances at Euro 96, 2000 and 2004. He also played in the 1998 and 2006 World Cups, although his appearance at the 2002 World Cup was denied by a foot injury. Competitiveness and reliability are paramount to Neville’s success as he remains a one-club man, a rare thing in the modern game.
Neville has never won a major international honour with England, unlike France’s Lilian Thuram. The recently-retired Thuram has won both the FIFA World Cup and the European Championship in a glittering 14 year international career. Another solid performer, Thuram rarely made mistakes and also enjoyed a massively successful club career in France, Italy and finally Spain.
Winning 142 international caps, Thuram only ever scored two goals for his country. These came in one of his country’s most important matches, as Thuram scored twice to help France overturn a one goal deficit to beat Croatia 2-1 in the FIFA World Cup semi-final. France would go on to win the tournament and cement Thuram’s place in history.
Thuram has enjoyed a fantastic career, although he hasn’t won as many trophies as his ability deserves. Among his honours are the UEFA Cup, Coppa Italia, two Serie A titles, two Italian Super Cup titles as well as the Spanish Super Cup. However, Lilian Thuram is one of the greatest right backs to ever play the game of soccer, only surpassed by the brilliance of Brazilian World Cup winner Cafu.
Cafu is known for his fantastic fitness and ability to make overlapping runs to help his team attack. These skills enabled the Brazilian to play a record-breaking 156 times for his country, winning two FIFA World Cup finals as well as a runners up medal.
Cafu has enjoyed an extensive career for club and country as he continuously reaches for the highest standards. His dedication and admirable fitness helped him to win various awards and club competitions including UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup Winners Cup and various league titles.
Three of the greatest defenders ever to play soccer, and certainly the best right backs of the last thirty years. All three show great levels of enthusiasm, commitment, ambition and desire to match their abilities. It would appear that these personal skills helped them achieve so much in the modern world of international and club soccer.

What was the most memorable football/soccer game you ever viewed?

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Posted by admin | Posted in Football Talk | Posted on 14-03-2010

I remember two: One was the Redskins against New York Giants with Lawrence Taylor. Poor Joe Theisman’s career ended on the field that day. The other was a game against Chicago Bears (home field advantage) and Philly Eagles. The game had to be stopped temporarily because thick fog came rolling in.

The Best Centre Backs Ever To Play Soccer

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Posted by admin | Posted in Football Talk | Posted on 13-03-2010

At the heart of any great soccer team, there must be a great centre back. The spine of the team consists of a goalkeeper, centre back, centre midfielder and centre forward, and so the central defender is vital to a solid defence. Often, the centre back will be the team captain and need to orchestrate not only the back line but the whole team.
Great centre backs are strong, good in the air and will marshall the defence with authority. Examples of this include Chelsea’s John Terry, France’s Marcel Desailly and Wigan’s Titus Bramble. These players rarely make mistakes and are regularly required to put their head where others put their feet or don’t even put them.
Since first watching the game almost thirty years ago, I have seen some fantastic centre backs and so will pick the best from this period from the 80s to the current day. The best centre back in the modern game would have all of the aforementioned skills as well as a calmness and ability to play a pass and build play from the back.
The Italian national side is famously built upon the ability to defend. Having recently lifted the FIFA World Cup with what would most supporters would consider a weak team for Italy, their defence was notoriously hard-to-beat, led by the team captain Fabio Cannavaro.
Cannavaro is one of the most decorated defenders in the modern game, and only the second defender to win the FIFA World Player of the Year in 2006. Playing 118 times for his country, Cannavaro has also won major honours in Italy and Spain including two La Liga titles for Real Madrid.
Cannavaro follows on in the tradition of quality Italian centre backs, with the likes of Franco Baresi leading the way. Baresi is one of the most graceful centre backs to have played the game, with more skill than many central midfielders. Baresi’s ability warranted far more awards and trophies than his career would deliver, having played in the underachieving Italian national side of the 1980s.
Baresi was coolness personified as he played the game of soccer at his own pace. Much like the greats before him, Bobby Moore and Franz Beckenbauer, Baresi lacks pace but his reading of the game was second-to-none. A twenty year career with AC Milan saw the Italian international pick up several major honours including three European Cups, six Italian Championships and many other Italian and European cup competitions.
Baresi was part of the Italian 1982 World Cup winning squad, although he didn’t play. He was a major part of their 1990 campaign, eventually finishing third in their own country. However, Baresi’s final action for his country was missing the first penalty in the 1994 World Cup Final shoot-out that Italy lost to Brazil. The international career os such a legend could have ended so differently.
English defenders are known across the world for their no-nonsense tackling, never-say-die attitude and inability to pass the football. England international Tony Adams was known as donkey, despite his qualities and various others before him have been criticised for their lack of cuteness and style.
There is a modern England centre back that seems to defy this tradition and bears more resemblance to an Italian or Brazilian. Manchester United’s Rio Ferdinand possesses many ball-playing skills, as well as the work rate, passion, determination and power that the English Premier League demands.
Ferdinand has been the subject of two record-breaking transfers in his career of 18 million pounds and thirty three million pounds when moving from Leeds United to Manchester United in 2002. Ferdinand has also played seventy times for England, following his debut at the tender age of 19 years and 8 days.
Ferdinand is still playing top-flight football, and is expected to achieve much more as his career progresses. He has however, already won three Premier League titles and the UEFA Champions League but has yet to win the FA Cup. Ferdinand’s skill on the ball is enviable and enables him to make forward runs, often sidestepping opposition midfielders with ease.
Ferdinand, Baresi and Cannavaro are all excellent on the ball and would make exceptional defensive midfielders, a skill that separates the good centre backs from the truly great centre backs. Power, strength, skill and aggression make these three some of the best players in the world, as well as the best centre backs.