Jump to content
talkfootball365
  • Welcome to talkfootball365!

    The better place to talk football.

Legends Of Each Country


Recommended Posts

Just now, Dr. Gonzo said:

Can I just say: lol @ James Rodriguez. Surely Falcao or Higuita ahead of him?

No, James is arguably the best Colombian player ever. He had a huge dip in form after he developed an attitude but he still was excellent in his first season at Madrid, Bayern and for a few months at Everton he showed his class. He also was Banfield’s best player in their only title win ever and lead Colombia to an unthinkable quarter final (and I say this because nobody believed me when I said they could go that far, not because of what an increíble team they clearly were). 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 73
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Or maybe its because Gazza looks like a bricklayer and his constant fuck ups despite being one of the best and most talented players in the world made him endearing to several generations of working class boys. Maybe it puts a smile in the heart of every footy playing boy that grew up to be a builder going on coke binges once a week.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Spike said:

It’s because Gazza played in the Premier League and had more exposure to a wider audience I suppose, with the game being ‘more professional’. You’d have to think if Keegan had played in the 90s he’d be the biggest star in the world, but nah he has a terrible 70s perm and fucked off to Germany for a couple of years.

This is important. Players these days are much better but I think it’s more fair to compare the legacy they left on an era and respect each era in its own right.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Goku de la Boca said:

This is important. Players these days are much better but I think it’s more fair to compare the legacy they left on an era and respect each era in its own right.

No it isn’t important, because Gazza barely played in the Premier League, I fucked up. He is much older than I thought.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Goku de la Boca said:

No, James is arguably the best Colombian player ever. He had a huge dip in form after he developed an attitude but he still was excellent in his first season at Madrid, Bayern and for a few months at Everton he showed his class. He also was Banfield’s best player in their only title win ever and lead Colombia to an unthinkable quarter final (and I say this because nobody believed me when I said they could go that far, not because of what an increíble team they clearly were). 

I think longevity works against James when there's other players to consider. If he's their best player ever, and I don't think he is, I think he's massively overrated off the back of one tournament - it makes me wonder where Asprilla would list in their all time list of greats.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Dr. Gonzo said:

I think longevity works against James when there's other players to consider. If he's their best player ever, and I don't think he is, I think he's massively overrated off the back of one tournament - it makes me wonder where Asprilla would list in their all time list of greats.

Falcao by that logic also doesn't have longevity. He was a very different player after injury. I will admit they aren't that far off though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Goku de la Boca said:

Falcao by that logic also doesn't have longevity. He was a very different player after injury. I will admit they aren't that far off though.

Yeah that's why I mentioned Asprilla the second time around - a player I remember being great at Parma, kind of less great at Newcastle, and then went back to Parma and won something again lol.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Goku de la Boca said:

As would most, I suppose the 2014 generation will be seen as legends as time goes on. From 2006-2014, they were the most consistent World Cup team and did manage to eventually win it.

Not necessarily. Indeed the "Breslau Elf"  from 1937, who won no International accolade is more of a name in football Germany than the European champions of 1980.Indeed the Euro winning squad of 1972 is more iconic than the WC champions from 2 years later. Also the team from the 80's that won the WC 1990 and ended as runners-up in both WC before that isn't more respected than that of 1966., argueably. It takes more than simply winning an International title for a German team to become legendary. Germans are much too spoilt with historical success. If Germans were asked for legendary teams of their history, most would probably only mention the WC winners of 54 and the Euro winners of 72l.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Rucksackfranzose said:

Not necessarily. Indeed the "Breslau Elf"  from 1937, who won no International accolade is more of a name in football Germany than the European champions of 1980.Indeed the Euro winning squad of 1972 is more iconic than the WC champions from 2 years later. Also the team from the 80's that won the WC 1990 and ended as runners-up in both WC before that isn't more respected than that of 1966., argueably. It takes more than simply winning an International title for a German team to become legendary. Germans are much too spoilt with historical success. If Germans were asked for legendary teams of their history, most would probably only mention the WC winners of 54 and the Euro winners of 72l.

That is a neat German point of view and I respect it. However, I can definitely say that for a lot of people outside Germany it can be debated. Germany 2014 wasn't my favourite in terms of performances but in terms of quality it was an absolutely ridiculous team and even managed to beat Brazil 7-1 in a time where that is near impossible (especially in a place Brazil was deemed unbeatable).

I have always said I liked the 2010 team more despite not winning but I get your point. 2002 was not a good side and they managed to reach the final.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Administrator

Happily take the comments about Keegan on board. I guess when I think of England legends he's not one that comes to mind straight away. Perhaps a generational thing. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Stan said:

Happily take the comments about Keegan on board. I guess when I think of England legends he's not one that comes to mind straight away. Perhaps a generational thing. 

I probably know more about him than I would otherwise... because my dad wouldn't shut the fuck up about how much he loved Keegan when I was a kid xD

Tbf, we're only going to be familiar with him from highlight reels on youtube cos like you say... we were born well after Keegan's playing days & from just hearing about him. We probably remember him better as a manager. But I think it's interesting there's players from the same era that kind of don't have their legacies as forgotten, while Keegan's one of the top players from that era and I guess doesn't have the same respect. And maybe a part of it is because of how Liverpool replaced Keegan after he went on to Germany, where he won those Balon d'Ors, like @LFCMike says. I think perhaps if we hadn't signed our best player ever as his immediate replacement... maybe the memory of how good he was for Liverpool would have been more established.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, Dr. Gonzo said:

I probably know more about him than I would otherwise... because my dad wouldn't shut the fuck up about how much he loved Keegan when I was a kid xD

Tbf, we're only going to be familiar with him from highlight reels on youtube cos like you say... we were born well after Keegan's playing days & from just hearing about him. We probably remember him better as a manager. But I think it's interesting there's players from the same era that kind of don't have their legacies as forgotten, while Keegan's one of the top players from that era and I guess doesn't have the same respect. And maybe a part of it is because of how Liverpool replaced Keegan after he went on to Germany, where he won those Balon d'Ors, like @LFCMike says. I think perhaps if we hadn't signed our best player ever as his immediate replacement... maybe the memory of how good he was for Liverpool would have been more established.

Milenials have left a mark on social media football.

You see so many people talk about Zidane nonstop but not about Platini or Van Basten.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Stan said:

Happily take the comments about Keegan on board. I guess when I think of England legends he's not one that comes to mind straight away. Perhaps a generational thing. 

Probably doesn't help that he played for England at a time when they were shit, failing to qualify for two World Cups and a Euros in the 70s. His achievements outside of the national team though are obviously up there with the very best 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd suggest perception of Keegan is effected by his 1972 - 1982 era. Similar for the likes of Trevor Francis, Ray Wilkins & Trevor Brooking.  England did not qualify for 74 or 78. And 82 was underwhelming. So, yes, the 1966-70 players are obviously more highly talked of. And the 86-90 players. Even the 'Golden Generation'. Which actually was not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 09/01/2024 at 16:30, Goku de la Boca said:

Brazil

Pele

Garrincha

Chile

Alexis Sanchez

Arturo Vidal

Germany

Toni Kroos

Franz Beckenbauer

England

Bobby Charlton

Kevin Keegan

France

Kylian Mbappe

Michel Platini

Italy

Paolo Maldini

Roberto Baggio

 

Got to say, I generslly try to think the first two players thst come to mind. Not always the best, but generslly good, probably more iconic.

When I think of Brazil, it's 100% Fat Ronaldo. Absolute phenominan. And that's even over Rivaldo and Ronaldinho. Pure magic. He'd always be my pick over Garrincha.

Chile for me has to contain one of either Marcelo Salas or Ivan Zamorano, maybe even both?

Germany would contain Jurgen Klinsmann or Lother Matthaus over Kroos, easy.

England would contain either Gary Lineker or Alan Shearer instead of Keegan for me.

France would be Zinedine Zidane over Mbappe, easily.

Italy I'd swap Baggio for Dino Zoff or Buffon I think, as much as I love Baggio. The other two are just more iconic, especially for the position they play too. 

 

A few I've not seen mentioned that spring to mind for me...

Belgium

Enzo Scifo and Kevin De Bruyne.

Czech Republic

Karel Poborsky and Paolo Nedved

Romania

Georghi Hagi and Gheorghe Popescu

Bulgaria

Hristo Stoichkov and Dimitar Berbatov

Denmark

Michael Laudrup and Peter Schmeichel

Sweden

Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Henrick Larsson

Switzerland

Xerdhan Shaqiri and Stephane Chapuisat

Cameroon

Roger Milla and Samuel Eto'o

Senegal

El-Hadji Diouf and Papa Bouba Diop

Ghana

Tony Yeboah and Sammy Kuffour

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Lucas said:

Got to say, I generslly try to think the first two players thst come to mind. Not always the best, but generslly good, probably more iconic.

When I think of Brazil, it's 100% Fat Ronaldo. Absolute phenominan. And that's even over Rivaldo and Ronaldinho. Pure magic. He'd always be my pick over Garrincha.

Chile for me has to contain one of either Marcelo Salas or Ivan Zamorano, maybe even both?

Germany would contain Jurgen Klinsmann or Lother Matthaus over Kroos, easy.

England would contain either Gary Lineker or Alan Shearer instead of Keegan for me.

France would be Zinedine Zidane over Mbappe, easily.

Italy I'd swap Baggio for Dino Zoff or Buffon I think, as much as I love Baggio. The other two are just more iconic, especially for the position they play too. 

 

A few I've not seen mentioned that spring to mind for me...

Belgium

Enzo Scifo and Kevin De Bruyne.

Czech Republic

Karel Poborsky and Paolo Nedved

Romania

Georghi Hagi and Gheorghe Popescu

Bulgaria

Hristo Stoichkov and Dimitar Berbatov

Denmark

Michael Laudrup and Peter Schmeichel

Sweden

Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Henrick Larsson

Switzerland

Xerdhan Shaqiri and Stephane Chapuisat

Cameroon

Roger Milla and Samuel Eto'o

Senegal

El-Hadji Diouf and Papa Bouba Diop

Ghana

Tony Yeboah and Sammy Kuffour

 

Chile for me would be Salas and Zamorano too. Maybe because the 98 World Cup is the first tournament I remember properly and remember Salas scoring that brilliant volley against England at Wembley before that tournament. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Lucas said:

Got to say, I generslly try to think the first two players thst come to mind. Not always the best, but generslly good, probably more iconic.

When I think of Brazil, it's 100% Fat Ronaldo. Absolute phenominan. And that's even over Rivaldo and Ronaldinho. Pure magic. He'd always be my pick over Garrincha.

Chile for me has to contain one of either Marcelo Salas or Ivan Zamorano, maybe even both?

Germany would contain Jurgen Klinsmann or Lother Matthaus over Kroos, easy.

England would contain either Gary Lineker or Alan Shearer instead of Keegan for me.

France would be Zinedine Zidane over Mbappe, easily.

Italy I'd swap Baggio for Dino Zoff or Buffon I think, as much as I love Baggio. The other two are just more iconic, especially for the position they play too. 

 

A few I've not seen mentioned that spring to mind for me...

Belgium

Enzo Scifo and Kevin De Bruyne.

Czech Republic

Karel Poborsky and Paolo Nedved

Romania

Georghi Hagi and Gheorghe Popescu

Bulgaria

Hristo Stoichkov and Dimitar Berbatov

Denmark

Michael Laudrup and Peter Schmeichel

Sweden

Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Henrick Larsson

Switzerland

Xerdhan Shaqiri and Stephane Chapuisat

Cameroon

Roger Milla and Samuel Eto'o

Senegal

El-Hadji Diouf and Papa Bouba Diop

Ghana

Tony Yeboah and Sammy Kuffour

 

I think Mbappe vs Zidane is debatable. Zidane at club level has achieved more easily, but in my opinion Mbappe has already done more at national team level. I suppose it really depends on what the end of his career will tell us, and we're still about 10 years away.

The one I disagree with though is the Chileans. Alexis Sanchez is comfortably their best ever player and I don't think it's even a debate. Vidal could probably be debated but Sanchez carried them to their second Copa America win and was a top 3 player in the Premier League in his prime. My dad has told me that he was comfortably better than Zamorano (since I was too young to remember him). 

Also I think for Senegal that Sadio Mane is above El Hadji Diouf, but I guess it depends on where you rank what they achieved at the separate World Cups.

Agree with the rest. I will admit Kroos was a very bold take.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, DeadLinesman said:

Zidane shits all over Mbappe both at domestic and international level. It’s not even a conversation.

The latter I disagree with strongly. In only 2 World Cups Mbappe is proyected to be more important than Pele and is already breaking records. At club level I suppose it isn't a debate, Mbappe hasn't really been a "different player" yet.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 09/01/2024 at 19:45, Rucksackfranzose said:

Not necessarily. Indeed the "Breslau Elf"  from 1937, who won no International accolade is more of a name in football Germany than the European champions of 1980.Indeed the Euro winning squad of 1972 is more iconic than the WC champions from 2 years later. Also the team from the 80's that won the WC 1990 and ended as runners-up in both WC before that isn't more respected than that of 1966., argueably. It takes more than simply winning an International title for a German team to become legendary. Germans are much too spoilt with historical success. If Germans were asked for legendary teams of their history, most would probably only mention the WC winners of 54 and the Euro winners of 72l.

Really? What about the 1974 World Cup winning team and the 1990 World Cup winning team? That 1990 squad was stacked with quality players who would go on to play for many more international tournaments.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 09/01/2024 at 23:16, Reluctant Striker said:

I'd suggest perception of Keegan is effected by his 1972 - 1982 era. Similar for the likes of Trevor Francis, Ray Wilkins & Trevor Brooking.  England did not qualify for 74 or 78. And 82 was underwhelming. So, yes, the 1966-70 players are obviously more highly talked of. And the 86-90 players. Even the 'Golden Generation'. Which actually was not.

This is exactly the point that I wanted to make. The reason that Keegan is pretty much forgotten by a lot of people, is much less to do with the fact he didn't play in the 1990s or play in the Premier League. Because Bobby Charlton was much older than Keegan, but he was always regarded as an English footballing legend, arguably our best ever player. It's more to do with the fact that Keegan played at a time when the England national team of the 1970's were quite frankly a bit shit. We failed to qualify for both the 1974 and 1978 World Cups, as well as the 1976 Euros. Keegan only ever played in 2 international tournaments for England, namely the 1980 Euros and the 1982 World Cup. In the former tournament, England failed to even qualify from their group. Although Keegan played in both of these tournaments for England, he failed to score a single goal. I think shining for England and playing well at a major international tournament for England, goes a long way in helping a player gain that legend status. 

Keegan was no doubt an excellent player at club level, where he achieved a heck of a lot of accolades. But it's clear to me, that his lack of success with England is one of the major reasons people tend to forget him when thinking of the great England players through the generations. Although I am too young to have watched him live, I know many of the older people in my family who rave about how good Keegan was as a player. Some of the Youtube clips I've watched of him also seem to confirm how talented he was. He should definitely be classed as one of England's best ever players. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, Michael said:

Really? What about the 1974 World Cup winning team and the 1990 World Cup winning team? That 1990 squad was stacked with quality players who would go on to play for many more international tournaments.

The WC winners 74 are in parts identical with the 72 Euro winners. It's less talked about because the many contemporaries held the opinion the performance was better during the latter, therefore it's usually referred to as Euro 72 squad. As for the WC 90 winners had the political "issue" of having won during the year, when the German reunification happened. Therefore the societal attention and significance associated to their win  was less than that to the one especially WC winners 54. Google "WM 1954- Wir sind wieder wer" and use google translate to become an impression what I'm talking about.🙂

Edit: Doesn't mean both teams you mentioned were disrespected in any kind. They're very liked just not seen as iconic.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

44 minutes ago, Michael said:

This is exactly the point that I wanted to make. The reason that Keegan is pretty much forgotten by a lot of people, is much less to do with the fact he didn't play in the 1990s or play in the Premier League. Because Bobby Charlton was much older than Keegan, but he was always regarded as an English footballing legend, arguably our best ever player. It's more to do with the fact that Keegan played at a time when the England national team of the 1970's were quite frankly a bit shit. We failed to qualify for both the 1974 and 1978 World Cups, as well as the 1976 Euros. Keegan only ever played in 2 international tournaments for England, namely the 1980 Euros and the 1982 World Cup. In the former tournament, England failed to even qualify from their group. Although Keegan played in both of these tournaments for England, he failed to score a single goal. I think shining for England and playing well at a major international tournament for England, goes a long way in helping a player gain that legend status. 

Keegan was no doubt an excellent player at club level, where he achieved a heck of a lot of accolades. But it's clear to me, that his lack of success with England is one of the major reasons people tend to forget him when thinking of the great England players through the generations. Although I am too young to have watched him live, I know many of the older people in my family who rave about how good Keegan was as a player. Some of the Youtube clips I've watched of him also seem to confirm how talented he was. He should definitely be classed as one of England's best ever players. 

Keegan only made one substitute appearance in that World Cup due to injury

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Goku de la Boca said:

The latter I disagree with strongly. In only 2 World Cups Mbappe is proyected to be more important than Pele and is already breaking records. At club level I suppose it isn't a debate, Mbappe hasn't really been a "different player" yet.

Until he wins the Euros, Zidane has had a better international career. World Cup win against that Brazil team won him the Balon d'Or too. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

Sign up or subscribe to remove this ad.


×
×
  • Create New...