Sunday, March 1, 2015

MUST READ: PAUL SCHOLES REVEALS HOW MESSI ALMOST RUINED HIM IN 2008- HOW HE TRIED TO AVOID THE 'GENUIS'

It was a moment I will never forget. He went past me, I stuck out
my leg and Lionel Messi went over. This was at Old Trafford in
2008 in the second leg of our Champions League semi-final
against Barcelona and, with the score 1-0 to us, I had fouled him
in our area.
When I think about our win over Barcelona in that game, on our
way to the second Champions League title of the Sir Alex
Ferguson era, I always remember that tackle. Yes, I scored the
only goal of the tie, and it was one of my better ones. But I will
never forget that couple of seconds when the best footballer in the
world deceived me into fouling him and I waited for the world to
fall in.
It should have been a penalty to Barcelona, and an away goal
would have won them the tie. But for some reason the referee
didn't give it, the game moved on and even Messi did not make
much of a fuss. The relief was overwhelming for a few moments –
and then I was back into the game.
He got his own back in the end. I faced Messi four times in my
career, twice over the two legs in 2008 and then, as a substitute,
in the Champions League finals of 2009 and 2011, when Barcelona
beat us comfortably both times. Messi is back in Manchester next
week, to face Manchester City again in the Champions League
round of 16, and it is never a bad day when you can watch one of
the best footballers ever pull on a pair of boots.
There have been so many superlatives to describe Messi's career
that you find yourself just adding to the pile of words about him.
So these are some of the little things that you learn when you play
against the man himself which you might not see on the
television. First off, he never speaks on the pitch. In fact, I don't
think I ever heard him say a word. Second, you won't believe how
strong he is for a little man.
I am not ashamed to admit that in the games against Barcelona I
spent a lot of the time just hoping he would take up positions as
far away from me as possible.
Elusive is the word that immediately springs to mind when I think
about Messi's style of play. You think you have an eye on him and
then – blink – he has gone, only to reappear somewhere else in
space, with the ball. When you try to face up to him and make a
tackle you know what it is he is going to do with the ball. The
problem is staying with him.
He avoids the highs and lows of football. You rarely see him go
over the top in a goal celebration, just as he never gets too
downhearted. That's a quality I think that I shared when I was a
player. The game changes so quickly and you have to get yourself
in a position mentally where you can deal with whatever is thrown
at you.
I have never seen a United performance with such a high level of
concentration as when we beat Barcelona at Old Trafford. For
every second of that game, and the first leg at the Nou Camp, we
had to be aware of our positioning, of the dangers they posed and
our shape as a team as a whole. We spent the whole week
working on it with Sir Alex and the staff. We knew exactly what we
should be doing at all times. Then we had to do it over two
games.
The two finals were different. In preparation, we thought less about
them and more about what we could do. We had Cristiano
Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney for the first one in Rome and we
believed we could hurt them. Perhaps we underestimated them.
When you prepare to play Barcelona you go through the usual
weaknesses. Gerard Pique lacks a bit of pace. Javier Mascherano
is not really a centre-half (the position he played in 2011). But
you can only exploit those weaknesses when you have the ball.
We had 37 per cent possession in the 2011 game and we were
used to having a lot more.
There was never any specific plan to deal with Messi, simply that
whoever was nearest picked him up. Rio Ferdinand had two great
games against him in 2008 but no one keeps him quiet every time.
As a finisher, there are few players as composed as Messi. When
you can score as many different kinds of goal as he can, you have
every reason to be confident.
People say that I played under pressure, as a Manchester boy at
United where we were expected to win every week. But it is
nothing compared to the pressure Messi is under, and Cristiano
too. They go a game without scoring a goal and people want to
know why. Not just fans either but former players who should
know better. We expect it of them now and that they keep doing it
is incredible.
Messi is as famous as any footballer has ever been and yet, when
it comes down to it, we don't know much about him. I read that he
is a family man, and likes to walk his dogs, but beyond that he's a
mystery really. I like that. Especially these days, when people's
feelings about every issue are there to be read on Twitter or
wherever. Keep something of yourself back. It is a strength.
I am looking forward to seeing him play at the Etihad Stadium on
Tuesday and if City want a result then their concentration and
focus will have to be as good as it has ever been to make sure
they are in the right place at the right time for 90 minutes. It only
takes a second for that little No 10 to trick you into doing
something daft. And you can't always rely on the ref not to see it.

source: independent uk

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