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Top five faded footballers...

Discussion in 'Hull City' started by originallambrettaman, Jun 10, 2014.

  1. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    5. Kerlon

    Kerlon came to prominence at the age of 17 due to his unusual but stylish technique of dribbling the ball on his head. This became known as the seal dribble and his other array of skills lead him to be dubbed the “next Ronaldinho”. A big money move to Inter Milan did not work out with him not playing one single game there. He was last seen playing in the third tier of the Japanese League and is currently a free agent at the age of 26.

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    4. David Bentley

    Being compared to a star player appears to be something of a curse. Steve McClaren dubbed Bentley the “new Beckham” due to his passing ability, yet he finds himself without a club at the age of 29. He did make a big money move to Tottenham in 2008 for £15m, but over half of his five years there saw him sent out on loan. He was released from Spurs in June, 2013.

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    3. Cherno Samba

    Cherno Samba seemed to have the World at his feet as a teenager. He was discovered by Millwall as a teenager after scoring 132 goals in 32 goals for his school team. He was such a prospect that at the age of 14 Liverpool offered £2m for him after a trial with the club. Sadly, the move did not materialise and after several unsuccessful stints at various clubs both in England and in Europe; he finds himself on the football scrapheap at the age of 28.

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    2. Michael Johnson

    Michael Johnson was a dynamic midfielder who looked destined to play for England. However, Johnson has suffered with mental health problems, and was in the media spotlight for being arrested twice in 2012 for drink driving offences. Unfortunately, it became apparent his personal problems were having too much impact on his football career and he retired at the age of 24.

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    1. Freddy Adu

    This is the classic case of a young player who was hyped up and failed to live up to expectations. At the age of 14, Freddy Adu had already agreed a million pound contract with Nike, was dubbed the “next Pele”, and was a well known player on the Championship Manager games. He is still only 24 and finds himself currently without a club.

    http://mt.sportsranc.com/top-five-faded-footballers-4/
     
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  2. jayc89

    jayc89 Well-Known Member

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    Transfers such as Shaw to Man U make these sort of articles all the more common.
     
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  3. PLT

    PLT Well-Known Member

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    Crazy that Adu is still only 24. I remember we were falsely linked with him when we were last in the PL so he must have been about 19 then. I remember thinking he was a faded footballer even at that age.

    Michael Johnson though, frig me. What happened there? I remember he was being compared to previous Man City legends. That picture doesn't even look like the same guy. Didn't he go on loan to Leicester under Sven around 2011-ish? They were real excited about him even then.

    I'd also put Joe Cole on this list with him being in the news. It's incredible that he's gone from being a top England player to being released by a different club every summer and he's not even that old.
     
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  4. Amin Yapusi

    Amin Yapusi Well-Known Member

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    Michael Johnson was a massive, massive shame. What a potential player England had there.
     
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  5. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    David Bentley can't really be arsed with football anymore, he says he doesn't enjoy playing and isn't even looking for another deal, he lives in Spain where he owns a restaurant.
     
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  6. bum_chinned_crab

    bum_chinned_crab Well-Known Member

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    Fair play to him then. The easiest thing in the world for him to do is sign another contract on half a million a year and give it a half-arsed effort every now and again. He's got a talent but doesnt enjoy using it, he's not the first and wont be the last.
     
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  7. GLP

    GLP Well-Known Member

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    Michael Johnson had the world at his feet, he now has the world in his stomach.

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  8. Quill

    Quill Bastard

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    There's loads of players who should've been bigger than they were.


    Joe Cole immediately springs to mind for me. He was a very good player, but had the potential to be the greatest English player ever.
     
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  9. Crash Gate 9

    Crash Gate 9 Member

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    I remember speaking to David Mail under the West Stand and he was happy to admit he didnt even like playing football. Very odd.
     
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  10. bum_chinned_crab

    bum_chinned_crab Well-Known Member

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    The mistake people make time and again is that for 90% of footballers this is a job. Nothing more nothing less. I bet if you asked 90% of the workforce if they like their job theyd say no and footballers are no different. The only issue is it's the job that 90% of the rest of the workd would want to do! It's just that when you do it for 4 hours a day 5 days a week it's monotonous. So many pros I have spoken to have said you wouldnt believe how boring and repetitive training is.

    I remember David Batty saying he'd never ever watch a game on tv. Even when massive Leeds or England games were on tv and he wasnt playing he wouldnt watch. he just didnt give a **** if he wasnt playing.
     
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  11. Crash Gate 9

    Crash Gate 9 Member

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    Another odd example was Stuart Elliott. He said that he stopped enjoying the game when he was having a hard time with Phil Brown. His move to Donny was just to pay the wages. They realised he didn't want to play anymore and O'Driscoll subsequently hardly played him. He went to Hamilton, Stirling and Glentoran...all failures for a player who could have played above that standard.
     
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  12. PLT

    PLT Well-Known Member

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    I'm sure this is true for some players but I'm also pretty sure the majority love playing football.
     
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  13. Muffinthegoat

    Muffinthegoat Well-Known Member

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    Micky Horswill. He used to sit in the corner of the bar in Cross Keys, Cottingham around 1977/8. We were warned never to speak to him about football.
     
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  14. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    Aye i dont think Lineker was ever in love with football. Doesnt miss it either. ****.
     
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  15. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    I wondered what happened to this kid, a real shame if he doesnt fulfill his potential. Bojan. Get him signed up cheap Brucey??

    http://www.theguardian.com/football...c-barcelona-ajax-milan-roma-whatever-happened

    There are nearly 12 minutes gone when Andrés Iniesta receives the ball midway inside the Schalke half. An opposition defender approaches to check his forward momentum but Iniesta evades him and slides a pass into the path of Thierry Henry. The Frenchman opens his body to shoot.

    Manuel Neuer saves but cannot hold on. Henry squares the rebound across the goal. Aged 17 years, seven months and four days, and still studying for his school exams, Bojan Krkic taps home the winning goal in a Champions League quarter-final.

    Krkic had all the attributes we have come to expect from a La Masia graduate. He was skillful, he had wonderful balance, he was quick and he was a better dribbler than a baby with teething problems. He could score goals too. He joined the Catalan Club at the age of nine and within seven years he had over 850 to his name. Aged 15, he was joint top-scorer at the 2006 Under-17 European Championships. A year later and he scored the winning goal for Spain in the final of the same tournament.

    He beat Lionel Messi’s record as the youngest player to score in La Liga for Barça by nearly eight-and-a-half months and soon after he became the first footballer born in the 1990s to play in the Champions League.

    The compliments came in the almost the same numbers as the youth-team goals. “Bojan is a treasure,” purred the then Barcelona manager Frank Rijkaard. “There are only a few players who have a magical touch,” said Pep Guardiola, “and Bojan is one of them.” Some saw him as the new Messi. Others compared him to Raúl. Spain and Serbia – his father’s homeland; his mother is Catalan – fought for him to represent them. They both believed they needed him. So too did Barcelona.

    The squad was overloaded with overloaded stars who had grown too comfortable and too complacent. There were whispers that injuries had been invented as excuses to leave out certain players and while Barcelona batted away rumours of Rijkaard’s demise, it became clear that the Dutchman was not much longer for the club. In stark contrast to that mess, here was this young star, untainted and with a smile that lit up like Tokyo at night. As Sid Lowe pointed out, one Spanish (and non-Catalan) newspaper even pictured him in a cape with his underpants on the outside and a B on his chest. Here was Krkic swooping to the rescue. In 2007/08 he made 48 appearance, scored 12 goals and set up another six. For a teenager to record such numbers for such a big club on his first season in La Liga is nothing short of miraculous.

    But with great expectations comes great pressure and Krkic could not cope with it. He was called up to the Spain squad but he pulled out with a what was reported to be a panic attack. He was called up for Euro 2008 but once again he pulled out. He was, he said, “physically and emotionally shattered”. “Pressure was being heaped on very young shoulders,” wrote Lowe. “He’d gone from a 16-year-old inhabiting one world to a 17-year-old living somewhere completely different.”

    “Overnight, I couldn’t even walk down the street,” Krkic said. “I couldn’t go to a birthday party or to the cinema.”

    By the start of the 2008/09 season, there was a new man in change. The loss of the Dutch manager was a big blow for Krkic. “Rijkaard had complete trust in me,” he said. “He has a great personality. I had a relationship with him that I haven’t had with anyone else.” Under Pep Guardiola, Krkic fell behind in the pecking order and started to get fewer and fewer appearances, making less and less of an impact when he did play. This soon led to a falling out between him and Guardiola and after two more sparse seasons, Krkic would leave the club in 2011 without saying goodbye to him. “As a fan,” Krkic said, “Guardiola is the best coach in the world, but personal things that have happened to me [that] were hurtful. He was not fair with me on several occasions, and this is one of the reasons that I decided to leave.”

    Roma seemed like an obvious choice. The man who had replaced Guardiola as the manager of the Barcelona B team, Luis Enrique, was in charge and the club’s owners were eager for the team to play in a way that Krkic was more than familiar with. “Luis Enrique represents an idea of football that we would like to follow which imposes itself today through Spain and Barcelona,” said Roma’s sporting director Walter Sabatini. At Roma, he had plenty of playing time to impress – he made 33 appearances in his first season, more than any other player that season – and in patches he did, scoring seven goals in his first season. However, his form was inconsistent and he failed to impose himself on games. Easy chances were often spurned and he was quickly overshadowed by other players within the squad. His lack of strength – not so much an issue in Spain – held him back and the suspicions about his lack of mental toughness raised their heads once more.

    “There are a lot of strong personalities in Serie A and Bojan wasn’t one of them,” says Italian football correspondent Susy Campanale. “He was very quiet and seemingly lacking in confidence. He was also accustomed to a different tactical style and Spanish forwards have traditionally struggled in Italy. They are not accustomed to being marked so firmly and expect far more time and space on the ball than they’re allowed in Serie A. Bojan expected more than most. He needed to barge his way into the game a bit more but wanted to always have the classy move without the hard work that goes with it.”

    The end of his first season at Roma saw Luis Enrique leave the club and Krkic soon followed him. He decided to try his luck with a loan move to Milan. He started just nine games – he made a further 14 appearances from the bench – scored just three goals and made the sort of impact on the Rossoneri that a fly has landing on a brown bear. It was the same old problems but he was not helped by his contract situation. “It was reported,” says Campanale, “that the clause in his contract meant Milan would have to buy him out permanently if he amassed a certain number of appearances, so towards the end of the season they simply stopped using him.” For a player in desperate need of a club to inject some confidence in him, that must have been a cruel blow.

    From Milan, he continued his journey north, this time to Ajax. Like with his move to Roma, this seemed like the sensible option.

    Historically, Ajax play the sort of possession and passing game that would suit Krkic’s style and the Eredivisie’s reputation was not built on the motto that ‘might is right’. “When Bojan was signed by Ajax, it was seen as quite a coup,” says Michiel Jongsma from BeNeFoot. “In Eredivisie measures, it was as if a superstar had arrived because usually the type of player that joins the league is a either a promising talent or an unknown player. In Bojan, they had the combination of a name well known in Europe and still the promise of someone who could go on to become a very good player.”

    His performance in a pre-season friendly against Werder Bremen must have had Ajax fans rubbing their hands with glee. Stationed wide on the right, Krkic was a constant menace against the decent German opposition. He worked hard, combined well with his new team-mates, produced flick after trick, made some intelligent runs, set up one goal and scored another. But it was not long however before that glee evaporated into thin air. According to OptaJohan, it took him 665 playing minutes to score his first goal for the club – he would only add three more to his season’s tally – and although he had three assist in his first six league games, he would record no more for the season (by means of comparison, Christian Eriksen had five before he moved to Tottenham).

    “I’m delighted for Bojan because he just does everything right on the field,” Rijkaard once said. “Every decision he takes is the right one.” At Ajax last season, his decision-making stood out but for the wrong reasons. “He starts dribbles when a pass would be more appropriate,” says Jongsma. “He has also found himself in decent positions to shoot but he waits for someone he could pass to.” All signs pointed to the return of those problems. Krkic’s dip in form has seen the fans turn on him too. From the player they expected major things from, he has become a player who is seen as a major impasse in the progression of youth team players.

    “I’ve really enjoyed this season,” said Krkic, “and I have to evaluate the pros and cons.” So too will Ajax, or any club or manager who thinks they can revive the flagging fortunes of a player who was once had the world at his feet.
     
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  16. renegadetiger

    renegadetiger Well-Known Member

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    Elliott also had another "vocation" though of course, which he is now pursuing via his wacky "One Goal Ministry".

    And not forgetting his asthma problems.
     
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  17. Quill

    Quill Bastard

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    I wonder if you thought he was a **** when he was banging goals in for England?

    Thought not.


    You don't have to like football to play it ffs.

    Also, if Lineker hates football so much, why the **** has he been talking about it for 20 years?
     
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  18. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    Yes i did think he's a ****. If Fred West scored for England I'd be happy we won but still not like him. Bit like Marlon King. Did you cheer when he score goals for us even though he was a ****? Thought so.

    Where did i say he hates football?

    If you knew anything you wouldnt rush in and shout your mouth off constantly.
     
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  19. The FRENCH TICKLER

    The FRENCH TICKLER Well-Known Member

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    Far too many over the years sadly fall into this catagory.
     
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  20. Quill

    Quill Bastard

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    Difference between him and King/West is that you called him a **** for not loving football and 'not missing it'. Which is a bit different from murder or domestic abuse, is it not?
     
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