Thursday, November 17, 2011

Dance Thursday

Mohammed Rafi - Jaan Pechechaan Ho by thefourthofficial



Today The Fourth Official passed the 1000 views! To this news, TFO thought about what celebration he wanted to adopt and it split up in two parts. The first part of the celebration was one of genuine happiness. So let’s follow Thomas Müller and his refreshing way of celebrating his goal against England during the 2010 World Cup after a fatal counter-attack. No pretentious “airplane” moves, no acrobatics, just raise your arms high above your head, scream, run around aimlessly and look around for your teammates. He did it, and he can’t believe it!


Müller's goal against England and the no-funny business celebration. The music provided by TFO goes well with the action, so cut the video sound!



Being purged and as it is Dance Thursday, The Fourth Official feels it adequate to add a little slick move. And for this we turn to the king of ridiculous meaningless steps: Emmanuel Eboue. Watch and learn a dance never seen before probably never to be seen again. Put your feet closely together, pull your butt out (far, far, out), curb arms, slightly flex knees, and lift legs alternatively. You got it. 



Eboue's ridiculous dance, from 0'18 to 0'24 in the video.




Thanks everyone and here’s to a 1000 more!

TFO

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Friendly Report: The German Lesson

Kraftwerk - The Model by deimmunization



Germany 3 -0 Holland
Hamburg
Goals: Klose (15'), Müller (26') and Özil (66') for Germany

            In preparation for the Euro 2012, Germany and Holland offered us a prestige friendly game, accompanied by the longtime rivalry between both sides. If the final score-line was undecided on paper at the start of the game, it remained only that. The Germans came out on top by a large margin, placing themselves as a serious contender for the European trophy. Holland on the other hand, even amidst the notable absences and a palpable quality, seems to be reaching the end of a cycle.

            Playing in Hamburg, it only took Germany 15 minutes to take the advantage in a nervy game. Toni Kroos’ cross found Miroslav Klose who laid off the ball to an on-rushing Thomas Müller who made no mistake. With a strong domination, Germany doubled their lead after Dirk Kuyt had missed the target receiving the ball from a corner kick. Müller and Özil combined on the right side of the pitch, the latter delivering a pinpoint perfect one-touch cross onto Klose’s head, beating Maarten Stekelenburg on the near post. A comfortable lead after 26 minutes of play, then. Holland replied timidly in the game but strongly on the physical level. The first half ended with Klose’s missed opportunity to take a 3-0 lead. The second half was a slight variation of the first. Germany dominated over a tame Dutch team who relied mostly on individual exploits for chances. Efforts from Sneijder (54’) and Babel (59’) were far too predictable to worry Neuer. The score was finally sealed after Germany’s golden trio Müller-Özil-Klose combined yet again to score a wonderful goal on the 66th minute. The game then lost considerable pace with each coach undertaking at least four changes.

            A formality-win then for Germany, showing its muscles. On a stable (very) high level for the past 5 years, the Mannschaft used its well-known strengths: a well-oiled collective, youth and a relentless search for direct attacking football. The quality of the German players is not a secret anymore and tonight all of their players performed at their best, with, of course, a special mention to Özil, Müller and Klose. All the players seem most comfortable in and with each other’s roles within the national team. As an example one can simply look at the goals, where Özil and Müller swap position with a bewildering facility. In this sense, it seems Germany have become a very complete team, able to play possession, as it did in the early part of the first half, or counter attack, as it did in the second, with the same ease. Germany were in control of the game whether with or without the ball. Another testament to Germany’s quality is the fact that the absence of two of the most capped players, Schweinsteiger and Lahm, went unnoticed tonight. Löwe’s constant influx of younger talents has allowed him to have easily replaceable and equally performing parts. Toni Kroos doesn't just look like Scweini, he also plays like him (at least, with the national team).

            The same cannot be said about Van Merwijk’s Holland. If the quality of the players is also undeniable (maybe less so for the back four), the automatisms seem at this point galvanized. The game was overly systematic: the good short ground passes are overly directed at Sneijder who in turns puts the wingers on orbit. If the midfield can rely on a guarantee such as Van Bommel, Holland’s plan B is on the other hand much less seductive. Babel offered much but alternated between the good and the less so; Strootman showed a good complicity with Van Boom Boom, but also a lack of the necessary experience to excel at international level (you do have to start somewhere); the masked Huntelaar although valiant in effort did not have the stature to carry the Dutch team forward. These three were not the worst Dutch players on the pitch tonight, far from it, yet they were all substitutes nominations. Van Der Vaart, Robben and Van Persie sure made their absence felt. Against an all around complete team like Germany, Holland could only rely on moments of grace and glory from individual players, and if these almost happened, it was not from the substitutes. Van Merwijk is not succeeding in supporting his talented starting line-up. On another note, the defense also seemed slightly under par, the complicity between the experience Mathijsen and Heitinga could not make up for the approximations of the wingbacks, notably from Braaheid on the first goal. Leaving that much space to a striker like Klose is treacherous.

            If the Euro Cup is still far away and all prognoses must remain cautious, Germany’s sure on the right path to entering the competition strongly. Holland on the other hand will hope to have a complete squad for the Euro, because if they do, their side could reveal itself one of the deadliest as it did not only during the South African World Cup but also during the Euro 2008.


TFO

Monday, November 14, 2011

Cover Monday

We continue with The Fourth Official’s cover series. To remind of the concept, TFO offers you a great song cover equated with a great soccer move cover.

“We Can Work It Out”, from The Beatles to Stevie Wonder

            What do you do when you need to make an inch perfect cross when the ball is rolling on your weaker foot? Such a profound dilemma could only have a spectacular solution, namely the “rabona” (or the “scarf move”): “a method of kicking the football whereby the kicking leg is wrapped around the back of the standing leg—effectively with one's legs crossed.”* With this move, players like Maradona could in 1980 cry out “We can work it out” to the ball whilst perfectly addressing it to his teammate with his better left foot. If the rabona has now become less of a technical feat to accomplish, its purposeful usage is on the hand rarer. The point is now to show that you can indeed work it out for yourself, but also for the team, the way it should. So watch Aquilani appropriate himself the rabona with his tall and lanky body as he sings “try to see it my way”. A different style, like Stevie’s, the same technical ease, and a goal in the end.

Maradona's 1980 rabona for Argentina against Switzerland

Aquilani's 2008 rabona for Roma against Milan



 “All Along The Watchtower”, from Bob Dylan to Jimi Hendrix
            The play is here simple. The team star receives the ball in center circle, run diagonally towards the goal past defenders, beats the keeper with the simplest of shots, and his team wins. Remarkable by its simplicity, Thierry Henry stunned all of the Bernabeu by creating himself a way out of there. It was only a year later that Kaka proved himself by undertaking the feat. If Dylan is said to be stunned by Hendrix’ cover, Henry must be abashed by Kaka’s. Everything fits: using the body to defend possession the acceleration, successfully overtaking the first defender, the weaker foot finish (if only they had tried a rabona…), the Champion’s League atmosphere and the three points. Kaka’s run did occur in stoppage time, just to add that extravaganza equal to that of Jimi’s solo. The move of a generation, interpreted twice, so that we are sure to get the point.

Henry's 2006 qualifying goal for Arsenal against Real Madrid

Kaka's 2007 qualifying goal for Milan against Celtic





TFO
*Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabona , accessed 14/11/2011, 8:33PM

Monday, November 7, 2011

Small Cover Video Talk Monday


            Small talk can only reach so far. Instead the Fourth Official introduces you to a new category of posts: the covers. On the one hand, a great cover of a great song, on the other, a great cover of a great soccer move. Between them a similar re-appropriation of signature gestures, simple enough. And since this is the first of the series, you get three for the price of one!



“I Fought The Law”, from Bobby Fuller to The Clash.
           Let’s start with the most obvious of comparisons. On the one hand we have Diego Armando Maradona, El Pibe, possibly the greatest player ever to have lived, scoring what has long been dubbed “the greatest goal ever.” Dribbling past half of the Queen’s team, Maradona fought the law, in the strictest of ways: cocaine, his refusal to join a big European club, his hand of God, his friendship with Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez. Most of the time, the law did win. Now take Messi’s incredibly similar goal against Getafe. The same path, the same fake to pass the keeper, the same diabolical left foot. Yet Messi fights another kind of law: the law of the records and those of physics. No one expected Maradona’s goal to be so well re-interpreted. Faster, stronger, louder, Messi adds the distortion, wins and adds “I guess my race is run.”

Maradona's:

Messi's:


“The Man Who Sold The World”, from David Bowie to Nirvana.
          Van Basten’s goal is exceptional. From an impossible angle, the Dutchman volleys the ball in the opposite corner, lobbing the goalkeeper. An extraordinary feat only matched by Van Basten’s impressive personal prizes: three Ballons d’Or, best scorer for the Euro 1988, for the Italian Serie A (x2), for the Dutch Eredivisie (x4) and for the Champion’s League. Yet few remember Marco as an all time great. A truly blasé persona, Marco was thought to have died alone, a long long time ago, but with this volley he only answers: “I never lost control.” Youri Djorkaeff, with a prize list opposite of Van Basten’s (the two most prestigious collective rewards, the World and Euro Cup) brought us the 90s version: forget the simple volley; try the bent oblique grungy bicycle kick. On a grey Lombard afternoon, the melancholy is only greater, but the result remains: the ball in the top corner, a beautiful ballad in itself.

Van Basten's

Djorkaeff's:



“Ghost Town” from The Specials to Kode9 & The Spaceape.
         The repeated step over is nowadays a classic. Even right backs can pull it off with confidence. But do you remember the good old days when it only meant samba? When it only meant that you left your opponent staring at nothing while you blissfully pass him? Denilson surely does. Maybe the last of the Brazilians to be all fun and no work*, the winger had a mitigated career full of unfulfilled promises. Here is an example of what he did best, the step over in question, full of rhythm, anticipation horns and playfulness. Mancini on the other hand shows us the institutionalization of the step over: no longer joyful, it’s become mechanic; the jerseys turn from orange and yellow to black and white; the action concludes itself by a cold missile and not a silky pass; the field itself is depopulated. No sound, just a hint of it.

Denilson's (starting at 1:24)

Mancini's:

TFO


*Some argue, and probably rightly so that the last Brazilian generation to be fully all fun and no work was that of Zico’s and Socrates’.

Monday, October 31, 2011


Small Talk Monday


Amon Tobin - Slowly by thefourthofficial


           Gearing up for a European mid week, the Fourth Official offers you a look at one of his favorite current forwards: Antonio Di Natale. Small, pacey, technical and cold-blooded, “Totò” is Udinese’s captain courage. Scoring an average of 22 goals per season since 2004, the 34 year old has become the emblem of a team always capable of playing attractive attacking soccer. He also managed to be Serie A’s top scorer in two consecutive seasons, 09/10 and 10/11, a remarkable feat in Europe’s most defensive league. Yet, with all the greatness his numerous goals entail, Di Natale has consistently refused bigger offers to remain in a club that has obviously attained a big part in his heart. A real provincial hero (who else still gets sponsored by Asics?), the striker embodies at best the spirit of a club that never lies to itself about its aspirations. This season, Di Natale is at it again, leading the scorers’ classification with seven goals in nine games. Udinese, is currently second of the Serie A, after having held the lead for one week. In the fight for the title, there a few chances the Friuli bianconeri will be able to keep the pace of clubs such as Milan, Juventus, Lazio or Napoli, but they seemed promised to at least a European spot by the end of the season.

            Last week Di Natale scored Udinese’s only goal in the club’s win against Palermo. This is a video (starting at 0:26) of Di Natale’s great backheel pass. Note this is at the 75th minute at a time when most of the other players keep play simple.



             If the Napolitan-born striker might remain in the world’s memory only as part of the Italian squad that failed miserably at the 2010 World Cup, his name is forever engraved in the mind of Udinese’s supporters. And the Fourth Official likes it better that way; making Di Natale a sort of secret pleasure only few know of, as a special luxurious treat.

Here are Di Natale’s 29 goals from the 2009/2010 season.



And here are his 28 from 2010/2011. Enjoy!



TFO