Why I Hate Barcelona FC and Why They Are Ruining World Football

I hate Barcelona Football Club. I hate their players. I hate their style and their tactics. I hate their fans. And I hate all of those ‘experts’ who try to validate their own knowledge of the game by comparing every other team to the glowing example of modern football that is Le Catalans.

I’m not “jealous”. Don’t go throwing your petty, immature insults at me: Hear me out. I respect the success that Barcelona has had and continues to have. They are the best team in the world at the moment. I know this and you know this. The problem is that they know it too. They’ve won 3 league titles, 2 domestic cups and 2 European titles in 4 years with their high pressing, slow building tiki taka style of play. They’ve become the self- appointed world leaders of this revolutionary brand of total football. Like the rulers of some cult. Every second grassroots club team tries to emulate them and it’s ruining football. The reason Barcelona can pull this off is because they have two brilliant midfield visionaries and arguably the best finisher in the game. Unlike so many cheap imitators (read: Arsenal), Barcelona are actually capable of keeping the ball for 60-70 minutes a game and this is the foundation of their success. Each time they lose the ball, they press like crazy to win it back, which they can afford to do because it’s the only 20 minutes of effort they have to give each game. They get the opposition into a strangle hold, forcing them back deep into their own half, and then, instead of tightening their grip around the jugular and fatally cutting off the airflow with a few quick goals, they keep them in that submissive position for so long that they eventually die of boredom. Pass the ball around for 20 minutes, then capitalise on the first mistake with a highlight reel through ball to Messi for the opener. Repeat 3-4 times and go home. It’s a bully tactic. It’s the footballing equivalent of stealing the fat kid’s hat and holding it ever so slightly out of his reach.

It’s still a great strategy, the perfect one for this team, but it is impossible to replicate. Thus Swansea will never win a European Cup. Sadly, tiki taka has been adopted as the epitome of sporting flair and beauty, though it’s a benchmark that only Barcelona can reach. Cue an innumerable amount of bandwagon fans and self-righteousness and pretention. The bandwagon jumpers cannot be helped. As a Manchester United fan, I’ve known more than a few of them (YOU KNOW WHO YOU ARE!). It’s the holier-than-thou attitude of the club that I hate. The way that Barcelona expects to win every game not because of their superior ability but because it is their God-given right as the purveyors of The Beautiful Game. To beat them would be sacrilege (Let us now cast stones at the heretics of AC Milan). Maybe people have said the same thing about Man United, but I’ve always felt that Sir Alex kept them grounded. The arrogance of Barcelona extends beyond the field, too. Like the Fabregas transfer, where Arsenal were publically harassed into selling their captain so that he could pick the splinters out of his behind on the Barcelona bench. Or the pompous UNICEF jersey-sponsorship deal (real charity needs no such publicity), where Barca donated a certain amount of proceeds to the charity because, after all, they are the most generous, sympathetic and altruistic force in football since Jesus played goalie for Jerusalem. Of course, this deal has since been replaced with new sponsorship from the nation of Qatar. Yes, Barcelona is now being funded by oil money. I don’t think that it’s a stretch to call this team the Bono of world football. There’s a word for people and clubs like these. And it rhymes with oil tankers.

Now, I could try and taint the legacy and achievements of Barcelona Football Club by bemoaning the absolute lack of depth in La Liga, how nobody tackles in Spain, hence Master Messi has hardly been injured in his entire career, and Barcelona can comfortably pass the ball around without worrying about any vigilante reproach. I could make a valid argument that Lionel Messi is well inferior to a certain C. Ronaldo. I could go into great detail about their shaky defence, so often spared due to the mere scraps of possession that opposition teams are left with after Barcelona finish passing and backheeling and running sideways and patting each other on the back. But I won’t. Because I am bigger than that. These people make me sick.

 - Wildcard

 

Uncle Dysfunktional - Cheers Gaffer

Cheers Gaffer

The Don is stepping down. Father is quitting work for his garden. The Gaffer is taking a back seat.

When Man United got knocked out of the Champions League earlier this season at the second round stage by Real Madrid, it seemed to be a bigger deal than usual. There seemed to be a deeper sadness and heartbreak in the Man United camp – Sir Alex Ferguson more than anyone. He refused to give a post-match interview, didn’t speak to the media for days – something very strange giving the rash sending off of Nani in the crucial second leg. Man United staff claimed that Sir Alex was too upset to speak, and now we know why. Sir Alex, THE gaffer, THE boss, THE legend, THE genius has finally after 26 ridiculously successful years at the United helm has retired. He wanted to go out with a bang, he wanted that 3rd Champions League title but I’m sure he’ll get over it when he looks back at his managerial career.

It’s a strange feeling, and this is coming from someone who has no affiliation with Man United in any way I’m just a football fan, but he’s Britain’s footballing father he’s been around my whole life and that whole time he has been the top dog. He’s had a career that even the most ambitious people couldn’t dream up – he’s had a managerial career like an EA Sports FIFA manager mode. When he took over Man U were a mid-table team struggling to be a big force in England’s top flight and he has turned them into the biggest football brand in the world and England’s most successful club. 13 Premier league titles, 5 FA cups, 4 League cups, 10 Community Shields, and 2 Champions League trophies – all this and he still wasn’t happy as he has claimed many times that the club have not been good enough in Europe and that his biggest regret is that he hasn’t won more Champions League titles. He is the epitome of glory, ambition, and desire for success. Whoever attempts to fill his shoes has got a monster of a task even with them being able to call on Sir Alex advice. For many Sir Alex has been a father figure as well as a teacher of football. Players like Beckham, Giggs, Scholes, Ronaldo, the Neville brothers, Hernandez, Nicky Butt, and so on have been with Sir Alex from young ages and have grown into men and world-class footballers under his stewardship – this is a man who is more than a football manager.

David Moyes is the man chosen to take Manchester United into the post-Fergie era and I think he’s the only man for the job. Mourinho and Klopp were considered but this job is a long term job. Such managers will win silverware and then leave – this goes against what has made the club so successful over the years – the continuity of Sir Alex. Moyes is a fantastic manager who is committed, loyal, and intelligent enough to take on the job and build a new long term success. I predict he will struggle at first and I can’t see him winning the league at the first time of asking but he will be a success. However their can never be another Sir Alex, no one will ever have that much success at one club let alone just stay with a club for that long. Club owners these days are too hasty; sacking managers left, right, and centre for success but this is only a short term solution.

For many people around about my age of 21, we don’t know anything else except Sir Alex. He’s been ubiquitous for over 2 decades in which he has immortalised himself with glory. As far as I’m concerned he IS Man Utd and even though that’s only one club it’s like English football will never be the same again. We’ve seen the last of such long term success. From his famous hair-dryer rants at football stars, to his no nonsense attitude with the media, his battering of chewing gum, and tapping his watch to death Sir Alex is a man football will find impossible to forget. Sir Alex Ferguson take a bow, we salute you.