Feature: Best Players of the First Month of 2013

Many international football fans and supporters decided that the top 5 football players of January and of this year so far come from three different leagues with La Liga as the prevailing one. The list was compiled according to the independent fans voting FootballTop.com.

 

FIFTH place of that list takes a glorious player and one of the best goalkeepers of the century, Gianluigi Buffon.

 

His actions were evaluated this year according to an increasing level of stability of Gianluigi, the captain of Juventus for many years, who was one of those to bring Juve to their current position never conceding more than one goal in a Serie A match except for the recent game against Sampdoria where Juve suffered a 1-2 away loss.

Stability of the keeper was confirmed by a new one year deal that Buffon signed with his club.

 

FOURTH place goes to Steven Gerrard, another leader, another irreplaceable man in his club.

 

Gerrard, aged 33, is still capable of delivering world class football. Gerrard isn’t already as fast and as he was during the Champions League final in Istanbul, he can’t play all possible and impossible positions on the field performing as a forward in one game and a flank defender in the next one as he did before.

In spite of that he decided to settle in defensive midfield in Brendan Rodgers’s tactical schemes to play on showing his best abilities splendidly assisting his teammates and fooling the defenders of the rivals.

 

THIRD place is taken by Iker Casillas, another one goalkeeper and captain that can’t be ever replaced by any other top footballer.

Yes, Jose Mourinho, this man can’t be substituted by any other world class goalkeeper be it Buffon or Cech because Iker Casillas=Real Madrid, and Real Madrid=Iker Casillas.

The statistics shows: owing to this very man Real Madrid conceded only one goal in past 5 games. The sad moment in Iker’s career is his recent injury. He broke an arm in a recent game against Valencia which required surgery.

The injury makes Iker miss the Copa del Rey semi-finals clash against Barcelona and the Champions League 1/8 finals fixture against Manchester United which signboard seems to have lost a pinch of its glance without Real Madrid’s captain.

 

This month Lionel Messi comes SECOND.

 

Regardless of the fact that Barcelona is top of La Liga the closes chasers are within an enormous distance away from the Catalan club both on the league table and in the quality of play Messi was still brilliant but not as brilliant as Ronaldo.

The effect of the fourth Ballon d’Or award makes itself felt when you understand that everything is accomplished and you can relax a bit and remain the second for just a while. Barcelona has a sensible advantage over Atlético Madrid and there is some time to relax and prepare for the Champions League challenge.

 

And finally, FIRST place goes to Cristiano Ronaldo who is and has always been outstanding.

 

Fast runner, stunning dribbler, splendid finisher, marvelous diver (who said that diving isn’t a profession?) – this player is good at everything.

But this month was exceptional for one reason. Cristiano has officially proved that he is a key element of Real Madrid’s striking force and that without his talent Mourinho’s attacking machine does not work properly.

A clear evidence of that fact was a game against Osasuna where Mourinho decided not to place Cristiano in the starting line-up and this move resulted in a boring 0-0 draw at Osasuna.

 

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Steven Gerrard: Ageing Liverpool Icon Faces Fork In The Road

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There seems to be a touch of hesitancy of thought when the name Steven Gerrard is mentioned. Having been with Liverpool since the age of nine, the midfielder has been the living embodiment of a club draped in history with a fan base from which you can not escape the passion that arguably cannot be rivalled in the British game. Gerrard has been the roving, blood, sweat and thunder caricature of the Kop he has played in front of for the past 14 years, the beating heart of everything good done at Liverpool over the past decade.

It is almost hard to accept that when Gerrard, as is looming, eventually befalls the time when he is required to stop storming around the pitch in the name of Liverpool, he would not have won the amount of silverware his unbridled desire and talent suggests he should have.

His Champions League success and 2 FA Cup wins will remain long in the memory, but those 3 medals sitting alongside a couple League Cup and Community Shield gongs and the Gerrard mantelpiece begins to look a little underwhelming, especially when it is probable he will assume legendary status once his legs finally cannot take his immense workload at the heart of midfield.

Not even a summer of intense flirtation with Chelsea in 2004 could lower his standing in the eyes of Liverpool fans who idolise the man who, after emerging back in 1998, is still the most recent player out of the academy in Kirkby to become an established member of the first team.

From his pivotal last minute salvo against Olympiakos in that incredible run to Istanbul in 2005 which culminated in a night that showcased Gerrard as a surpassing of the individual; the Captain propped up in nearly every position to drive the Reds back from the dead at half-time and achieve his most abiding moment as a Liverpool player, the lifting of their 5th European Cup with pride etched in every vein.

To his sensational last minute equaliser against West Ham in Cardiff to take the match to victory in penalties, his hat-trick in last season’s Merseyside derby, the scintillating partnership with Fernando Torres that tore Manchester United and Real Madrid apart amongst others as they guided Liverpool closer to the Premier League title than at any point since its inception back in 1992.

Gerrard’s career has been sprinkled with the spectacular, you can probably form a catalogue of moments where the net has bulged from a 25 yard belter with the number 8 wheeling away to the admiration of the supporters belting out his name in chorus. Yet that will be scant consolation to Gerrard as the Premier League title, dominated throughout the years by the bitter rivals up the M62, still eludes him.

It is a different Liverpool now from the one Gerrard won the Champions League, or even finished second in the league with. Transition is now the order of the day with the youthful outlook of Brendan Rodgers charged with leading the team into a new possession-based era after three years of regression. Gerrard is still captain and is still his heart on his sleeve, though there is a feeling that he may not be part of the revolution for the long-term.

The new animal of Rodgers’s cherishing-possession philosophy has already killed off Andy Carroll and is threatening to see off Stewart Downing, a duo worth a total of £55 million. There is surely concern that Rodgers, as he continues the Anfield odyssey, may not even be able to find room for his all-conquering captain either.

A viable criticism of Gerrard is his penchant for being too over-enthusiastic, sacrificing disciplined positioning in favour of charging around the field like a bull. Too many times he opts for the Hollywood moment, not the simple, intelligent play preached by his new manager and it could be the ultimate irony that Gerrard’s irrepressible energy and bullish style from which his game is famed on, could be his Liverpool downfall.

Gerrard is currently 32 and is still of great use to Rodgers and Liverpool. He has played in all 15 Premier League games so far this season and his brilliant crossing and set-piece delivery remains a huge asset to both club and country. One suspects however, the longer Rodgers gets to transform Liverpool into the slick-passing high-intensity pressing unit he had at Swansea, the lesser the direct Gerrard becomes a necessity.

Rodgers has deployed Gerrard deeper in midfield this season in an area that he possessed Joe Allen and Leon Brittain for at Swansea. The manager has already acquired Allen, while the nimble, disciplined Brittain, who boasted a passing percentage of 94% last season as he remained integral to Swansea’s passing game, is a totally different force to the England captain.

Gerrard’s ageing limbs may also hinder his adaptation to the high-pressure that a Rodgers midfield is based on. He only has to look at his stand-in captain at Anfield, Jamie Carragher, for the realisation that past contribution cannot outlast maturing legs.

Gerrard’s position with England remains much less disputed, he’s still very much a vital part, as captain, to Roy Hodgson’s journey to Brazil for the next World Cup in 2014, but that surely will be his last tournament as another member of the failed “Golden Generation” will fall.

Tough it is a shame that one of the most entertaining and enthralling footballers out of that generation could be about to embark on the slide away from the club that he has served so majestically through the past 14 years.

He will continue to serve Liverpool with passion and pride, still the only way he knows how, yet it is rather unfortunate that Rodgers may know differently and leave no room for sentiment as he strives to bring the glory days back to Anfield, days that may have to be achieved without the midfielder who was desperate to see them more than any other.

 

Written by Adam Gray

Follow him on Twitter @AdamGray1250

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