Jump to content
Bellazon

Fernando Gago
Thumbnail


Tali

Recommended Posts

2 - REAL MADRID: Casillas; Salgado, Sergio Ramos, Cannavaro, Torres; Diarra, Gago (Guti, 62'), Higuaín (Beckham, 65'), Robinho (Reyes, 84'); Raúl and Van Nistelrooy.

1 – VALENCIA: Cañizares; Miguel, Ayala, Moretti, Del Horno (Hugo Viana, 82´); Albelda, Albiol, Joaquín (Jorge López, 67'), Silva; Villa and Morientes.

REFEREE: Miguel Angel Pérez Lasa, del Colegio Vasco. Mostró cartulina a Gago, Ayala, Albiol and Guti.

GOALS:

1-0: Min. 17: Superb goal by Van Nistelrooy after volleying a perfect cross by Torres.

1-1: Min. 51: Morientes beats Casillas after a centre pass from Joaquín.

2-1: Min. 73: Sergio Ramos headers Beckham's free kick passed Cañizares.

NOTES: Matchday 31 of La Liga played at the Santiago Bernabéu. Attendence: sold out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Gago: I Have My Own Style Of Play

Fernando Gago has insisted that he is determined to prove himself at Real Madrid in his own right and does not want to be compared to anyone else.

The former Boca Juniors star was reacting to the Spanish media dubbing him the new Fernando Redondo, a player that he has always admired.

"He is the player that I ahve always liked most, that is true, but I want to create my own style," Gago explained.

"I want to be Gago and nobody else. I understand that there will always be comparisons, but I do not pay any attention to them.

Since joining Madrid in the winter transfer window, the 21-year-old has become a big hit at the Bernabéu but he has not been over-awed by the move.

"The dressing room smells like like the dressing room at Boca and all the same things are there," he continued. "There are thousands of different football boots, but they are just the same.

"I came here with plenty of wishes, but they were not outlandish ones. Just to train every day with the players and be treated equally.

"But I hope that I gained the respect of them. I cannot change my ways, if I do not like something I will say it to someone's face.

"It has never happened, but that's the way it would be if it did."

Gago has no plans to change his playing style to fit in with the wishes of others and revealed that being scared is something that has never happened to him.

"I play like I have always played, which is to try and involve myself in the build-up play.

"I am never really nervous at all and enjoy every minute of it here. The pressure does not bother me because I like that.

After moving to the Spanish giants, Gago was made to feel at home and the fact that his team-mates called him by his first-team helped settle him in.

"That felt good. At first it is strange, I know that much. It was also strange when an important player wold come over and sit next to you, but you soon become accustomed to it.

"I hope that I gained the respect of them. I cannot change my ways, if I do not like something I will say it to someone's face.

One player in particular has caught the youngster's eye for his ability and professionalism.

"I have been most impressed with (Fabio) Cannavaro because of the amount of time that he spends working, the quality that he has and the sort of person that he is," Gago added.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Real Madrid vs. Sevilla

KEEPERS: Casillas, Diego Lopez.

DEFENDERS: Ramos, Cicinho, Cannavaro, Helguera, Marcelo, Michel Salgado, Torres

MIDFIELDERS: Guti, Gago, Emerson, Diarra, Robinho, Raul, Reyes, Beckham.

STRIKERS: Higuain, Van Nistelrooy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Real Madrid seek the new Redondo in Fernando Gago

Living up to former greats is all part of the pressure on young players in Argentina, yet they seem to thrive on adulation and comparisons.

Most of the players I have a fondness for - the ones I loved most as a boy, the ones I enjoy watching most now - are attackers. It is no coincidence that many of the greats of the game were natural Number 10s. Maradona, Pele, Platini, Cruyff, Zidane, Puskas and Baggio all played in the space between midfield and forward line, shaping attacks with clever angled passes, explosive dribbling and intuitive misdirection.

The player in that position can, with sufficient skill and tactical acumen, utterly control a game. He is the conduit through which each of his team's attacks must pass. When it goes well, he gets all the praise and all of the glamour, and he is the player posterity regards most kindly.

But the modern game, where players are fitter, faster and stronger, has made it more difficult for these conjurors to practise their art. There is less time on a pitch now than at any time before, less space. Speed of thought must be even quicker, ball control more acute. The modern midfielder is a powerful athlete, capable of covering miles at high speed in every game, and a jack of all trades - he must be a good tackler, a perceptive reader of the game, capable of passing long and short, able to dribble if the need arises and apt to break into the box to score a goal.

Players like Steven Gerrard and Michael Ballack typify this new breed, while the traditional No.10 slowly dies out except for the odd abberative child genius - Wayne Rooney and Lionel Messi qualify, as does, possibly, Yoann Gourcuff at AC Milan. Only in Messi’s homeland, Maradona-worshipping Argentina, is there a concerted effort to promote the playmaker in the classic mould as a workable part of a modern squad.

Accordingly, Argentina have produced an astounding number of high-quality No.10s in the last two decades, most of them cursed to live with "next Maradona" status from their youth-team debuts for their country. A list of such names would include Ariel Ortega, Juan Roman Riquelme, Pablo Aimar, Andreas D'Alessandro, Javier Saviola and the two main rivals for the title of the newest new Maradona, Carlos Tevez and Messi.

Less-heralded than the No.10, but just as important to the way Argentinian teams play their football, and also threatened by the modern midfielders need to be a great all-rounder, is the N0.5. In the Argentine tradition, the No.5 shirt goes to a central midfielder rather than a defender. The last great Argentine No.5 was Fernando Redondo. Redondo was a defensive midfielder, but not quite in the vein of a Claude Makelele or a Roy Keane. Instead, he was a deep-lying playmaker.

He broke up opposition attacks with sharp tackling and set in motion attacks of his own with crisp, short passing. He didn't race forward and break into the box. He didn't score many goals. He didn't cover every blade of grass for 90 minutes. But he could control a game like no other central midfielder I have ever seen. He played with his head up, always reading the movement of the players around him, always aware of where his next pass was going.

The Argentine football character is founded just as much on steely, often brutal, aggression as it is on sublime skill, and Redondo was as combative as a ball-winning midfielder must be. His tackling was hard and he was a big man - a formidable physical presence in the centre of the pitch, around which his team revolved. His technique was extraordinary and he was a flashier No.5 than his most recent heir in the position, Javier Mascherano - he showed a control and understanding of a football comparable with most of the No.10s listed above.

But he under-achieved, given his tremendous talent. He spent his first years as a professional in Buenos Aires with Argentinos Juniors, then spent four years at Tenerife before moving to Real Madrid. Finally playing for a big club, he won La Liga twice, and the Champions League twice. He was probably Madrid's most important player in their 1999-2000 Champions League campaign, dominating Keane at Old Trafford in the quarter-finals in a manner seldom seen. His back-heel past Henning Berg to allow him to set up Raul for the simplest of tap-ins was just a moment of pure genius and the defining moment in the tie.

After that triumph, Madrid, amazingly, sold Redondo to AC Milan. Madrid's Ultras literally rioted at the news.

His two seasons at Milan were blighted by injury, and he rarely played. He refused to accept wages from the club, believing that, as he was giving them nothing, then they should give him nothing. These injury problems were what led to his premature retirement in 2003. The mixture of stubbornness and an uncommon sense of personal principles suggested by his stance over wages is perhaps what ruined his international career.

He reportedly refused a call-up to the 1990 squad because he disagreed with the team’s defensive tactics. And he would not play for the team when Daniel Passarella was coach because he refused to play anywhere other than central midfield, although the Argentine press speculated it was because Passarella demanded that all his players cut their long hair, and the ever-stubborn Redondo refused.

He only played 29 times for Argentina and appeared at only one World Cup, in America in 1994, where he was probably his team’s most consistent player. That squad had the potential to win a tournament lacking a truly great team. It had the strong spine needed to win a World Cup, with Ruggeri playing in his third World Cup at the centre of defence, Redondo running things in front of him, a seemingly rejuvenated Maradona prompting the forwards, who were the legendary Gabriel Batistuta and Claudio Caniggia.

But Argentina, after a great start, were sent reeling by Maradona's expulsion on a doping charge, and were knocked out in the game of the tournament by Romania, 3-2. This lack of World Cup exposure is most likely the reason that Redondo's recognition factor is not commensurate with his talent or stature within the game.

In Argentina, his importance is acknowledged. The emergence of a startlingly talented young defensive midfielder in the classic Argentine mould at Boca Juniors over the last two years has seen the youngster accorded the No.5 equivalent of the dreaded "new Maradona" title.

Fernando Gago has been dubbed the “new Redondo”. Gago seems to relish the comparison, admitting his idolisation of Redondo in interviews, and finally moving to Real Madrid at the turn of the year. If his career is anywhere near as glittering as Redondo’s, he’ll be a fortunate player.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Gago says ready to be Real Madrid's leader

Argentine midfielder Fernando Gago said he is ready to assume Real Madrid's leadership "in the forthcoming years".

In an interview with Don Balon soccer magazine, Gago also asked for "a little bit more time" for Madrid's soccer fans to see the midfielder which Argentina's soccer club Boca Juniors had had. "I always say the best has yet to come, as I get better acquainted with my teammates and when they get to know me better."

"I ignore if I am worth 20 million euros. That was managed by Real Madrid's and Boca's presidents, not me. When I arrived I said I could not make miracles. I did not come as a savior, I came here to work with the team as best possible," said Gago.

"I am a winner and I would never be happy with a second place," Gago added.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...