هل بيقدر احد يشرح و يفسر لي مدى الجريمة في المتعة الكروية اللي سويتها في نفسي بعدم متابعتي و تشجيع القوت ميسي ، وين كنت مغيب عقلي عنه و دفنت روحي مع مارادونا و باتيستوتا ، لا لا لا انا جدا نااااادم و البالوندور هالسنة بكل انصاف من حقه و انا راحت علي متعة سنييييييييين.
#ميسي #Messi
🚨🗣️Fabio Capello(Former England & Real Madrid Manager):
"I have played against Pele, I have faced Maradona & Messi as a manager. They are the only 3 geniuses of football. To choose one, i will pick Messi as the greatest ever.
Cristiano? Maybe top 10"
I’m going to take my time with this one. If you’re busy, bookmark it and come back later.
Do you know the biggest problem with Cristiano Ronaldo? It isn’t that he never won the World Cup. It’s that he spent years telling everyone what separates legends, only to change the standards once he couldn’t reach them himself.
After winning Euro 2016, Ronaldo made it clear that winning a major international trophy was what completed a player’s legacy. At the time, Messi had just lost another international final and was going through the toughest period of his career. Those comments only added to the narrative that Messi could never be the greatest because he hadn’t won with Argentina. For years, that became the standard. Messi was called a bottler, while Ronaldo was praised as the player who had proved himself internationally.
Nobody wanted to hear about context. Nobody cared that Messi had dragged Argentina to a World Cup final in 2014 with a squad many considered weaker than the Portugal teams Ronaldo has had over the last decade. The only thing that mattered was that Ronaldo had won a major trophy with his country, and Messi hadn’t.
Then Messi won the Copa América. Suddenly, the goalposts moved. We were told one Euro was worth more than multiple Copa América titles because South America supposedly wasn’t competitive enough. That became the new excuse.
Then Messi won the World Cup. The excuses changed again. It was “fixed.” It was “scripted.” Then came, “A career can’t be defined by seven games.” Funny how nobody was saying that before the tournament, when many believed it would finally be Ronaldo’s chance to win it.
Now Portugal have been eliminated from the World Cup, and Ronaldo posts about Euro 2016 again. That’s what I find ironic. When international trophies favored Ronaldo, they were the ultimate measure of greatness. When Messi caught up, people started ranking competitions differently. When Messi surpassed him by winning the biggest trophy in football, suddenly the World Cup wasn’t supposed to define a career anymore.
That’s the contradiction.
The difference between Messi and Ronaldo was never just about goals, assists, or trophies. It’s about consistency. Messi never needed to diminish Ronaldo’s achievements to elevate his own, nor did he ask football to change its standards because they no longer favored him. He simply kept playing until he won everything there was to win.
League titles. Champions Leagues. Ballons d’Or. Golden Boots. Copa América. Finalissima. World Cup. Every major trophy that was ever used against him eventually became part of his legacy.
Cristiano Ronaldo will always be one of the greatest footballers to ever play the game. But this is exactly why I believe Messi is the greatest. He didn’t ask football to rewrite the standards.
He met every single one of them.
كلا اللقطتين الجدلية اللي يحتجون عليها لاعبي مصر ماهي ركلات جزاء وأبعد ما تكون عن ذلك ، ما ترتقي لكونها تصبح جدلية أصلا إلا عشان توقيتها وردة الفعل حولها
وردة الفعل هذه عاطفية بحتة
إلغاء هدف زيكو صحيح والحالة مختلفة تماما ، المباراة تحكيميا ما فيها شيء غير مسارها هذه الحقيقة
الكرة والرياضة ما هي نظيفة للدرجة اللي يتصورها البعض يعني عادي يصير فيها مؤامرات بس أنك تستخدمها في كل موقف هذه عاطفة وتنفيس عن النتيجة ، أقبلها من المصريين لأن هذا منتخبهم بس فيه شريحة وجودهم في الموضوع مضحك صراحة