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(Here goes nothing) If you’re tall, dark, handsome and you wear glasses and you happen to live in a certain flat(block E) at burma camp meet me at the car park. I just want to have a word🤣
I want all the South Africans to gather here. Here’s another evidence of your laziness on display. First, she’s begging on behalf of locals who are known to your owners as LAZY!! Second she’s not shouting on top of her voice “go bek go bek, go bek to your kentry” as she does in the presence of black people. This retarded woman is the embodiment of all that is wrong with the South African psyche.
I followed the debate, and honestly, a lot of you have a flawed way of judging who a good passer really is.
Passing isn’t just about accuracy or how beautiful it looks. The true art of passing lies in the intelligence behind the decision.
If I play a long ball that’s difficult to control, yes, I’ve completed a pass but it’s a poor one.
If I pass to a teammate surrounded by four opponents, that’s 100% accuracy but terrible timing and awareness.
If I deliver a flashy, defence-splitting pass but put my teammate in a tight, high-risk position, it’s still accurate but it’s bad decision-making.
This is where Lionel Messi stands out. I’m a Cristiano Ronaldo fan, but Messi surpasses every passer of the ball, past or present. Mesut Özil comes close. Kevin De Bruyne as well. Toni Kroos too.
But Messi’s passes carry intelligence. He releases the ball into spaces where you either have one defender to beat or none at all. He minimizes risk, maximizes advantage, and often puts the receiver in a position where finishing feels natural. His passes don’t just find a teammate, they create space, control the tempo, and tilt the odds in your favour.
That’s the difference between completing a pass and mastering the art of passing.