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Javier Mascherano Interview

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Arn

Lucas the best player in the world
Banned
Javier Mascherano interview: Barcelona defender on what makes the Nou Camp so special

Ahead of his side’s Champions League encounter with Arsenal next week, the Argentinian defender tells Pete Jenson that the culture that runs to the core of Barcelona is the reason for their unparallelled success – that and a bloke called Lionel Messi

Anyone who thinks Barcelona have won the Champions League three times in the last seven years just because of pass, pass, pass and Lionel Messi, has not been paying attention according to Javier Mascherano.
“El Jefecito” (“the little boss”) lays down a few home truths about the team currently favourite to become the first to win the tournament in successive seasons.
“Those on the inside don’t have to adapt to those coming from the outside. No, no, no,” he says. “It’s those arriving to the club from the outside who have to adapt to those already here. The players who have come up through the system are the ones who pass on the culture of the club.”
Barcelona travel to England next week to see if they can knock Arsenal out of the competition as they did in 2010 and 2011 and the focus will be on Leo Messi, Luis Suarez and Neymar when they touchdown on Monday. But speaking at Barcelona’s Joan Gamper training complex, a short distance from the new base of the club’s legendary Masia academy, Mascherano talks about that respect for the club’s “home-produced” players and also of the mental toughness of the players who have won so much in such a short space of time.

“What is so special here is that the players – and not just the three up-front but players such as Sergio Busquets, Andres Iniesta and Gerard Pique – have been winning all there is to win for so many years, and yet they still have that hunger for more.

“Even just a little bit of praise can weaken you. So imagine when there is not just the praise but the medals on the table too. But these players have marked out the route and those that join the club are obliged to follow in their footsteps.
“That is the special thing here: the homegrown players, the people of the casa, have laid the path and those that have arrived afterwards follow it.”
It’s something that perhaps Manchester United had with the Class of ’92; Chelsea with John Terry and Frank Lampard; and Liverpool, where Mascherano played for a spell, with Jamie Carragher and Steven Gerrard – Barcelona take it to another level.
“Yes, of course, Liverpool had Carragher and Gerrard. But there were two of them. When there are seven or eight it’s a lot easier. When you got to the Liverpool dressing room the first thing you would look for is to see if Jamie and Stevie had arrived and if they had then everything was OK. But what happens when one of them is missing? Or if they are both missing? It’s not so easy. I think that’s the secret.”

Mental toughness is the other quality he believes underpins this domination of European football. “Great players are very good technically but they also have a huge amount of character, because without it you will never get to see that great technique because it vanishes under pressure. I have had so many team-mates who have been technically better than me. But they have lacked that desire and mental strength. This team has that.”

None of which means Mascherano does not marvel at Messi along with the rest of us. “Football is not as easy as it looks from the television gantry,” he says at one point, before adding: “but for Messi it is.
“He is someone you never stop being surprised by. Iniesta is the same. There is always a piece of skill during a match or a training session where the normal thing would be that it doesn’t work out, but with them it does. I have seen Iniesta dribble on the edge of our area so many times and you say to yourself: ‘how has he done that?’ If he loses the ball then they score. But he doesn’t lose it.”
When Mascherano joined Barcelona from Liverpool in 2010 he did so as a midfielder. But Barcelona already had the best midfield unit in the world with Iniesta and Xavi Hernandez flanking Busquets.
Was it always the plan to become a defender? “No, no, no. I had no idea. And sincerely, after five or six months of being here it looked as if I would not be staying for very long. My strengths seemed to be in complete contrast to the style of the team,” he says.
“Throughout my whole career I have been a physical player who contains the opposition; a defensive player who doesn’t get involved in the attack. But here the style of play is to always go on the attack!”

So he became a centre-back – one picked out as a potential weak link but who won two Champions League medals without putting a foot wrong in the finals. “I knew in terms of being a regular starter I was not going to be able to take Busquets’ place. It’s impossible. He is very, very good. And for Barcelona he is perfect.”

He says he could only have made the positional transition at this club, where a high-defensive line often sees him next to Busquets on the pitch. “I still feel like a central midfielder and one day I will not play any more for Barcelona and I will go and play somewhere else and I’m sure I will do so as a central midfielder,” he says.

“Being a central defender for Barça it is not like being a centre-back for any other team. The part of the pitch that you end up playing in is very similar to the part you would inhabit if you were playing in midfield. The only thing that changes is that I receive the ball facing the pitch, and not with my back to the play. If you take me back to defend in my area the whole time, then obviously I am going to suffer more because of my physical stature.”

He would not have been the first player to struggle at Barcelona because he was unable to change to suit their style. There are plenty of Arsenal players – both past and present – on that particular list with Cesc Fabregas, Alex Song, Alex Hleb and Alexis Sanchez among them. After the original pessimism he says he drew on the same strength that saw him make it at Liverpool.
“I was at West Ham and I wasn’t playing and then I went to Liverpool and you could say: ‘If I’m not playing at West Ham, how am I going to play for Liverpool when they have Gerrard and Xabi Alonso?’ It was a challenge and it was the same situation here.”

So which was the better midfield – Barça’s fabled three or that Liverpool trio of Mascherano, Alonso and Gerrard? “It’s difficult,” he says, admitting that while one was perfect for Barcelona, the other had the perfect balance.
“I was there to contain and to offer balance; Xabi was there to distribute and Stevie was there to distribute as well but also to arrive in the area and finish. That Liverpool team played some very good football. It was one of the best sides I have played in.”

The Liverpool experience brings a big smile to Mascherano’s face. It also takes him back to the subject of what a football club should and should not be.
“Liverpool is a club where you need to be there to enjoy it. It’s not worth owning Liverpool if you are going to always be 20,000 miles away. It’s a club that belongs to the people. And you will never understand that if you are never there.”

The club has changed hands since Mascherano left but it remains in the control of people making decisions from another continent. At least they now have the right manager. “Jürgen Klopp is a perfect coach for Liverpool. He is very much of the people. He likes to get close to people and that is what the people of Liverpool are like. I always say that nowhere have I been treated as well as I was treated there.”
Does that affection for Liverpool mean that if Pep Guardiola came calling this summer wanting Mascherano to do for him at Manchester City what Alonso did for him at Bayern Munich he would turn him down out of loyalty to his former club?
“No, no, Pep is not going to call me,” he says laughing down the suggestion. “He will not call me, no, no, no. But returning to the Premier League? I don’t know. My feeling for Liverpool does not mean I’m tied to them. If in the future a Premier League team was interested in me and I had the chance to go back, you can’t say: ‘No, I would only play for one team’. I don’t know what I would do.”

Beyond the next move as a player, management surely awaits. Everyone who has ever played alongside him sees it as his destiny. Few understand this sport better than Mascherano and even fewer are able to communicate their understanding so eloquently.
“Playing at being a coach is very easy,” he says playing down the possibility. “From this side of the fence things look very different and when you cross over it is not the same. I would certainly like to try. I would start in Argentina, for sure.”
And then would he coach in Europe, maybe at Liverpool? “Let’s see how good I am first,” he laughs again as things get increasingly hypothetical. “I think maybe Stevie and Jamie might get there before me. Perhaps they will want an assistant.”

If they did, they could do a lot worse than choose a man steeped in success.

http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/...t-makes-the-nou-camp-so-special-a6884171.html
 
I can only believe Barca players if they are on an airline or on a horse, like the milky bar kid.
 
I loved Masherano. Cracking player.

Me too. He was like a little terrier, covering acres of ground as he dispossessed the opposition and fed our attacks. I think if Benitez hadn't been such a poor man-manager we could have kept him at Anfield.
 
Me too. He was like a little terrier, covering acres of ground as he dispossessed the opposition and fed our attacks. I think if Benitez hadn't been such a poor man-manager we could have kept him at Anfield.
Mascherano disagrees with you.

“What happened is what had to happen. They promised me that if there was a good offer they’d release me because the club was in a process of disintegration.But [then the club] didn’t always tell the truth; it’s the player whose image gets damaged, the same happened to Fernando [Torres], but things were clear: I never lied. When Rafa [Benítez] went, they knew I’d leave. I felt the project was falling apart. Rafa had gone, there was no direction.” He pauses. “And the offer was Barcelona.”

The full interview is here: http://www.theguardian.com/football...ano-barcelona-nicklas-bendtner-changed-career
 
Me too. He was like a little terrier, covering acres of ground as he dispossessed the opposition and fed our attacks. I think if Benitez hadn't been such a poor man-manager we could have kept him at Anfield.
Wasn't it hodge podge that messed it up?
 
Mascherano was claiming he had a problem because his wife wanted to go back to Spain a long time before Benitez went. I always felt it was an excuse and Mascherano wasn't happy under Benitez.
 
Classless departure, but he was right to want to leave. It's our fault for hiring Roy. You're a Latino player at the top, and you have a choice of playing for Barca or under ROY Hodgson, what do you do. It's a no brainer. He's always said nice things about us, and when they Beat UNITED in the CL, his first comment was of us.

It's clear we're in his heart. He gets us. So let's not be classless, and let's give the guy a pass on how he left.. I for one, forgive the fella. He was great for us.

As an aside those Rafa years look so good right now.
 
Me too. He was like a little terrier, covering acres of ground as he dispossessed the opposition and fed our attacks. I think if Benitez hadn't been such a poor man-manager we could have kept him at Anfield.

Am. He left when Hodgson was in charge.
 
Classless departure, but he was right to want to leave. It's our fault for hiring Roy. You're a Latino player at the top, and you have a choice of playing for Barca or under ROY Hodgson, what do you do. It's a no brainer. He's always said nice things about us, and when they Beat UNITED in the CL, his first comment was of us.

It's clear we're in his heart. He gets us. So let's not be classless, and let's give the guy a pass on how he left.. I for one, forgive the fella. He was great for us.

As an aside those Rafa years look so good right now.

Top post.
 
Our situation when Mascherano left was so shit that no one had blamed Gerrard if he had left. We would have understood why. Hours from being forced to sell all our best players. Hours away from doing a Leeds.

Thankfully Gerrard thought that Hodgson was a great fantastic manager. Mascherano knew better. Roy our new manager with Gillett and Hicks as owner. Fuck it I'm out of here.

Mascherano made the right decision and left. Gerrard made the wrong one and stayed. If you look at it what would have been best for the players. How much better would Gerrard have been if he had left for a top class club at that time?
 
Our situation when Mascherano left was so shit that no one had blamed Gerrard if he had left. We would have understood why. Hours from being forced to sell all our best players. Hours away from doing a Leeds.

Thankfully Gerrard thought that Hodgson was a great fantastic manager. Mascherano knew better. Roy our new manager with Gillett and Hicks as owner. Fuck it I'm out of here.

Mascherano made the right decision and left. Gerrard made the wrong one and stayed. If you look at it what would have been best for the players. How much better would Gerrard have been if he had left for a top class club at that time?
Who cares about how much better Gerrard would have been. It's about supporting the club, not the player.
 
Our situation when Mascherano left was so shit that no one had blamed Gerrard if he had left. We would have understood why. Hours from being forced to sell all our best players. Hours away from doing a Leeds.

Thankfully Gerrard thought that Hodgson was a great fantastic manager. Mascherano knew better. Roy our new manager with Gillett and Hicks as owner. Fuck it I'm out of here.

Mascherano made the right decision and left. Gerrard made the wrong one and stayed. If you look at it what would have been best for the players. How much better would Gerrard have been if he had left for a top class club at that time?

Gerrard stayed because he's from Liverpool, supports Liverpool, was Liverpool captain, all his friends and family supported Liverpool,and he felt duty-bound by honour and loyalty to stay. And he could have left several times under Benitez, Dalglish and Rodgers, not just Hodgson. But he didn't.

I'm not sure what kind of cunt you have to be to not understand that.
 
...in addition to which I don't think a move would have worked for him anyway. He'd never have been happy elsewhere and he'd have become a lesser player, even with Mourinho - of whom Stevie was a big fan - as manager. My guess is he'd eventually have come back to LFC but with limited success and we'd all have seen he wasn't the player he'd been before, a bit like Rushie when he returned from Italy.
 
Mascherano was a great player but I have no affection for him.

I wish we hadn't sold him for about a third of his real value.
 
Mascherano disagrees with you.

“What happened is what had to happen. They promised me that if there was a good offer they’d release me because the club was in a process of disintegration.But [then the club] didn’t always tell the truth; it’s the player whose image gets damaged, the same happened to Fernando [Torres], but things were clear: I never lied. When Rafa [Benítez] went, they knew I’d leave. I felt the project was falling apart. Rafa had gone, there was no direction.” He pauses. “And the offer was Barcelona.”

The full interview is here: http://www.theguardian.com/football...ano-barcelona-nicklas-bendtner-changed-career

"I felt the project was falling apart"

His time with us was a "project". His words.

Fucking ringpiece.
 
He's so full of shit, always has been:

"What kills me about living in Liverpool is that there are only two Argentinians here with me, Emiliano Insúa and Maxi Rodríguez. Insúa and I live in a private neighbourhood. He lives in one tower and I live in the other. There are 15 metres between us and we used to look at each other through the window".
 
"I felt the project was falling apart"

His time with us was a "project". His words.

Fucking ringpiece.

The club will always be a project. It wasn't his time with us that was a project. It was the club that was and still is a project. So many here imagine up things just to have a go. I do wonder who is the ringpiece.

FSG is now building up the club again, that is a project. Maybe you want FSG out of here because of that. Every player we sign is a part of the project. Every contract they sign is a part of the project and so on.

When a player joins us they want to be a part of the project.

When you decide to make a walk to the shop or something then that is also a project. Not that important project but still a project. When you get back home then that project is finished. Everything you do is a project. If you wank then that is also a project. Probably won't take that long time but it still a project.
 
He's so full of shit, always has been:

"What kills me about living in Liverpool is that there are only two Argentinians here with me, Emiliano Insúa and Maxi Rodríguez. Insúa and I live in a private neighbourhood. He lives in one tower and I live in the other. There are 15 metres between us and we used to look at each other through the window".

john_lewis_christmas_commercial_man_on_the_moon_1446841033101_26374014_ver1.0_640_480.jpg
 
I remember people saying when he left, "it's OK, we've got Lu......".

I can't even bring myself to finish typing that.
 
He was superb, wasn't he. He would have gone down as one of the best DM's of this generation of football, except he spent most his time in the back line at Barca. But he won pretty much every trophy on offer, to you can't blame him. As a DM he would have gone on to be better than Makelele by some distance.

I remember one game against Arsenal at Anfield - still under Rafa. He was literally cutting down Arsenal every time they got into the zone in front of our penalty area.

Him and Alonso as the '2' in a 4-2-3-1 was as near to perfect as you can get.
 
Mascherano rightly deserves stick for the manner of his leaving as he came out with every excuse in the book to force a move but that doesn't mean it wasn't the right decision for him it just wasn't the right decision for Liverpool who lost a player we have been unable to replace adequately.

No one here complains too much when players from smaller clubs than us act like arseholes to force through a transfer to us do they?

We can't expect foreign players to want to stay with us if we aren't successful and other top teams can attract them with better chances of winning things and at least the same wages and probably more. That's a problem the club has and until we can regularly compete for trophies both home and in Europe then it will continue to happen unfortunately.

The Torres transfer was much worse in my opinion as it showed that we couldn't keep hold of a player from a club in the same division and the Sterling transfer proved that once again. Suarez also wanted to go to another team in our league as he felt they had more chances of winning things and Liverpool were almost glad to sell him to a foreign team when he finally did go.

It all goes to show how far the club has fell and it's going to take a lot for us to regain our status as one of Europe's elite clubs.
 
In the case of Torres, he had gone well off the boil by the time he was sold to Chelsea, so it was a fantastic deal which was rather spoilt by the decision to use a big chunk of the proceeds to pay over the odds for Andy Carroll. Likewise with Raheem Sterling, he is a young player who is still some way from being the real deal, so that sale was a good bit of business too. I don't see either transaction as evidence that the club has fallen a long way.
 
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