Man Called Sun wrote:It's inevitable that it would happen this way, but people's beef with this Barcelona team only really seems to be being constantly told how fucking brilliant they are, cos we live in a world where we are constantly being told how fucking brilliant everything is.
But this team really is fucking brilliant, and I'm happy enough to just watch the bastards getting on with that.
And on the diving thing, Busquets and Alves might well be cunts for it, but that doesn't mean the rest of the team are.
I really love and admire Barcelona as a city and a club, and the bigest reasons to do so will still be there long after Guardiola, Messi and Xavi are gone, but this team really is unbelievable, so let's just enjoy watching them eh?
gazurtoids wrote:You're close, but not quite right. I think many people's beef isn't being told that they're brilliant -- they can see that for themselves and most will readily agree, I reckon -- it's being told, as you did, that we must enjoy them.
The idea that this is the one, true, pure way to play the game is constantly being advanced, as though anyone who finds themselves stifling a yawn while watching Barcelona is some kind of anti-aesthete.
Personally, I find them quite a dull proposition. I admire the technical proficiency involved and its effectiveness is there for all to see but, as a spectacle, it's stultifying. So, no, I'm afraid I can't sit back and enjoy watching them.

gazurtoids wrote:I think it probably results from the degree to which they dominate possession, tbh. Even in those games where they rattle 5+ goals in, you seem to spend a lot of time watching them knock the ball around. After a few matches, i tired of it.
Come to think of it, I used a not dissimilar argument against Superman in the film thread I think!
moscowhite wrote:As for the 'pressure' to enjoy them: well, whatever. Ignoring the media bull shit is always the best idea.
Mustafaster wrote:I hope they fuckin trounce Chelsea, can't stand the cunts.
gazurtoids wrote:I think it probably results from the degree to which they dominate possession, tbh. Even in those games where they rattle 5+ goals in, you seem to spend a lot of time watching them knock the ball around. After a few matches, i tired of it.
Come to think of it, I used a not dissimilar argument against Superman in the film thread I think!

Mustafaster wrote:English footie culture has a large "Blood on yer studs" element, and it's exciting to see players get stuck in, blood and thunder gets the adrenaline going. Fair enough.
MightyWhite wrote:I see where you're coming from. I watched QPR v Swansea the other day, and there were serveral 'boring boring Swansea' etc chants coming from the QPR fans as Swansea knocked the ball around in their own half. Cue a deluge of incredulous journalists tweeting and retweeting in a frenzy, about how absurd the QPR fans are at even suggesting this beautiful display of possession could possibly be boring.
It is boring. Technically superb, but boring nonetheless. And I don't think you have to be a stereotypical knuckle dragging British neanderthal to think this.
gazurtoids wrote:Mustafaster wrote:English footie culture has a large "Blood on yer studs" element, and it's exciting to see players get stuck in, blood and thunder gets the adrenaline going. Fair enough.
Argh! This annoys me more than anything else: the idea that if you don't get turned on by Barcelona suffocating football matches by obsessively keeping the other side from touching the ball, you must be a blood & thunder "get stuck in" throwback. It's a false dichotomy.
moscowhite wrote:gazurtoids wrote:Mustafaster wrote:English footie culture has a large "Blood on yer studs" element, and it's exciting to see players get stuck in, blood and thunder gets the adrenaline going. Fair enough.
Argh! This annoys me more than anything else: the idea that if you don't get turned on by Barcelona suffocating football matches by obsessively keeping the other side from touching the ball, you must be a blood & thunder "get stuck in" throwback. It's a false dichotomy.
I think the falseness of that dichotomy can cut both ways, though. Just because I like what Barcelona are doing, doesn't mean that I don't thrill to a thunderous end to end game. The 1989/90 title video hasn't been usurped in my house.
(in fact about fifteen years ago I had a long running argument with a lover of Dutch total football, about my outrageous opinion that the seventies Holland side would have been improved by David Batty.)
For my money, though, Barcelona have taken their particular style somewhere new. Nobody has played like this before, and that's why I find it so interesting. There are two sides to the interest: 1) will someone find a way to stop them? Mourinho v Guardiola has been amazing to watch; and 2) where will they take it next? Messi is about the same age as Ben Parker. They're not done yet.
To turn your back on it all just because people are "going on about it too much" seems daft to me.
gazurtoids wrote:Who was David van Batty pencilled in to replace, incidentally?
moscowhite wrote:(in fact about fifteen years ago I had a long running argument with a lover of Dutch total football, about my outrageous opinion that the seventies Holland side would have been improved by David Batty.)
gazurtoids wrote:[
Of course not: that much is implied in my labelling of it as a false dichotomy. I don't believe I've said at any point that all of those who do find enjoyment in Barcelona's style don't find it in others, have I?
Let's be clear about your last point, though, because you have it arse about face: I haven't dismissed Barcelona because of the fawning over them, in reverse-snobbery fashion. I find them, for the most part, an unentertaining spectacle in their own right but the apparent consensus (albeit not on this thread) that one must find them beautiful and enjoyable, or, rather, that theirs is the ultimate/ideal style to which all others should aspire, really irritates me. My opinion of FCB is [as far as possible] independent of the wider debate about them. It's an important distinction. My back hasn't been turned but I do choose to look elsewhere.
Who was David van Batty pencilled in to replace, incidentally?
Man Called Sun wrote:moscowhite wrote:(in fact about fifteen years ago I had a long running argument with a lover of Dutch total football, about my outrageous opinion that the seventies Holland side would have been improved by David Batty.)
Surely there isn't a side that wouldn't?
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