Jonathan Wilson: Berbatov a misunderstood genius

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Jonathan Wilson: Berbatov a misunderstood genius

When Dimitar Berbatov was a child, he idolized Robert De Niro, so it perhaps isn't surprising he plays the cold-eyed assassin well. There is a coldness about him, a sense of calculation that fits uneasily into a Premier League environment in which "passion" remains the foremost of all virtues. If anything, though, he probably resembles less De Niro than Clint Eastwood, laconic and unfussy, almost everything he does performed with an ironic glint.

His two headers in Manchester United's 3-2 win over Liverpool on Sunday were masterpieces of understatement, the ball guided in with a minimalist flick. In both cases he had to hold off markers -- first a weirdly insipid hold from Fernando Torres, then a rather more robust challenge from Jamie Carragher -- and on both occasions his sense of timing and positioning meant that the headers seemed effortless. An in-form Wayne Rooney -- he is certainly not that right now -- would have attacked either chance in a flurry of bustling shoulders and thrusting neck muscles.

Berbatov's other goal -- trapping the ball on one thigh and then sending it arcing over his shoulder and in off the underside of the bar -- was a classic of what Rob Smyth has taken to calling "Berbarotica"; one of those moments of skill and imagination whose brilliance elicits an instinctive warmth in the gut. And, as with all the greatest Berbatov moments, it felt as though he were operating on a different plane than everybody else on the pitch. How on earth did he find that much time in the box?
Overhead kicks happen so rarely partly because they're difficult to execute, but also because usually a defender gets close enough that a referee will call dangerous play for the raised foot. Yet Berbatov, languidly elegant as ever, was so unflustered that there was time for the thought to crystallize: "Surely he's not going to try an overhead?" He was, and he did, and the result was a goal that stands out even in the saturated modern world in which we see a dozen brilliant strikes from around the globe each weekend.

That economy, not only of action but also, seemingly, of emotion, defines him. It gives him the calm that is central to his talent, but it also means that, in England especially, when things go wrong he is derided as a sulker, somebody who doesn't try -- an accusation that, quite ludicrously, was flung last week at Torres. Sometimes, it needs to be accepted that players are simply out of form.
What made it worse for Berbatov was that the player he effectively replaced at Old Trafford, Carlos Tevez, is so energetic, so obviously passionate, that even on his worst days his sheer effort won the admiration of fans and pundits. And the criticism was heightened by the lingering sense of disapproval at the way Berbatov was perceived to have engineered his move from Tottenham. In other professions, of course, it's perfectly legitimate for an employee to leave a company for a bigger one offering better prospects, but football, driven as it is by the loyalty of fans, demands a level of loyalty from its stars as well.

Berbatov loved a club once, but it rejected him, and it seems the experience left a streak of ice in his blood. He grew up in Blagoevgrad, a town in southwestern Bulgaria, and when he was 9, CSKA Sofia came to play the local side, Pirin, in a cup tie. CSKA remains one of the two great clubs of Bulgaria, but back then it had extra cachet as the team of the great Hristo Stoichkov. After the game, Berbatov's father, himself a professional player, arranged for his son to meet Stoichkov, who gave him a signed pennant. From then on, Berbatov's ambition was to be good enough to move to the capital and play for CSKA.
At 17, he achieved his dream, and played alongside Martin Petrov and Stiliyan Petrov in one of the great youth sides. In a derby against Levski, he fell awkwardly after a bad challenge and broke his arm, but he remained as dedicated as ever. His mother, Margarita, once went to visit him at the club dormitories during a holiday period when many of the other youth players were away.
"It seemed to me there was nobody else about in the whole neighborhood, just a couple of dogs," she said. "It was one of the saddest pictures I've ever seen. He was lying on the bed, listening to music, like he was pining for somebody. I thought it must be some girl, but when I looked at what he was staring at I saw it was the badge of CSKA. That was when I realized how much he loved that club."

At 18, he stepped up to the first team, which he helped to the Bulgarian Cup in 1999, but those were difficult years for CSKA. And after he missed a string of chances in a derby in 2000, the crowd began to take out its frustration on him. When, on the first day of the following season, he was profligate again as CSKA opened up with a goalless draw at home to Litex Lovech, the reaction of fans was even harsher. Berbatov was abused and threatened, and the experience was deeply upsetting.
"He was devastated," his mother said. "His phone was ringing but he didn't want to talk to anybody. That was maybe the worst moment of his career. He suffered and it was very hard for the whole family."
He considered quitting the game, but his parents persuaded him to stick at it. He scored nine goals in the 10 additional games he played for CSKA, but the spark had gone and, rejected by fans of the club he loved, he rejected them, and joined Bayer Leverkusen the following January.
"For me, it was pretty difficult because I had some bad moments," he said. "You have difficult games and you miss some chances and the fans aren't great to you, your own fans, and it's difficult to accept that and you start to think about your future. After a while, you decide to go and play outside your country. When you overcome things like that, that's what makes you."

It seems he resolved then never to let himself become so attached again. His career path since, from Leverkusen to Tottenham to United, has been so straight, so logical, that it almost seems programmed, like a young lawyer outgrowing his father's small provincial business and plotting his route, step by step, to the plush corner office in an international firm in London or New York. But more than that, Berbatov seemed unmoved by the widespread criticism he received last season; it may have hurt, but he gave a very good impression of a man who just didn't care what others thought or said, and maybe he didn't.

It is a detached view that means Berbatov will never profess undying love for one club, will never go chasing lost causes into the corner, and may never seem fully settled, like the executive at the drinks party who glances just a little too often over your shoulder even as he engages in conversation and delivers killer one-liners. It probably means he will never be loved in the way that Rooney, Ryan Giggs or Paul Scholes is at Old Trafford, but it may also give him a different, less emotional perspective on the game. And it may be that it is just that detachment that makes goals like Sunday's overhead possible. He is, fundamentally, a very talented gun for hire.
Jonathan Wilson is the author of Inverting the Pyramid; Behind the Curtain; Sunderland: A Club Transformed; and The Anatomy of England.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...erbatov/index.html?eref=writers#ixzz10Cv4eXKc
 
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Oh how fickle the press are... A few good games and he's a 'misunderstood genius' before a few shockers will have him labelled the biggest dud since Djemba-djemba. I'd put him somewhere in the middle.
 
Oh how fickle the press are... A few good games and he's a 'misunderstood genius' before a few shockers will have him labelled the biggest dud since Djemba-djemba. I'd put him somewhere in the middle.

agreed, once Rooney is fireing on all cylinders again Berba wont be the number 1 boy and he wont feel loved again.
 
take neither of you read jonathan wilson much then?

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agreed, once Rooney is fireing on all cylinders again Berba wont be the number 1 boy and he wont feel loved again.
cjacko11, youve never liked berbatov so i take most of your comments with a hefty pinch of salt
 
i've been saying this for sooo long. i had an argument with my dad and a few of his mates a couple of months ago defending him and said how good he is.

Technically, he's one of the best players around. His technical ability is up there with the likes of Xavi, Messi etc. he just needed to apply himself a bit more and it looks like this season he has...
 
take neither of you read jonathan wilson much then?

---------- Post added at 12:13 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:12 AM ----------


cjacko11, youve never liked berbatov so i take most of your comments with a hefty pinch of salt

I've actually read a fair bit of his stuff. Read his book about Travels in East European Football and if he's in the Independent (when I pick it up for free) then I give his articles a read.

My comment wasn't based on this article really, it was more about the press as a whole, and how opinions on Berbatov change rather frequently.
 
I've actually read a fair bit of his stuff. Read his book about Travels in East European Football and if he's in the Independent (when I pick it up for free) then I give his articles a read.

My comment wasn't based on this article really, it was more about the press as a whole, and how opinions on Berbatov change rather frequently.
fair enough, but to be fair you cant lump wilson with the rest of the press, he's a cut above those fickle crows
 
No doubting he is a great footballer, just is too lazy most of the time to show it.
 
the last two years were incredibly frustrating to watch, because every now and then you saw glimpses of his brilliant, his apprach play was great, just not enough of getting on the end of chances, or driving into those very attacking areas, whereas this season he starts of outside the box,but now he gets in and around the 6 yard box to finish, really hope he can keep it up, hes a technical genius
 
I've never doubted Berbatov since he moved to England (besides his first few games for Spurs that is.) He was class for us and I was genuinely gutted when he left Spurs and hoped that we might get him back on the cheap after last season.

Don't forget this is the man who almost single-handedly destroyed Chelsea's defence with a performance that made our London neighbours look like pub-footballers at times. Only when Jol took him off did Chelsea find a way back into the game. (I'm talking about the 3-3 cup draw here btw.)

I think Berba has struggled to strike up a partnership with Rooney, as I've said in previous threads, because of the all-action way in which Rooney plays and the extra amount of grafting United ask of him -- Berba was used to having his strike partners close to him at Spurs (and was rarely asked to defend) and always knew where they were, whereas Rooney can be anywhere on the pitch at any given time (even covering his defenders ***** at times.) The more he plays, the more he gets used to this, and eventually his undoubted talent will shine through -- as it's beginning to in recent matches.
 
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I've never doubted Berbatov since he moved to England (besides his first few games for Spurs that is.) He was class for us and I was genuinely gutted when he left Spurs and hoped that we might get him back on the cheap after last season.

Don't forget this is the man who almost single-handedly destroyed Chelsea's defence with a performance that made our London neighbours look like pub-footballers at times. Only when Jol took him off did Chelsea find a way back into the game. (I'm talking about the 3-3 cup draw here btw.)

I think Berba has struggled to strike up a partnership with Rooney, as I've said in previous threads, because of the all-action way in which Rooney plays and the extra amount of grafting United ask of him -- Berba was used to having his strike partners close to him at Spurs (and was rarely asked to defend) and always knew where they were, whereas Rooney can be anywhere on the pitch at any given time (even covering his defenders ***** at times.) The more he plays, the more he gets used to this, and eventually his undoubted talent will shine through -- as it's beginning to in recent matches.
this ive noticed, look how close rooney is to him in the liverpool match. think is a case of rooney learning to be closer to berbs as much as dimi learn to be more independant, think is working better this season because we are committing more players in the attack so far than we did last year, theres always options
 
Surprised to see his De Niro idolisation mentioned over his obsession with Shearer, especially when it then goes straight into his headed goals.
 
fair enough, but to be fair you cant lump wilson with the rest of the press, he's a cut above those fickle crows

I probably should have made it more clear I wasn't directly referring to the particular article, but oh well. I still stand by my point though.

Yeah, I can't seem to find a particular blog for him, he seems to write for lots of newspapers/magazines. I'd recommend his book on East European football, it makes a good change from the Premiership!
 
I probably should have made it more clear I wasn't directly referring to the particular article, but oh well. I still stand by my point though.

Yeah, I can't seem to find a particular blog for him, he seems to write for lots of newspapers/magazines. I'd recommend his book on East European football, it makes a good change from the Premiership!
annoyingly he doesnt do a blog. probably because he knows his word is absolute gold, why do it for free when you can get paid by virtually anyone? havent read that one yet, was going to after i have got over my mini obsession with sacchi.

On Berbs, also have noticed he does better when he drifts to from left to right across the box as nani comes in, they link very well
 
take neither of you read jonathan wilson much then?

---------- Post added at 12:13 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:12 AM ----------


cjacko11, youve never liked berbatov so i take most of your comments with a hefty pinch of salt

i liked Berba while he was at Spurs and its because he was playing and scoring reguarly. Maybe im abit ****** because Shevchenko got slammed for a 30million pound transfer and Berba was not much better with the same price tag. I said it about a few players it seems to me as if Berba is better when he is in a smaller side as the top man the same i think goes for Santa Cruz and Huntelaar. But thats why i think he is doing so well at the moment because its obvious that Rooney isen't top dog at the moment so Berba has taken that position, but sometime in the future Rooney will get his form and confidence back and will start to grab all the headlines again and Berba wont be the top dog anymore.
 
i liked Berba while he was at Spurs and its because he was playing and scoring reguarly. Maybe im abit ****** because Shevchenko got slammed for a 30million pound transfer and Berba was not much better with the same price tag. I said it about a few players it seems to me as if Berba is better when he is in a smaller side as the top man the same i think goes for Santa Cruz and Huntelaar. But thats why i think he is doing so well at the moment because its obvious that Rooney isen't top dog at the moment so Berba has taken that position, but sometime in the future Rooney will get his form and confidence back and will start to grab all the headlines again and Berba wont be the top dog anymore.
sheva never stood a chance because mourhino had no intention of integrating him, so he never had any great success. berbs is still at the club so not sure how he can be written off. disagree about your last statement, its all about finding a way to suit a players game, and we seem to have done that so far this season, and berbs has adapted as well, hes making runs that he wouldnt have made last season, and thus gettin on the end of things he wouldnt normally have, take a look at those two headers for one
 
Sheva's main problem was that he should never have signed for yous in the first place -- when it's the Chairman asking you to come whilst the manager stays quiet on the matter it's pretty obvious he don't really want you and the confidence a manager has in a player plays a huge part in things.
 
Sheva's main problem was that he should never have signed for yous in the first place -- when it's the Chairman asking you to come whilst the manager stays quiet on the matter it's pretty obvious he don't really want you and the confidence a manager has in a player plays a huge part in things.
this. the one thing SAF has always done is defend berbatov to the hilt, and so have the rest of the players. look at their reaction when he scores, they absolutely mob him because they see and hear the criticism
 
sheva never stood a chance because mourhino had no intention of integrating him, so he never had any great success. berbs is still at the club so not sure how he can be written off. disagree about your last statement, its all about finding a way to suit a players game, and we seem to have done that so far this season, and berbs has adapted as well, hes making runs that he wouldnt have made last season, and thus gettin on the end of things he wouldnt normally have, take a look at those two headers for one

Sheva's main problem was that he should never have signed for yous in the first place -- when it's the Chairman asking you to come whilst the manager stays quiet on the matter it's pretty obvious he don't really want you and the confidence a manager has in a player plays a huge part in things.

yer totaly agree on the Sheva thing and i think that was the beggining of the Jose-Roman fall out. I just think Utd will struggle to get both Berba and Rooney playing at the top of there form in the same side. Its obvious Berba has class and possibly some of the best tekkers in the world game for a striker but i just think once Rooney comes back into form he will get faded out again.
 
yer totaly agree on the Sheva thing and i think that was the beggining of the Jose-Roman fall out. I just think Utd will struggle to get both Berba and Rooney playing at the top of there form in the same side. Its obvious Berba has class and possibly some of the best tekkers in the world game for a striker but i just think once Rooney comes back into form he will get faded out again.
what makes you say that? rooney being out of form doesnt mean that berbs is in. if anything the strike force becomes more potent. rooneys lack of form isnt from any tactical shift on our part
 
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