Captains carrying club's standard
Monday, 7 March 2005
By Trevor Haylett
John Terry (Chelsea FC)
Whoever comes out on top when Chelsea FC and FC Barcelona renew their UEFA
Champions League rivalry at Stamford Bridge on Tuesday, it is a fair guess
that most of the plaudits will be showered on the night's matchwinner, be it
Samuel Eto'o, Damien Duff or any other of the attacking luminaries on show.
Two of a kind
But as to which player will experience the greatest sense of satisfaction
there will be no need to look beyond John Terry or Carles Puyol. Two
captains, two defensive pillars but also two players for whom success at
their clubs resonates all the more vibrantly because they have each
undertaken the long journey from the junior sides to the captain's armband.
Strong personalities
Each will be crucial to his team's hopes of making it to the quarter-finals.
Both commanding defenders in their own right, they have far more to offer
than that. Two strong personalities, Puyol and Terry so often set the tone
for how their side will perform while team-mates have come to expect an
encouraging word here or a forceful suggestion there.
Outstanding performer
While Puyol has been an outstanding performer for Barcelona for a number of
seasons – firstly as a full-back and now as a centre-half – Terry has
really come to the fore this term. So much so that many observers are
predicting the 24-year-old will become only the second English-born player to
win the coveted Footballer of the Year trophy since 1994.
Helping Carvalho
In the first leg of their first knockout round match at Camp Nou, Terry gave
another emphatic statement of his quality and resistance. Fully aware that
alongside him, Ricardo Carvalho was feeling his tentative way back into the
fold having missed several outings with a broken toe, the Londoner knew he
had to take on even more responsibility as Deco, Xavi Hernández and Demetrio
Albertini launched waves of attacking intent designed to feed the goalscoring
hunger of Eto'o and Ronaldinho.
Unglamorous work
Terry was simply outstanding. So much of his work involves the unglamourous
side of the game, getting his body in the way to deflect goalbound shots or
to cut out incisive passes. Sometimes a defender can get lucky in those
situations and benefit from a striker's inability to shoot straight. But with
Terry it happens so often it can only be the result of a sharp positional
sense and awareness of where the ball will be directed.
Puyol quicker
Puyol, curly-haired and uncompromising, is cast from the same granite slab
when it comes to hard-man defending. He is as unyielding as his opposite
number in Chelsea blue, formidable in the tackle, determined to come out best
in the air and diligent in the organisation of the defence around him. The
26-year-old also has the advantage of being a shade quicker over the ground.
Where the Chelsea man scores over the Spaniard is in the goalscoring stakes
C he has been on target seven times this season, including three in Europe,
whereas Puyol has still to open his account.
International regular
Where Terry will cast covetous eyes at his opponent is in the matter of
international football. At the moment he is seen by Sven-G?ran Eriksson as
the first-choice replacement should either Rio Ferdinand or Sol Campbell be
injured, whereas Puyol is a regular starter for Spain. So impressive has been
Terry's level of excellence and improvement over the last 12 months, however,
that the time when he is considered indispensable to England's cause will
surely come sooner rather than later.
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