Beyond Lionel Messi: An Alternative List of the Best 25 Footballers in the World

Beyond Lionel Messi: An Alternative List of the Best 25 Footballers in the World

The titanic four-game battle between Real Madrid and Barcelona has once more thrown up the seemingly inexhaustible comparison between Cristiano Ronaldo and an Argentinian chap whose name I have momentarily forgotten.

Every time I read about how Lionel Messi boasts so many more goals per game than Cristiano Ronaldo, or that Cristiano Ronaldo has winked so many times for each game Lionel Messi has gone without an assist, or Ronaldo’s girlfriends-to-goals ratio compared with Messi’s ejaculatory compliments from Diego Maradona, I begin to understand the righteous rage which prompts fully-grown Englishmen to hurl vitriolic abuse at televised images of Portuguese wingers who ‘go down too easily’.

It’s that burning sense of indignation, that awful sensation that although there are probably many who agree with me, it’s up to me to put the world to rights.

So here it is: Lionel Messi is not the best player in the world. Neither is Cristiano Ronaldo. It seems we’ve suddenly and violently dropped from the Mount Olympus of great playmaking Gods dictating the fates of the humble mortal players around them to the labyrinthine game of tactical chess, which encloses creativity in a relativistic prison of peak physical conditioning with bars forged from the finest steel of unapologetically awful television punditry.

So fast was our fall that we appear to have barely noticed the dramatic shift in our surroundings. No longer do we inhabit a Garden of individualistic Eden, whose harmony is held in perpetual balance by the vision of a Zidane or a Nedved; our brave new world is at once a monument to tactical and physical excellence reveling in elegant structure and preparation and a chaotic sprawl of competing egos, a formless void echoing with – yet in so doing, denying – the dissonant thunder of the great players who just five or six years ago bestrode the football globe.

Yet it is this juxtaposition between the tight harnessing of individual creativity by the combination of tactical nous and physical perfection with the resultant lack of definite hierarchy between individual players which leads us to search for an absolute resolution: we want to have a figurehead for our generation. We want a Zinedine Zidane.

What I want to argue is that, whilst we may well be over Zidanes in this day and age, the two players we look at as their equivalents are simply the wrong choices. By producing this list, my aim is to acknowledge the most talented players in the world fairly, both by considering them in the light of their peers and by judging them in the context of a football world which requires players to be more complete than ever before.

Rather than judging players by the irritating combination of base statistical analysis and pseudo-romance preferred by the mainstream football media, I believe we can decide who the best players in the world are by following the following simple criteria:

  • How good would this player perform in a totally different context? Would Hulk’s ferocious pace and power be nullified by the Premier League”s physical style and high tempo compared with Portugal? Would Miroslav Klose thrive in Serie A? Why is Frank Lampard’s international record so mediocre considering his phenomenal exploits in the Premiership?
  • Who are the other top players in this player’s position? How do they compare?
  • What are this player’s weaknesses? How might they be exploited?
  • What is this player’s relative importance? If he is absent, how easily might he be replaced by another player?

Rather than asking what players ‘do’, which inevitably leads us into the trap of asking what their goals and assists stats look like, we should ask what they don’t do, and what they can’t do that others can. In this way, we can compare the headline-grabbers with the players who lay the foundations to make their work possible.

In my next two articles, I will put forward an ordered list of the 25 best players, be they central defenders of center-forwards, in the world. Most will be among the usual suspects, but I hope to try to explain my choices within the context which I have just outlined here.

The point is simple: whilst history will remember the teams, the result and the goalscorers, we should keep alive the spirit of greatness which lies at the root of the game through the memory of the important players who contribute substance along with style.

I have not included goalkeepers in my list because their role is unique and separate from what goes on ‘in play’.

Beyond Lionel Messi: An Alternative List of the Best 25 Footballers in the World

For now, here is a list of players who do not make my list: Gennaro Gattuso, Frank Lampard, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Robin van Persie, Wayne Rooney, Lukas Podolski, Robinho, Fernando Torres, Samir Nasri, Rafael van der Vaart, Alexandre Pato, Gonzalo Higuain, Pedro, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Ricardo Carvalho, Nemanja Vidic, Michael Essien, Diego Forlan.

Topics: Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Lists

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8 Comments

  1. Kaori1

    Wow dude, all the 25 players you mention are good, but for now, Messi is the best. Some of the players you mention, I’ve never even heard about them (or I forget perhaps). If you’re asking about the greatest of all time, then I’m not sure about the answer. But if you’re asking about the best of today’s generation, Messi is the one. Are you sure you like and watch football?

    April 27th, 2011 @ 10:05
  2. ish

    great list, one omission i though that was outstanding was rooney. im my mind rooney is the best deep forward in the game, power, speed, skill, finesse and an engine that means he plays nearly like a DM inside the opposition third makes him a constant threat. Honestly in my mind rooney is the best player in the EPL currently.

    This is coming from a Chelsea fan btw. love to see ramires in there because simply put he has been the best midfielder at chelsea this season after his initial jittery start. just immense in so many games.

    April 27th, 2011 @ 10:40
    • augustoneto

      I think Rooney’s recent form would make him a candidate, but personally I’ve always felt that he is a limited player. If he has an in-form number nine up with him, if he’s in form and if his team dominate possession, he’s a great player. The problem for me is that that’s too many ifs to be up there ahead of certain other players.

      As for Ramires, he’s one of those players who will never get the recognition he deserves – he is too hard a worker. He has much more technical ability than many people recognise too.

      April 27th, 2011 @ 12:55
  3. Stefan

    Considering your list and what you’re looking for, I’m pretty sure Xavi and Iniesta deserve a mention

    April 27th, 2011 @ 13:18
  4. jgmanza

    Hahaha, dude. I know most of these players, and some are good. But, are you joking???

    April 27th, 2011 @ 13:38
  5. CFAdrian

    WTF Fernando Torres Dude. you just said you wouldn’t put him in the list and there he is seriously WTF!!!!!!

    April 27th, 2011 @ 19:19
  6. John

    Fifa Rankings are correct.
    1) Messi
    2) Iniesta
    3) Xavi

    You are wrong. Messi is the best player of today. Though I agree All of the players you mention are all world class, especially your mention of Rio Ferdinand, Cole, Drogba and Pirlo, They cannot beat Messi. He is the greatest player I have ever seen with my own eyes.

    April 27th, 2011 @ 22:26
  7. Mark Hayden

    Zlatan Ibra is my far the dominated ST in the game more so than Ronaldo and Messi…Rafael Van Der Vaart is up there too but I believe Iniesta is the most well rounded player in the world.

    May 2nd, 2011 @ 03:51