da betway: What do we want from players? And what traits do they need to be held in the highest esteem? Flair, pace, strength? Intelligence? We always note which players are more intelligent than others. Lampard has good GCSEs and an IQ good enough for Mensa. Arsene Wenger has a degree in electrical engineering and economics and recently Johan Djourou’s interview with The Independent highlighted him as one of the sharper knives in football’s draw. But why do we care? Intelligence seems to have little relevance to a footballer’s worth. As long as they’ve got a ‘football brain’ that’s all we really care about, isn’t it?
da blaze casino: Obviously as long as a player is on form and aiding your team’s success you’re not going to care if he knows what the capital of England is but in a world where fans are increasingly disenfranchised with overpaid footballers the idea that our hard earned money is at least going to men who could form some sort of opinion on political affairs in this country would be reassuring. With so many footballers displaying levels of narcissism not seen since Joseph Smith Jnr claimed he’d spoken to god you’d be forgiven for wanting to see some humility and intelligence grace our sport. For too long have men who’s intellect barely qualified them as sentient beings been paid five times the average yearly wage in this country every week. As talented as they may be it makes them harder to respect.
Perhaps we don’t necessarily think less of good footballers for being less intelligent but our yearnings for the intellectualisation of the game definitely sees us put those we consider to be intelligent on a pedestal. Just look at Thierry Henry or Clarence Seedorf. Or even Clark Carlisle: how much more do you respect the Burnley defender after seeing on Question Time hold his own against the likes of Alastair Campbell last year. The rise of organisations like Zonal Marking demonstrate the desire of football fans to see deeper in to the sport they love, to gain a better understanding, an understanding that footballers with base intellect just can’t provide us with in interviews. Perhaps the problem is that we only notice the poor quality of the interviews that we have to absorb when a genuinely bright footballer comes along.
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Djourou’s comments about the fragility of players’ mentality and the humanisation of seemingly untouchable stars not only rang true in the aftermath of Gary Speed’s death but also provided a welcome change to the normal “we’ll give it 110%” chat that we are forced to swallow down week after week as though we couldn’t conduct both sides of the interviews ourselves. Footballers might not need to be intelligent to play footballer, but fans do need to read about and listen to intelligent footballers if we are not to be dumbed down like so we are by so many other forms of common culture.
Nobody’s calling for intellectual snobbery, some footballers can’t help being less intelligent, but the desire for footballers who can be respected on every level is definitely something worth seeing. Obviously footballers are never going to be bought and sold based on their IQ but the football as a sport has a problem with its reputation. Those who know and love football appreciate that it is a complex cultural phenomenon uniting communities, spreading wealth to the disadvantaged and providing pleasure for millions of people around the world. For those who don’t understand football it is the sport of idiots: full of overpaid cretins writhing around on the floor as a consequence of non existent fouls, squandering their money, setting a bad example to the youth and consistently embroiling themselves in scandals of all shapes and sizes. So, does intelligence in football matter? Yes it matters. It matters to football’s reputation, it matters to those who love it and want to understand it better and it matters if we want to get the best out of all the positive aspects of football. It’s not just footballers that are the problem either. Owners and managers need to be more responsible, the press perhaps needs to be less invasive and in light of Gary Speed’s sad death the requisite level of manners from chanting fans should perhaps be set higher than it already is. Football has the power to enrich our lives, and more people would realise it if we as a community all recognise that standards set for every other area of life apply in football too.
Agree on disagree? Join the debate on Twitter @H_Mackay
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