Cristian Molinaro (16 Viewers)

only-juve

Senior Member
Jan 5, 2008
7,451
I think this is the first time in history someone is a regular starter for Juve for two seasons in a row yet he's not even called "once" to the national team !!

Got to say ranieri and molinaro are breaking some records lately .....
 

Ken

The Dutch Touch
Aug 17, 2007
13,340
I hope Ferrara is just waiting on De Ceglie to come back and that he's just trying out everyone who is remotely capable of playing as a LB to fill that gap. If he saw his starter for LB in Molinaro I think we would've seen him more often. Having said that.. he wasn't fully fit was he?
 

dogsarecute

Senior Member
Aug 7, 2008
525
So you admit that you judge players from watching one match and one match only but excuse Molinaro from your judgement... even despite him playing like crap for most of his matches.

That's all that needs to be said. Nobody should take you seriously.
I did not judge Criscito. I was justifying the reason why the board let Criscito go on loan and the judgement of that performance was retrieved from one of the post-match comments by another member. I am always in support of giving more time for young players to adapt, be it Criscito, Ariaudo, Molinaro, or Marchisio.

Oh yea? What if they are playing against each other in the CL quarter finals?
The "first" and "second" should tell you the answer.
 

JBF

اختك يا زمن
Aug 5, 2006
18,451
I think this is the first time in history someone is a regular starter for Juve for two seasons in a row yet he's not even called "once" to the national team !!

Got to say ranieri and molinaro are breaking some records lately .....
:lol: :agree:
bottom line it's obvious that molinaro is not juve material
i really doubt that he is any serie A team material
And you came to that conclusion now!? :sergio:
Didn't he play at Siena with a three-men midfield already? He did quite well while playing there.
if doing well means running all over the pitch and knocking the crowd unconscious.
Yes
Oui
Da
Haan
Si
Na'am
:sergio:
 

Rollie

Senior Member
Apr 15, 2008
5,143
I did not judge Criscito. I was justifying the reason why the board let Criscito go on loan and the judgement of that performance was retrieved from one of the post-match comments by another member. I am always in support of giving more time for young players to adapt, be it Criscito, Ariaudo, Molinaro, or Marchisio.

The "first" and "second" should tell you the answer.
Dogs you realize that one of these names really doesn't really belong in the same category of 'young player' though, right?

Criscito (22), Marchisio (23), Ariaudo (20)....

Molinaro --> 26 years old...

I'm all for supporting the players on our team, and Molinaro did make some improvements last year, which he should be recognized/commended for.

Still... we can't be waiting on two players at the same position to develop, and expect to achieve great results there. Ideally, we need to upgrade that position one way or the other, and I really think Moli has been given a fair shot here... DC hasn't. Ideally, we would upgrade that position, but unfortunately, we don't seem to have the finances for that at the moment.

Unfortunately, I think that on the pitch, moli is going to miss Pavel more than anyone else. His on-field security blanket (pavel), and his off-field bum chum (Rainieri) are both gone... Personally, I don't think this bodes well for Molinaro.

Hope I'm wrong.
 

dogsarecute

Senior Member
Aug 7, 2008
525
Dogs you realize that one of these names really doesn't really belong in the same category of 'young player' though, right?

Criscito (22), Marchisio (23), Ariaudo (20)....

Molinaro --> 26 years old...

I'm all for supporting the players on our team, and Molinaro did make some improvements last year, which he should be recognized/commended for.

Still... we can't be waiting on two players at the same position to develop, and expect to achieve great results there. Ideally, we need to upgrade that position one way or the other, and I really think Moli has been given a fair shot here... DC hasn't. Ideally, we would upgrade that position, but unfortunately, we don't seem to have the finances for that at the moment.

Unfortunately, I think that on the pitch, moli is going to miss Pavel more than anyone else. His on-field security blanket (pavel), and his off-field bum chum (Rainieri) are both gone... Personally, I don't think this bodes well for Molinaro.

Hope I'm wrong.
I counted his age starting from the time he joined us, which would be 23-24. By now, we would have known that he does not have the goods to ever become a world-class fullback. I have no problems with replacing him with a better player, but I dislike him being thrown all the wrong labels. There is nothing wrong in calling him the worst left-back in our recent history, because he indeed is. There is nothing wrong in saying that he has no footballing brains due to his inability to cross, pass well or make a pre-emptive challenge, because that is what we observe. However, there is something wrong with calling him the worst left-back the world have ever seen, because he is not. How about members complaining about the numerous errors that they claim he made which resulted in conceded goals? I am not surprised that they cannot substantiate that claim. When people claim that the likes of Andre Santos and Balzaretti are much better than him, I am puzzled. Thus to reiterate, I am all for another left-back to replace him, but if someone wants to criticise him, make sure it is backed by evidence and not just throw the worst label one can ever think of at him just because it is cool.

Coincidentally, De Ceglie is now in the same situation as Molinaro two years ago--a couple of poor performances as a left-back. Will he receive more support than Molinaro if Ferrara makes him the first choice?
 

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