Fabio Quagliarella (14 Viewers)

Would you keep Quagliarella?

  • Yes

  • No

  • Maybe


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Noodle

★ ★ ★
Jul 29, 2007
2,501
I tried to talk about Quags a few pages ago but it didn't work :D
Seems like it didn't work this time either. :D
I thought it was just Raman being a Barca fanboy.
How dare you?! I'm offended. :stuckup:
I think a large part of the hate comes from the fact that they win so much. Even going by that interview, I think Xavi would still speak of trying to build a legacy at Barca even if they weren't winning as much. Spain winning everything and Barca winning Cl titles let's him believ the ideologies he's grown up with, since age eleven are true. I don't think it's him, it's his conditioning. And if people are finding this arrogant empty speak, than Guardiola is as involved in what is being sid in that interview. This is not an individual. It's am ideology. I think players at Madrid would have a smilier outlook. Any team or players winning the way these guys do, would develop strong opinions about the game, thinking they know best. I think some people would hate on Xavi even if he didn't say those things the way he did and say he was faking the humility like Jeeks anyways thinks the team does. Face it, the fact that they win so much has added to the hate.
Xavi, Guardiola, Barca, conditioning, Busquets, it doesn't matter they're all pricks. Barcelona aren't the first team to win things.
 

baggio

Senior Member
Jun 3, 2003
19,250
Sure they're not. Look at our own Juventus in the nineties. People used to throw so much shit at us for being so damn good. They fucking questioned our ethics. It doesnt get more hateful than that. (But we aren't as hated now as we were back then, obviously our winning cycle had something to do with it. And subsequently, the farsiopoli.)
 

Noodle

★ ★ ★
Jul 29, 2007
2,501
Sure they're not. Look at our own Juventus in the nineties. People used to throw so much shit at us for being so damn good. They fucking questioned our ethics. It doesnt get more hateful than that.
You're missing the main point though: Juventus weren't pretentious cunts. Anyways, you read the Xavi interview yourself and I could bring up a thousand more examples if I wanted to. But apparently you don't see anything wrong with what he said, so I guess there's no point.
 

JCK

Biased
JCK
May 11, 2004
125,390
I actually hated them like I do Madrid today, back then coz that team was not only overhyped, it was also crap. These guys play good football. And I grant them that.
You said that the hate towards them stems from the fact that they are winning, please do not include me in this argument because it sounds exactly like the uber lame "jealousy" argument that some people have it as their flag,
 

JCK

Biased
JCK
May 11, 2004
125,390
Isn't what they do on the pitch, real life? The club I've grown up supporting is Juventus. All my individual support and idolising has happened with Juventus. I got nothing for Xavi as an individual. But I do have a great deal of respect for their group as a collective, and I don't really care if people feel a certain way about footballers. I'm just trying to understand where this hate is stemming from because some of it seems unjustified. Barca has never featured so prominently on peoples hate lists as they have in these recent times, which is why I wonder.
Then you obviously haven't read any of my posts before.
 

baggio

Senior Member
Jun 3, 2003
19,250
Guys Raman/Jck let's not ruin the Quag thread. Pm me what you guys mean? Jeeks I've not read your previous arguments. Or the jealousy claims, what are those about? Raman I've seen that full interview, I didn't find it pretentious, I found him to be a straight talker. But I'm more than happy to understand why you grudge him as a player? Please pm me if you like.

Back to Quagsy! He's changed boots again I can see, I ordered the t90 elite because he moved to them at the start of the season, and now he's moved back to the mercurials. Fkin a!
 

baggio

Senior Member
Jun 3, 2003
19,250
Quagliarella worth waiting for...

Fabio Quagliarella has gone a year without scoring for Juventus, but, as Antonio Labbate argues, the Italian is still a key player for the Old Lady.

It was a cold afternoon in Verona. Simone Pepe considered his options from the flag as his teammates jockeyed for position. The corner was poor, but big Vincenzo Iaquinta juggled with the ball before looping it on to the edge of the six-yard box. With his back to goal and an opponent breathing down his neck, Fabio Quagliarella semi scissor-kicked the sphere over his left shoulder to find the top corner. You couldn’t have placed a postage stamp more accurately.

That was back on December 19, 2010, and another clear demonstration of just how important the summer signing from Napoli had become for Juventus. Used more centrally by then boss Gigi Del Neri than he was fielded at Udinese and the Stadio San Paolo, Quagliarella was on course for his most prolific season ever in Serie A.

Over the previous four campaigns at Sampdoria, two at Udinese and Napoli, he finished terms with 13, 12, 13 and 11 strikes respectively. His work of art at the Stadio Bentegodi was his ninth in only 17 League games for La Vecchia Signora. It was also significantly the last time he scored in that famous black and white jersey.

Just six minutes into the first game of 2011, on January 6 at home to Parma, Quagliarella collapsed under his own weight. Holding his right knee in agony, every Juventino watching shared his pain as it became instantly clear that the season was over for Quaglia – and, unbeknown at the time, for his club given their subsequent slump.

Today the 28-year-old is fit and at the squad’s total disposal, but the seconda punta or prima punta role which he thrived in under Del Neri is not openly available to him. New boss Antonio Conte has favoured Alessandro Matri – the man Juve netted in January as cover for Fabio – as his main striker in a 4-1-4-1/4-3-3 after realising that he needed to simultaneously employ Andrea Pirlo, Claudio Marchisio and Arturo Vidal in midfield.

The forward’s lack of use so far this term – six substitute appearances in Serie A for a total of 125 minutes and one Coppa Italia start – have understandably seen him associated with a January move, but Quagliarella is not a player to be sacrificed and Conte knows it.

His restricted use so far this term can be attributed to a number of factors. Firstly, you need time – as Alex Del Piero can testify – to recover physically and mentally from knee ligament damage. Secondly, Conte has rightly been cautious in changing a winning team after hitting the top of Serie A. Thirdly, no European football means that numerous players, and not just Quagliarella, are struggling for space without a Coach’s need to rotate. Juve have also been quite fortunate with injuries so far.

The reality, despite what the stats suggest this season, is that Quagliarella is a player who fits into the Bianconeri puzzle. He has the kind of attacking characteristics that Conte needs and the work ethic that will eventually see him fight for a first team place, whether that be in a wide attacking position or in the middle. He’s also been used more regularly over the last few weeks.

The likelihood, though, is that we may not see the real Quagliarella, a player who cost Juve €15m, until next season. Nevertheless, that is arguably when the Old Lady will need him most if they achieve their ambition of returning to the Champions League. With a proposed double assault on the Scudetto and European Cup, a fitter and more confident Quagliarella will be given a stage to stun with his scintillating strikes. Until then, Juve and he will be more than happy with the odd tap-in.
 

Bianconero_Aus

Beppe Marotta Is My God
May 26, 2009
81,127
Xavi is one of the most disgusting players in the world. The way he and Puyol were talking rubbish about how Cesc really wanted leave Arsenal and join Barca was typically arrogant and pathetic of them, whether Cesc felt that way or not, it showed extreme arrogance and disrespect to Arsenal. But I forgot this is Barca, and they are the most humble and morally decent people on earth and everything they do or say is gold.
 

kronos

Senior Member
Aug 16, 2011
1,847
Xavi is one of the most disgusting players in the world. The way he and Puyol were talking rubbish about how Cesc really wanted leave Arsenal and join Barca was typically arrogant and pathetic of them, whether Cesc felt that way or not, it showed extreme arrogance and disrespect to Arsenal. But I forgot this is Barca, and they are the most humble and morally decent people on earth and everything they do or say is gold.
:hellyes:
 

Elvin

Senior Member
Nov 25, 2005
36,923
I think the reason they're so arrogant is because they're not used to winning, really, they've been second their entire history and now with all the success they don't know how to handle it with class.
 

ZoSo

Senior Member
Jul 11, 2011
41,656
Xavi is one of the most disgusting players in the world. The way he and Puyol were talking rubbish about how Cesc really wanted leave Arsenal and join Barca was typically arrogant and pathetic of them, whether Cesc felt that way or not, it showed extreme arrogance and disrespect to Arsenal. But I forgot this is Barca, and they are the most humble and morally decent people on earth and everything they do or say is gold.
I especially hate this. Everyone thinks they're so humble and modest. Get the fuck out of here, none of them are close to humble (maybe Messi is a little for being the best player in the world but I'll be happy to say he isn't humble if I see him talking shit). Have you seen Craig Foster on The World Game? Fuck he spends about 10 minutes talking about Barca every week. He would get down and suck off every single of one of the Barca players, Guardiola, Cruyff and all those stooges.
 

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