ერთი რაღაცას იტყვის ხოლმე და მერე წლობით იმეორებენ სხვები , ესეა რიკელმესთან მიმართებაში აქ ხალხი
ქართველების გარდა მაგას არავინ არ იძახის , მარა რაღაცით ხო უნდა ვიყოთ გამორჩეულები
თამაში დამისახელე რომელი ?
და ფეხბურთელი დამისახელე , რომელსაც არ აქვს ჩაგდებული თამაში
ჰა , გაგიხარდეთ
მესის უბალეშიკეთ მარტო
Don't Cry For Me Argentina - Examining Juan Roman Riquelme's International RetirementA sensitive player who likes life on his own terms, Juan Roman Riquelme is nonetheless one of the finest number 10s of his generation. His retirement from the Argentine national team is bound to provoke debate. Goal.com analyses the ins and outs of another twist in the Riquelme tale...For the second time in three years, Juan Roman Riquelme has exited the Argentina national team. He has vowed never to return to the Albiceleste set-up so long as current coaching incumbent, Diego Maradona, remains in charge.
In much the same vein as his 'retirement' following the 2006 World Cup, Riquelme's decision to leave the fray is entirely based on reasons apart from a perceived or actual waning of his football ability. Then, it was the detrimental effect his participation with the national team was having on his mother's health that prompted him to walk away. Renowned as a painfully sensitive soul, Riquelme clearly, and justifiably, felt that certain things were more valuable than kicking a bag of wind around with his team-mates.
What is now apparent is that Riquelme and Diego Maradona have not exactly enjoyed cordial relations throughout 'el Pibe d'Oro''s tenure in charge.
Diego and advisor, Carlos Bilardo, have managed perfectly well without Riquelme since their respective appointments at the helm of the team, although they outwardly signal that there is still space for him.
The Boca Juniors playmaker was not selected for Argentina's first two matches under their new managerial axis, against Scotland and France, and the team seems to be galvanised in his absence.
Two victories have been recorded, with Maradona favouring a formation that now may have little or no space for Riquelme.
In their last two challenge matches, Argentina played with two 'No. 5s', in the shape of Javier Mascherano and Fernando Gago. Ahead of them, between the two fixtures, there was a fluent front four, featuring a mix of Leo Messi, Sergio Aguero, Maxi Rodriguez, Carlos Tevez, Jonas Gutierrez, Ezequiel Lavezzi and German Denis. The twin threats of interchangeability and pace in the final third does not leave much room for the languid style of Riquelme, and Maradona has already talked up the prospects of Independiente attacker Daniel Montenegro as an alternative.
In any case, Riquelme's inclusion in the national team is still a polemic issue among Argentinians, and his spot in any XI is far from guaranteed. Marcelo Bielsa, who coached the national side at the 2002 World Cup, omitted him from the panel altogether. Four years later and Jose Pekerman built his team around the 30-year-old in Germany, where the Argentines made an underwhelming exit following a strong start to the competition.
Upon his reinstatement to the squad, in time for the 2007 Copa America under Alfio Basile, Riquelme was very much flavour of the month. He dragged his side to the final, where they were humbled by Brazil, to once again prompt question marks about his 'bottle', or lack thereof.
Personally, he had responded well to that disappointment, claiming Olympic Gold in Beijing and notching four strikes to become Argentina's top scorer in the current World Cup qualifying campaign. The Albicelestes have flattered to deceive though in the qualification process and are currently only third, behind Paraguay and Brazil.
The appointment of Maradona in October represented a change of trajectory on and off the field for the AFA - a new departure under which national team players might rediscover the fire in their bellies; who better to re-align an ailing campaign and inspire some performances than THE all-time hero?
The gamble, for now, looks to be paying dividends for the heirs to Maradona's throne on the field - except for the one man it has left on the fringes.
Riquelme, nurtured and loved at Villarreal until his demands could be assuaged no more, feels that communication between the coaches in the national set-up and himself has been lax, critically so. He claims to have found out about his omission from the squad to face France on the radio and is unhappy with Maradona's perceived criticism of his Boca form in the press.
It must be remembered that Riquelme is hyper-sensitive to situations like this; last season he fell out with team-mate Julio Cesar Caceres when the Boca player dared bring up the schemer's loss of form in a radio interview. Riquelme has repeatedly spoken of the 'ethics' he believes invest the game. No player or manager should discuss a colleague outside the confines of the dressing room. Maradona, seemingly, has betrayed those ethics in the eyes of the former Villarreal player and has subsequently lost the services of his 'diez'.
For his part, el Diego is unhappy that Riquelme failed to respond to phone calls and seems to be steadfastly sticking to principles of his own; namely not indulging the playmaker in the manner in which he was indulged at Villarreal.
Maradona has vowed not to lose sleep over Riquelme's absence; it may even mark a welcome change for Diego, who admitted to once waking at 04:00 in an attempt to shoehorn the Barcelona reject into his plans. It seems that Maradona had a spot in mind for Riquelme, but that attacking berth was 15 metres too high up the field for the player - a spot that may now be occupied by Montenegro.
Riquelme has blamed his departure from the international scene, barely a year before the World Cup in South Africa, on the coach with whom there is notable friction.
It may mark the beginning of the end to a career that ultimately failed to light the touchpaper across the Atlantic. One of Argentina's most gifted number 10s since 'you know who' will spend his last few seasons away from much of the international spotlight. We, on the old continent, may be afforded glimpses on TV of his guile and passing ability, but it seems we are to be deprived of an up close and personal scrutiny of the inadvertent superstar. That privilege goes only to those inside the Bombonera.
http://goal.com/en/news/1717/editorial/200...uelmes-internat This post has been edited by BEQA 11 on 17 Mar 2009, 15:28