I guess the diving (cheating) has always gone on too but my memory of it becoming an art form is of Jurgen Klinsman's balletic swoops to the turf.
Call that a dive...Gosh, I’d forgotten about Klinsmann but yes, he could even teach Neymar a thing or two about diving. David Ginola is another one who would never have passed the audition to become a Weeble.*
This got me thinking: are the best players also the worst cheats? Ronaldo, Neymar, Suarez... even the saintly tax dodger Messi. And I hate to say it but even Mo Salah too. And it’s not just diving - Ramos is still possibly the best defender in the world** but he’s also a cynical thug.
Or is it just that we notice their cheating more because they’re more prominent?
And is there really more diving now than there used to be or do we just notice it more because there’s so much more footy on telly?
*cultural reference for the teenagers there.
**definitely top 5 at least.
Typical rubbish from someone who has never played the game seriously. There is cheating in football, but no more than there is in any sport. Football is an extremely tough game and to survive at professional level you need to be able to take a high amount of pain. No player gets through a match without taking hard blows to some very painful bones and joints, ankles, knees and shins in the main. Cyclists may look like they are soldiering on with life threatening injuries, but as in the picture of the Moviestar rider above they are often no more than skin loss - uncomfortable enough, but not as agonisingly painful as a set of studs in the shinbone when you are running at your maximum.i'd give any of em 10 minutes max on a rugby pitch before they wanted out
mainly driven by jealousy over the popularity and coverage football gets.
This got me thinking: are the best players also the worst cheats? Ronaldo, Neymar, Suarez... even the saintly tax dodger Messi.
TBH I feel it's unfair to call Messi a diver (or put him in the same category as Ronaldo and Neymar). There are plenty of videos available on youtube of Messi being heavily tackled/fouled but he stays on his feet almost all the time and, IMO, opts not to dive/go down.
& Rugby League too, seems often to be either a) a delaying tactic to 1) take a breather or 2) get the defensive line set or b) to try & con the ref into giving an opponent 10 in the bin or a red.For the sake of balance I will also say I deplore the way these habits are also creeping into professional Rugby Union.
There are videos of him diving as well... Notably, he got a yellow card for diving in the 2016 Copa America final.
And he is also a tax dodger.
The yellow card in 2016 looked more like he lost his balance, than actually dived.
I think diving has always been around. What has changed has been the quality of TV replays and different camera angles that prove a player has gone down with no contact from his opponent. It wasn’t that long ago we would have to say it looked like a dive.And is there really more diving now than there used to be or do we just notice it more because there’s so much more footy on telly?