Socrates R.I.P.

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Hacienda71

Mancunian in self imposed exile in leafy Cheshire
Far far too young :sad:
 

Danny

Squire
Location
York
As well as being a great footballer, I always thought he had a great name.

Sounds like he must have led a troubled life since retiring. Unlike today's footballers I suspect he did not emerge from his career with much financial security.
 

dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
the story of Socrates and the 1982 World Cup is really about football's last great chance, and how it went begging.

In the run-up to Espana 82 the Brazilians looked set to become an even greater team than the legends of Mexico '70. Two dire world cups, set alight by the Dutch and snuffed out in the final by teams whose ruthlessness one can only admire had served to induce an acme of expectation. The Brazilians were playing like magicians - the ball spun away from the outside of the foot as if its path was drawn by a cartoonist. Passes were collected on the chest, transferred to the heel and then sent thirty yards with pinpoint accuracy. The players, each and every one, moved like gods. Flemengo had beaten the Liverpool team that had dominated Europe 3-0 looking like there was a lot more in the tank, their centreforward Nunes scoring two extraordinary goals - and when we found out that Nunes wasn't going to make the national team there was a collective sucking of teeth and shaking of heads.

We didn't know, or much care, that their record against the top teams was patchy. Love is blind. And there was not one that we loved more than Socrates. Consider, if you will, the current English team, and try to imagine one that might be called Aristotle or Plato. Homer maybe....

So Socrates, political hero and stroker of passes that ran as if on rails, was the hero. Zico might have been more exciting, and Falcoa more dramatic, but Socrates, the philosopher king of Brazil, placed them on a level that mortals couldn't aspire to. And, for their first five matches, mortals wearing football shirts simply didn't aspire - one goal (I think it was against the USSR) bent so dramatically that the goalkeeper simply didn't move for fear of looking stupid.

Enter, stage right, Italy. A fearsome team, but one that got through the group stage by drawing three matches against teams we'd barely heard of, with a skinny striker, Paulo Rossi, fresh from a two year suspension for drugs, and then under investigation for taking bribes, barely touching the ball. They disposed of Argentina (with one of the great goals of all time), who then lost horribly to Brazil. Italy and Brazil met, with Brazil needing only a draw to go through to the semi-finals

The script went awol. After six minutes the ghost, Rossi, stole in to the area unnoticed and headed the opener. From that point the most redoubtable defence ever assembled repelled the most creative attack ever witnessed. Shots swerved in on Zoff, the Italian keeper like quidditches. Socrates glided through the defence and scored a goal of surpassing beauty, and we, breathing once more, sat back to enjoy the game.

The Brazilian midfield and forward line played like angels, but the defence had a problem. With the exception of Junior, who, mystifyingly, took up the position usually reserved for no 11s, they were crap. Rossi, loitering with little intent, was gifted the ball and raced toward the goal, scoring a second goal.
 

dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
Brazil struck back, (teenytiny word limit, Shaun!) with Falcao shooting through a maze of Brazilian movement and Italian confusion, but, once again, the Brazilian defence came to the rescue of the Azzuri. Rossi, yet again, hanging around the six yard line with all the menace of a choirboy, spun on the ball and scored. That was it. Football died just a little bit, as it would in 1986, 1994, 1998, 2002 and 2006. The Italians ground out a 3-1 win in the final in which the highlight was Gaetano Scirea (wiki: Scirea was renowned for his class, fair play and sportsmanship. Scirea never earned a red card in his career. ) picking up a fallen German forward by his hair and punched him full force in the side of the head. Socrates, and Brazil, never recovered, although they claimed the 1994 and 2002 World Cups with a teams that could, nay, should have been managed by Tony Pulis

That Socrates should have gone in to such a terrible decline is sad, but all the sadder for being symbolic. I'm not saying that there have been no great teams since, but there have been none that have come close to the artistry of Brazil in 1982. By comparison Barcelona, with their tepid, tippytappy after-you-Claude football are just plain boring.

Socrates was put on to this earth to save football, and, sadly, the world turned out to be unworthy of his talents. RIP

interview here.... http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/blog/2011/dec/04/socrates-football-sage
 

Manonabike

Über Member
Too young indeed. He was a great player and a very clever man too. He tried hard to improve life for the people of his home village.

He will be missed.
 
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