Roy Keane... From a Fierce Player to One of the Most Ruthless Analysts

Roy Keane... From a Fierce Player to One of the Most Ruthless Analysts
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Roy Keane... From a Fierce Player to One of the Most Ruthless Analysts

Roy Keane... From a Fierce Player to One of the Most Ruthless Analysts

It’s thrilling, visceral television. The sort of raw, unbridled authenticity that makes Roy Keane one of the most compelling pundits not just in football, but in any sport. “I’m fuming here,” he says at half-time, with Tottenham 1-0 up against Manchester United and Keane sitting in the Sky Sports studio. And in those words lie a sort of mission statement, a definitive affirmation of an irrefutable truth: football is back, and how we’ve missed it.

No, that doesn’t really work. Let’s try it this way. It was unhinged, unsettling, shocking for all the wrong reasons. As he tore apart Harry Maguire and Luke Shaw, rounded on David de Gea for his failure to make a routine save, Keane again displayed the sort of indiscriminate rage that has made him one of the most toxic out-of-work coaches in the game. “I would be fighting him at half-time, swinging punches at that guy,” he spat, a sentiment that Sky seems perfectly happy to broadcast to a primetime family audience. The sooner this petty man with his unresolved anger issues is off our screens, the better.

No, my heart’s not really in that one, either. Clearly this whole “viral rant” business is harder than it looks. To tell you the truth, I struggled to muster any sort of opinion on Keane’s outburst on Friday night. Later I watched it back and found it vaguely amusing in a hackneyed, “play-the-hits” sort of way. Breaking news: Roy Keane is fuming about something. Perhaps, on balance, Keane should instead inform us when he’s not fuming. Not disgusted. Not possessed by violent retribution fantasies. It would save us all a lot of time.

To my eye, far more interesting than the outburst itself has been the basic faultline it exposes in televised football. Which is why we’re here, after all: television is the reason this husk of a season is being played to a finish. And so it’s worth asking: what do we really want from it? Do we want pundits to help us understand the game better, or enjoy it more? Was Keane’s tirade a tired, barbarian anachronism, or a riotously good piece of Friday night TV? In short: do we want explanation or entertainment?

For a generation or more, the answer seems to have been the former. The BBC’s first live Premier League game on Saturday night (Bournemouth v Crystal Palace) was a good excuse to seek out their last men’s top-flight fixture – Arsenal v Tottenham from March 1988 – and marvel at just how far we’ve come. What strikes you above all is the absence of anything remotely approaching thought, of any “why” behind the “what”. “He hit it very well in the end,” Trevor Brooking observes of Arsenal’s early goal, demonstrating that the job of an expert summariser back then consisted largely of narrating replays. “The ball bobs around, Alan Smith hits the shot on the turn, it goes right between Bobby Mimms’ hands, and you see his face there.”

How, then, did we go from “he hit it very well” to Jamie Carragher’s and Gary Neville’s exhaustive freeze-frame analysis on Monday Night Football? From “you see his face there”, to xG (expected goals) on Match of the Day? From Ian Wright the “comedy jester”, a role into which he was originally – and with hindsight, a little problematically – shoehorned in the 1990s, to the Wright who returned to the BBC as a wise bespectacled sage in the 2010s?

The answer is that for three decades, through Andy Gray in the 1990s to ITV’s Tactics Truck in the 2000s to the data revolution of the 2010s, the arc of football media has tended towards greater complexity, deeper insight, more immersive analysis. We wanted the game demystified, not dumbed down. Entertainment? Well, there was always the actual football for that.

Now, though, it feels like a turn has been reached. The gradual migration of the audience away from conventional television towards mobile and short-form video has been reflected in the product itself. The pundit these days must do more than fill airtime: he or she must drive engagement, stir debate, prickle emotions, preferably in shareable bite-sized social media segments. Arguments are good. Tribalism is good. Strong, simple, relatable opinions are good. Big names are good. Nuance, ambiguity, ebb and flow? Well, to coin a phrase, there’s always the actual football for that.

The effect has been to reframe punditry as an event in its own right: a content economy where the goal is not simply to discuss the game’s talking points, but to provide more. On Sky, Neville and Graeme Souness have a “heated debate” about United’s striking options. On BT, Joe Cole gives a “passionate view” on what’s gone wrong at West Ham. To see the game perfected, however, you need to go to YouTube, where an entire industry of partisan amateur ranters – Mark Goldbridge, True Geordie, AFTV (formerly Arsenal Fan TV) – waspishly holds court to an audience of millions.

Needless to say, this is an unashamedly alpha-male space, one in which the ability to flaunt an opinion crushes the ability to weigh one. Perhaps, with that in mind, it’s worth keeping an eye on our screens over the coming weeks. What’s being tried? What’s being discarded? Will a broadcaster ever dare challenge the time-honored model of some men, talking about football, in a room? Meanwhile, at the time of writing the Sky Sports video of Keane’s half-time analysis had received 1.5 million views on Twitter, 1.7m on Facebook, 1.4m on YouTube. Perhaps, as they say, the customer is always right.

(The Guardian)



Atletico Takes 11-game Winning Streak to Barcelona in Battle for La Liga Top Spot

Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
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Atletico Takes 11-game Winning Streak to Barcelona in Battle for La Liga Top Spot

Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)
Atletico Madrid's Antoine Griezmann celebrates after scoring his side's third goal during the Champions League opening phase soccer match between Atletico Madrid and Slovan Bratislava at Riyadh Air Metropolitano stadium in Madrid, Spain, Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)

When Atletico Madrid led the Spanish league in spending on summer transfers, Diego Simeone's club was making a bet it could challenge for its first title since 2021.

On Saturday, Atletico can move to the top of the table with a win at a Barcelona side that is struggling to reproduce its great start to the campaign. And to make matters worse for Hansi Flick, the hosts will be missing injured star Lamine Yamal for its last game before a short winter break.

Atletico has pulled level on points with Barcelona after reeling off six wins in a row in La Liga, while Barcelona has won only one of its last six league games.

Atletico midfielder Pablo Barrios expects a difficult game despite the contrasting form of the opponents.

“What is happening to them is kind of the opposite of what happened to us,” Barrios told Spanish radio Cadena SER. “When people were doubting us they were playing incredible, and even though they have lost some games now, they still have great players and I am sure it is going to a very tough game.”

Flick was earning praise from Barcelona fans and even Lionel Messi after the German’s great start when Barcelona was scoring in bunches and rolled off win after win, and it looked like the top title candidate when it crushed defending champion Real Madrid 4-0 in late October.

But that turned out to be a peak of performance from which Barcelona has subsequently fallen, The AP reported.

Barcelona has only two wins in its last eight games overall, a bad run during which it has endured humbling home defeats to Liga minnows Las Palmas and Leganes.

Atletico’s trajectory has gone the opposite direction.

Simeone’s team had some troubles early on as it worked to integrate newcomers Julián Álvarez, Conor Gallagher, Alexander Sorloth, and Robin Le Normand.

Atletico was in fourth place and 10 points behind Barcelona on Oct. 27 — the last time it lost a match.

Álvarez and Sorloth are now clicking up front with veteran leader Antoine Griezmann, and the team is on a streak of 11 victories in a row across all competitions. Griezmann has scored seven goals and Álvarez five in Atletico’s last six games. Sorloth struck to beat Getafe 1-0 last round and pull Atletico level on points with Barcelona.

Now it can take the lead of the competition with a win at Barcelona’s Olympic Stadium.

The fixture, while overshadowed by the “clasico” between Barcelona and Real Madrid, has become a must-see game in Spain ever since Simeone turned Atletico into a perennial title contender over a decade ago.

This edition of the matchup will pit Barcelona’s top-scoring attack with 50 goals against an Atletico defense that, along with Real Sociedad, has allowed a league-low 11 goals.

Yamal's ankle injury deprives Barcelona of the league's top assist maker (9).

Raphinha will likely replace Yamal on the right side of the attack to accompany Robert Lewandowski, who leads the league in scoring with 16 goals. Raphinha is the competition’s second leading scorer with 11 goals.

Meanwhile, Real Madrid will be hoping for a draw. It is in third place, one point back before hosting Sevilla on Sunday.

Both Atletico and Real Madrid have a game in hand on Barcelona.