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This is a good discussion to have. I think the analysis is deep but there are some fundamental mistakes which renders it very light. Drawing conclusions from the fact that Nedved seamlessly fitted into the Juve team after him is illogical. Showing league finishes is very misleading unless Zidane was a player-owner-manager or something. These things are white noise so I will ignore them and focus on the crux of the matter and the real “myth”:Ok here's a thought out detailed response. Please don’t TL;DR.
The legend of Zidane is that he was the mythical Maghreb who frequently dragged his team through tournaments and seasons sparkling goldust on the pitch every time he entered it. But the aura comes from a handful of CL games and the Leverkusen goal, the goals in Paris, the near perfect game against Brazil in 06 and Euro 2000. He was in fact very patchy and ornery for large portions of his career.
1. He was never ever ever the best player in the world over a full season the way Ronaldinho or Kaka or Figo were. Just simply never. Zidane could be incredible but he was never incredibly consistent by even the standards of say Figo or Kaka let alone Messi or Ronaldo. Did he have the talent? Of course! Did he step up in big games? Yes. Was he glorious to watch? You can't imagine!
To give an example of Zidane tasked with leading in a season – look no further than In 98-99. Del Piero had his big knee injury and spent months out. That ended phase one of his career. He was never the same again.
Zidane became main man and Juve finished 7th. 16 points off Milan. Juve were reigning champs and finished 20 points behind their 97-98 total. Zidane was consistently underwhelming that year. He scored 2 goals in 40 and (I think he got either 2 or no assists). Actually one of his better games was the Roy Keane game in Turin which of course they lost.
Assuming we think numbers are somewhat significant for attackers let alone such talents like Zizou those numbers are shocking. Those are Lingard numbers. He played that year with a young pre-Arsenal Thierry Henry and Pippo Inzaghi. Now Inzaghi still scored goals that year but no one could make up for Del Piero's and part of that was on Zidane's form. Juve actually scored some 25 goals less than the previous year even if their defence only conceded as many as AC Milan's (who won serie A that season).
2. A great peak means the someone who is always the best game in game out for a few seasons. Zidane had some great seasons but they were spread out over a decade not bunched up.
The other thing is Zidane dragging teams through tournaments:
1998: The fact is that Zidane did nothing in 1998 till the final. He was sent off in their second game against the mighty Saudi Arabia. Then he missed the final group game. Missed the 1-0 win over Paraguay. Did nought in a goalless draw v Italy that went to pens where he scored his and Albertini missed.
In the semi vs Croatia it was Thuram (of all people) who scored and Djorkaeff who set up one of the goals up for Thuram.
In the final of course we know what he did.
To compare: Pogba had a far superior world cup in 2018 where he legitimately probably was France's best midfielder and creative outlet while playing severely within himself in a deeper lying position and still contributing defensively.
Euro 2000: He was fantastic in Euro 2000. He had a good season building up to it also.
World Cup 2002: Missed the first two games through injury. Had a fairly good game v Denmark but France lost 2-0.
Euro 2004: Was decent. Scored two vs. England which always helps improve a player’s perception in the anglocentric media. Had a pretty underwhelming season coming into
it.
World Cup 2006: Was very good. The game vs Brazil was near perfection. A pretty rank season coming into it.
Zidane left Juve and he was seamlessly replaced by Pavel Nedved (who is genuinely underrated). Zidane at Madrid in the insane teams he played in finished:
1. A distant third behind Valencia and Deportivo la Coruna
2. Champion
3. A distant fourth
4. Second to Ronaldinho's Barca
5. Comprehensively outdone by Ronaldinho's Barca (He retired after this season and the world cup)
You can say a lot for Zidane's lack of league titles at Real. Makelele leaving for instance or mediocre managers like Camacho and Queiroz. But the fact is also that Zidane can and would go months without doing anything much. Plus he was a massive defensive liability which didn't matter when Jacquet got Karembu, Petit and Deschamps behind him in a short tournament but over a season it is much harder to justify.
Conclusion:
I am NOT saying Zidane was overrated. In fact his talent and technique cannot be rated highly enough. I loved him. He was a fantastic moments player. But he was not one you could lean on for a whole season. There were times where he simply COULD NOT BE arsed. In a sense he was the opposite of Thierry Henry who never a great player in big games but season in-season out he was far better than Zidane ever was.
(But Zidane also had big games where he was not that great.
In 1996 UEFA cup final he played the second leg as Bayern wiped the floor with Bourdeaux. Ok it was only Bourdeaux and it was Bayern after all.
In The 1997 final where he was marked out of the game by that titan of football Paul Lambert.
In 1998 final he started well but then Karembu and Redondo marked him out of the game as Madrid beat a ludicrously good Juventus side 1-0.
He played off the park by his replacement at Juve, Nedved when Juve beat Madrid 3-1 in 2003.)
Overall he was a great player. Probably didn’t do as much as he should have on a season by season basis. Great career. But he never had a so-called great peak that stretched over 2 or 3 seasons. Don’t get too carried away with the Balon D’or and so on. It’s indicative of nothing.
Ironically it is Bale who has resembled Zidane a lot. World record transfer. Obvious greatness. Great Euro performances. Often goes weeks and months not doing very much then goes and wins them the final in ridiculous style.
Zidane was a tank that could move like a ballerina. Zidane could play every single role in midfield. Zidane could start attacks deep from midfield or finish them deep upfront. Go look at Keane talking about Zidane, what did he highlight when he said he was the best player he had faced? He said he was nasty. As in tough as nails. Massive frame. And really really physical. Zidane was an all round midfielder unlike Del Piero, Kaka, Ronaldinho. See this is the mistake people make with Zidane. They expect him to have Kaka numbers or influence the game upfront like Del Piero did every game. Zidane was the ultimate midfielder because he was impactful in every aspect. Defending, physical battles, headers, target man, nimble dribbler, long range passer, tiki taka passer etc. This is no hyperbole. Zidane was the most complete midfielder of his time and one of the most complete players of all time. You can’t just look at the numbers for someone like that.
My theory is that Zidane will go on to become the most misunderstood player we have seen as time passes further and xG fanatics take over. Simply because he is not a player you can pin down on an Excel sheet.
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