This could have been a column on why Cristiano Ronaldo should win the Ballon
DOr.
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isnt. That has been done, many times, including by myself in January. For
similar reasons I had a year ago, I believe Ronaldo should win it this year, but
a year is a long time in sport and, although my opinion on who should win it
hasnt changed, my opinion on the award certainly has. I no longer care one bit.
I should point out that I have never been a big fan of individual awards in team
sports. For me, important accolades, awards and trophies are won within the
sporting arena and anything else is precisely what most sports are not -
arbitrary; placed in the hands of a democracy who may or may not be informed
enough to reach the correct decision. On the face of it, the task of finding the
best player of the year should be a relatively simple one. In fact, it is so
simple some inside the sport of baseball are wondering if they should have such
an award, instead of their Most Valuable Player honour. In that sport, the best
player in the game, Mike Trout, an outfielder for the Los Angeles Angels of
Anaheim, has finished runner-up in the American League the last two years in the
MVP race, simply because his team didnt make the playoffs and were not as good
as the Detroit Tigers, the team, Miguel Cabrera, the winner, played for. If a
Ballon DOr existed in baseball, Trout, who has an astounding 20.4 WAR the past
two seasons, would already be a two-time winner. So is it time to change their
sports main individual award? ESPNs Buster Olney and Tim Kurkjian, two of the
baseballs finest journalists, debated this very topic on a podcast recently:
Olney said: "A really smart executive in baseball said to me, you know it would
be a real shame if the best player in baseball for the first five years of his
career didnt win (the MVP) because he had bad teammates and I hope, although I
dont think it will happen, that the (voters) baseball writers would define MVP
and just pick the best player." Kurkjian disagreed: "I like it the way it is
because it creates the debates. The word valuable is a very subjective term and
its up to the voters to determine who the best player is based on the word
valuable." Make no mistake, Cabrera is a marvellous hitter, but Trout, a
superior overall player, has been even better the past two years but lost out on
the award simply because of the word "valuable," with many voters believing
Cabrera played in more valuable games than Trout because the Detroit Tigers were
in a playoff position in September. As a lover of baseball, I have sat back the
past two Septembers and watched/listened ad nauseam to networks debate who is
more deserving, rather than talk about the actual baseball games taking place at
an incredibly exciting time of their season. The debates might be good for media
shows and the sport which wants as many people talking about it as possible, but
the truth is when the decision is finally made, it doesnt make knowledgeable
baseball fans think any differently about Cabrera, with two MVPs, or Trout, with
none. And that is exactly the same with the Ballon DOr. From 1956 to 2009, it
was an award with history that meant (a small) something, but it still had major
flaws. It was only given to European players until 1995, meaning all-time greats
like Pele and Diego Maradona didnt win a Ballon DOr. Zinedine Zidane did win
one, as well as three FIFA World Player of the Year awards, but is that what you
think of when you think of Zidane? Of course, not. Ninety-nine per cent of the
games biggest fans couldnt tell you exactly how many awards he won, but they
could tell you about his brilliant performance in the 1998 World Cup final and
the breathtaking goal he scored in the 2002 Champions League final. And that is
how it should be. As we view sporting events that take place in our time, we are
trusted, as the guardians of that current footage, to ensure that history will
tell the story it should. After Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi retire and
your kids or grandchildren ask you about them, you should not tell them how many
Ballon DOrs they won. However, with column inches to fill and shows to
accommodate, the worlds media have spent the best part of this international
window talking about this award, rather than the games being played. Even when
Ronaldo produced one of the finest individual performances, guiding Portugal to
the World Cup, much of the talk was still on whether or not he should win the
Ballon DOr. His performances on the field, which ultimately define him as a
player, is what people need to focus on and not because it should decide whether
or not he wins an award at a glamorous FIFA ceremony in January. Since 2010,
when FIFA got their grubby hands on the award and merged it with the World
Player of the Year honour, the award has lost its lustre while gaining more and
more media attention. Previously open to the worlds finest media members to
vote, FIFA extended the Ballon DOr voting process to captains and coaches of the
national teams around the world. Each voter is asked to come up with a top three
from a 23-man shortlist. With 2010 a World Cup year, many eyes were on the
tournament in South Africa, leaving the likes of Wesley Sneijder, Andres Iniesta
and Xavi as real threats to Ronaldo and Messi at the top of the game. The last
three years, however, there has been no reason for anybody to believe a player
has been better than Ronaldo, let alone, Messi. And that includes Franck Ribery.
Ribery was thought to be among one of the favourites to win the award in January
because he was the best player on the best team, Bayern Munich, this year. This,
however, is just another example of people over thinking the award. Ballon DOr
does not go to the games best player, it goes to the games best player of that
year, but even that should rule out Ribery. Yet, just this very week, a very
respected Spanish writer suggested Ribery would be a worthy winner because Messi
hadnt won anything in 2013. This is a man who covers the game extremely well and
is paid to watch two of the greatest players the game has ever seen, each week,
yet he would have no problem with Ribery winning the award? A man who plays in
the German Bundesliga for a team the writer has probably watched fewer than a
dozen times in 2013? That writer, like you and me, will not have seen enough of
Ribery to know if he is on Messi and Ronaldos leve,l but if he believes the
Frenchman could be, what chance does that leave footballers who see far fewer
matches than media members? The result? Just a bunch of voters guessing or
picking their own personal favourites or friends. Now, you have likely never
heard of Jaffar Khan. He is the captain of the Pakistan national team. In 2011,
Khan voted for Thomas Muller to win the Ballon DOr with Andres Iniesta second
and Bastian Schweinsteiger third. No Messi or Ronaldo. In 2012, Khan voted for
Iker Casillas to win the Ballon DOr with Andres Iniesta second and Xavi third.
No Messi or Ronaldo. Khan is a goalkeeper. He is also a man who should never be
allowed to vote ever again. This is not about personal opinion, folks. It is not
like looking for a political party that matches your values. For the past three
years, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo have been hands down better than any
footballer on the planet. Yet, Khan wasnt alone in leaving them off his ballot
in 2012. Many other examples were revealing, including Austrias Christian Fuchs
naming Mario Balotelli (who would finish 23rd of 23 nominees) third and ahead of
Ronaldo and Messi and Tomas Danilevicius of Lithuania selecting Wayne Rooney
ahead of the duo. If you are looking for names more recognizable in the game
when searching for questionable votes, they are scattered all over the revealed
ballots. Dutch skipper Sneijders choice? Dutchman Robin van Persie. Spanish
skipper Casillas? He chose Real Madrid and Spanish teammate Sergio Ramos,
placing club teammate Ronaldo second and Messi outside of the top three. Chinese
coach Jose Camacho, who managed his native Spain in the 2002 World Cup, picked
three of his countrymen on his ballot - Iniesta, Xavi and Casillas. German boss
Joachim Low? Germans Mesut Ozil first and Manuel Neuer second. Spanish boss
Vicente Del Bosque? All three players from Spain. It is not fair to hammer the
likes of Del Bosque and Low, after all they know the mental state of their
players and if they think it can give them an edge by picking them on their
ballot, then they are just doing their job. The point is the voting process is a
farce and this week it become even more farcical. On Tuesday, FIFA decided to
re-open this years voting process for Ballon DOr nominees following rightful
criticism it received in originally enforcing a deadline of November 15th on its
voters before key World Cup qualifiers had been played. This means Ronaldo will
likely win in January, as he should. However, the timing of the announcement -
just hours after Portugals win over Sweden - brought the attention once again
back on FIFA and their award. In an era where peoples attention spans are
lesser than ever, the great thing about this game is just how much you need to
watch it to make judgments. There isnt a baseball box score or a fantasy
football ticker available to show you who had a good game. It is down to your
eyes and your insight and it is on those that you will rely when you look back
at the great careers Messi and Ronaldo have. Dont let FIFA and their annual
Mickey Mouse parade every January alter that.
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The 31-year-old Spain midfielder hasnt played since Madrid lost in the Copa del
Rey final to Atletico Madrid in May due to back and foot injuries.
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. Instead of dwelling on the negative, Oates focused on what was good about the
clubs recent play. It worked.
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.C. -- After a listless first half, the Washington Wizards used a big third
quarter run to beat the Charlotte Bobcats Bradley Beal scored 21 points and the
Wizards used a 17-0 run in the third quarter to take control of what had been a
close game and beat the Bobcats 97-83 on Tuesday night.SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Logan
Couture scored on a power play 3:28 into overtime to give the San Jose Sharks a
3-2 win over the Phoenix Coyotes on Saturday night. Coutures winner gave the
Sharks their second victory of the preseason just 32 seconds after the Coyotes
were called for having too many men on the ice. Oliver Ekman-Larsson gave the
Coyotes a 1-0 lead with 9:52 left in the first when he got a wrist shot past
Harri Sateri. Just 52 seconds into the second, the Sharks capitalized on a
four-minute doublee-minor penalty to Chris Brown and tied it up when Freddie
Hamilton quickly scored on a power play.
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Jason Demers gave San Jose a 2-1 lead when he scored on a power play with 8:23
remaining in the second as he was able to skip the puck past Mike Smith. Phoenix
evened the score with 31 seconds left in the second when Andy Miele converted a
power play. Sateri is trying to win a spot on San Joses roster as the backup to
regular goalie Antti Niemi. He made 24 saves and Smith had 23.
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