07:26
As much as the Argentine is often lauded for not
being the stereotypical egotistical modern footballer, the success that
both player and club have had in recent years has very much depended on
building the side In
contrast to previous seasons, Barcelona played their trump card in the
transfer market early this year by securing the services of Brazilian
starlet Neymar for 57 million euros ($75.7 million, £49.5 million) back
in May.
The 21-year-old had been on the Catalans' radar for some
time with Barca having even made a down payment of 10 million euros to
Santos for first option on the player a year previously.
However,
the confirmation of his transfer was hastened by the feeling that Barca
needed to react quickly to having been thrashed 7-0 by Bayern Munich in
last season's Champions League semi-finals.
Initial skepticism
as to whether Barca really needed another forward option rather than a
defender subsided after Neymar's stunning performances as Brazil won the
Confederations Cup in June.
One question that remains unanswered
though is how Neymar's talents will dovetail with four-time World
Player of the Year Lionel Messi?
As much as the Argentine is
often lauded for not being the stereotypical egotistical modern
footballer, the success that both player and club have had in recent
years has very much depended on building the side around Messi's
talents.
The need for Messi to play in a deep-lying central
striking role hastened the sale of Samuel Eto'o, resulted in Zlatan
Ibrahimovic ending his sole season in Catalonia on the bench and has
also limited Cesc Fabregas' chances to play where he has successfully
combined with Xavi and Andres Iniesta with Spain.
Those
sacrifices though have been worth a return of 271 goals over the past
five seasons and concerns over how Messi and Neymar will co-exist appear
to have been overblown for a number of reasons.
Firstly, as much as they still need defenders, Barca also desperately needed a scoring option that isn't Messi.
Over
the past five seasons in which Messi has starred, Barca have won the
Champions League twice and on both occasions Messi was outscored by his
striking partners over the course of the season.
In 2008/09
Samuel Eto'o and Thierry Henry combined for 62 goals to Messi's 38 and
in 2010/11 Pedro and David Villa's joint tally of 55 just edged past
Messi's 53.
By contrast in the last two seasons, while Messi has
rattled in more than 50 goals each time, Barca's second top scorers were
Villa with 16 and Cesc Fabregas' 15 in 2011/12.
Moreover, unlike
Ibrahimovic or Fabregas, Neymar is naturally much more compatible with
Messi as he likes to start on the left of a front three and cut inside
towards goal.
With Villa's departure to Atletico Madrid last
month, that position is now vacant in the Barca side and Neymar's
movement should also help drag defenders away from focusing their
attention solely on Messi.
Most importantly of all though, is that Neymar seems to be accepting his rung in the Barca hierarchy.
After
being hammered 4-0 by Barca in the Club World Cup final just under two
years ago, Neymar admitted he and his Santos teammates "had been given a
football lesson" and that he "aspired to get to Messi's level."
Fast-forward
to 2013 and Neymar insisted at his official unveiling as a Barca player
that he had come to Barca to "help Messi continue being the best in the
world."
Asked about his first impressions of Neymar this week,
Xavi told Catalan sports daily Sport that "the important thing is that
he is humble, he will fit perfectly into the Barca philosophy."
Should
the South American duo hit it off, that philosophy will, more than
ever, be based on winning with an exciting brand of attacking football.around Lionel Messi's talents.
via sports.ndtv.com
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