|
|
Goal.com Weekend Special: Rags-to-Riches Tales - Part II
This weekend Goal.com is running a two-part special series on footballers who were born and raised in poor conditions but went onto become successful and even legends of the game. In the second and final segment, Subhankar Mondal charts the rise from dust of ten such footballers.....
The players are in no particular order. You can check the first segment here.
11. Pele

Like another footballing legend Diego Armando Maradona, Edison Arantes do Nascimento, otherwise known as Pele, grew up in abject poverty. His first football was not a proper ball but a sock stuffed with newspaper. His father was a footballer too but he could never earn enough to feed his family and suffered consistent injuries. Pele himself worked as shoe polisher when he was seven and initially didn't dream of becoming a professional footballer. As Pele later noted in his autobiography, "Poverty is a curse that depresses the mind, drains the spirit and poisons life. It is being robbed of self-respect and self-reliance. Poverty is fear.” Yet in the subsequent years football became the centre of his life and we all know what followed next.
12. Ronaldo

These days he might be seen with models, supermodels and at times transvestites but once upon a time no one knew him and he was just another Brazilian kid who wanted to play football and was struggling to keep himself afloat. Born in a poverty-stricken family in Rio de Janeiro, Ronaldo Luís Nazário de Lima once couldn't garner the bus fare to take him to a trial with Brazilian club Flamengo, thereby mitigating his chances of becoming a professional footballer. But the later-to-become three times FIFA World Player of the Year and one of the greatest strikers of all time did not lose heart and went onto play for Cruzeiro, and subsequently went onto have the world prostrating at his feet.
13. Adriano

A fallen star he might be and perhaps a moral criminal for having wasted the God-gifted talent that you and I can dream of being blessed with only in our eighth birth, Adriano's rise from miserable poverty is as much inspiring as incredible. Born in Brazil's Rio de Janeiro and raised in Vila Cruzeiro - a notorious neighborhood that made the headlines when TV Globo journalist Tim Lopes was cruelly murdered in 2002 by druglords - Adriano grew up poor but dreaming rich. As he himself acknowledged, “When you're small, you dream of having a big car. Your mother is the most important person in your life, and you dream of giving her a big house. And you see the top footballers with beautiful and glamorous women." Only, in the subsequent years Adriano got more of such luxuries and could never fulfill the talent he was gifted with.
14. Moreno Torricelli
Moreno Torricelli might be best known for his performance in the final of the Champions League in 1996 against Ajax but the former Juventus defender didn't have a particularly easy time making his way into football. Torricelli actually worked as a carpenter and his talent was spotted only when he was over 22 years of age in a pre-season friendly in July 1992 for Caratese against Juventus. The then Juventus coach Giovanni Trapattoni signed him and Torricelli went onto establish himself as one of the best defenders in Italy. He featured for the national team too: he was part of the Italian squad for Euro '96 and 1998 World Cup.
15. Lionel Messi

This is not exactly a rags-to-riches tale but Lionel Messi's journey from a growth hormone deficiency-stricken lad to the world's finest player and most likely candidate to become El Diego II is quite inspiring. When the now 22-year-old was only 11 years of age, he was diagnosed with a growth problem that would have cost around $800 per month to be cured. His club at the time, Argentine side Newell's Old Boys, couldn’t arrange the funds and Messi could well have gone to waste and remained small and fragile had a certain FC Barcelona not come into the picture. The Catalan club moved Messi and his family to Spain, paid the expense for the lad’s treatment and now have the world's best player on their books.
16. Cristiano Ronaldo

Cristiano Ronaldo might hold the record for the most expensive transfer in football history because of his move from Manchester United to Real Madrid earlier this summer but the Portuguese international wasn't born with a silver spoon in his mouth. The Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year grew up in poverty in Funchal, Madeira. Now of course, the 24-year-old is a world class footballer, one of the best in the world, and arguably the most recognizable footballing face on the planet.
17. Juan Roman Riquelme

Generally described as an "enigmatic genius" and accepted as a throwback to modern football, Juan Roman Riquelme is without a doubt a world class playmaker and one of the world's finest and most incisive players. Like several of his compatriots, the Boca Juniors playmaker had a terribly deprived childhood. Born in a family of ten and raised in Don Torcuato, Riquelme was forced by his father to play in matches that formed the basis for illegal gambling rings when he was only 10. Riquelme, though, continued to progress and led Boca Juniors and Villarreal to glory, becoming one of the most creative genius of all time.
18. Collins John

Collins John might not be a Lionel Messi or a Cristiano Ronaldo and will never ever be but his story is as much heartening and inspiration. The former Fulham striker's father was murdered by guerrillas in Liberia in 1991 when John was only six years old. Two years later John, his mother and younger brothers escaped and immigrated to the Netherlands and lived in a refugee camp in Rotterdam for two years; eventually they gained Dutch citizenship. As Collins John recalls, "I had nothing more than a pair of underpants. We didn't have food every day. It was a real struggle because of the civil war."
19. Ian Wright
Ian Wright is an Arsenal legendary goalscorer but that wouldn't have happened had he not been spotted by Crystal Palace at the right time. Wright played non-league football in England until he was just a few months shy of his 22nd birthday when Palace talent scout Pete Prentice was impressed by the striker in a local Sunday league match. Wright was soon given a professional contract by Crystal Palace and later went onto become an Arsenal legend and England international. Had Palace not spotted him, Wright would have become a full-time plasterer.
20.Villarreal

This might well seem the odd one out but no rags-to-riches tale matches that of Villarreal's story, this columnist's favourite. The club from Vila-Real have spent most of their history in Spain's third division but since the late 1990s they have been on the rise. Built from virtual scratch by president Fernando Roig, who invested heavily in the club and promised to take them to the Spanish first division and make them challengers for the championship, Villarreal now are part of La Liga's elite. After gaining remarkable success in the UEFA Cup, the Yellow Submarine made the footballing world drop its jaw when they reached the semi-finals of the Champions League in 2005-2006 and were only a penalty away from securing a place in the final. In their second ever season in Europe's top club competition in 2008-2009, Villarreal reached the last eight.
Football is replete with rags-to-riches stories and we must have missed many such inspiring tales in this two part series. So who do you think we have missed? Which player's rags-to-riches tale you think we should have featured?
Subhankar Mondal
-
The list of EPL targets from Euro 2012 Group A
With the transfer rumour mill set to kick into frenzy throughout this month's European Championship, Goal.com looks at which players could be heading for England this summer
-
Euro 2012 Dream Team: Ronaldo & Van Persie feature
Goal.com puts together its dream team for this summer's European Championship in Poland and Ukraine
-
Euro 2012 Tactical Analysis: How far can Roy's masterplan take England?
England are a diminished lot, with the experienced players like Lampard, Gareth Barry and Gary Cahill all ruled out of the Euros. Goal.com's Sarthak Dubey analyses their chances..
-
Euro 2012 Trivia: Which team has no player from their domestic league?
In another episode today of Euro Trivia , we bring to you another tricky question..!
Which is the only team in Euro 2012 who have not called up a single player from their own domestic league?
A. Denmark.
B. Poland
C. Czech Republic
D. Republic of Ireland.
Test your knowledge with Goal.com and send in your response. -
Euro 2000 Legends: Zinedine Zidane, France
Zinedine Zidane led France to their second European success with his vital goals and important assists. Zizou masterminded the French revolution from his midfield throne...