Recognition of a footballing philosophy
Original article can be found @ SportsIllustrated
By: Sid Lowe ‘La Masía nurtures Barcelona’s philosophy for technical excellence’
Date: December 9, 2010
In the end, it was Photoshop that did them justice. All of them. It was Photoshop that made the picture complete and the message unequivocal.
On Monday afternoon, Lionel Messi, Andrés Iniesta and Xavi Hernández walked out to the pitch at FC Barcelona’s Sant Joan Despí training ground and posed for a photo. The three stood together and in the middle was a blue and red football, Messi reaching to lay a hand on it from the right, Xavi doing likewise from the left. Iniesta stood with an arm around his teammates.
It would have been a good picture anyway, but it was about to get better. The three men had just been confirmed as the final candidates for this year’s Ballon d’Or (Golden Ball), awarded by ‘France Football’ (and now FIFA) to the world’s best player. So it was natural enough that on the cover of the Catalan sports newspapers the following day, red and blue leather had been turned into precious metal, gleaming and golden, ‘France Football’ embossed on it.
Just as it was natural that while the pro-Real Madrid daily ‘Marca’ declared “And the Ballon d’Or goes to … Spanish football,” ‘Sport’ led on “Historic Barça.” After all, this is only the third time that the top three have all come from the same club — the last two times were both Arrigo Sacchi’s Milan.
But that was not the only reason they were feeling so satisfied in Barcelona. And the ball was not the only thing to get the Photoshop treatment. By the time the picture appeared the following morning, the concrete, metal and plastic of the stands behind the three players had, by sleight of technological hand, turned into an old, traditional-style Catalan farmhouse, built in rough, slightly yellow stone.
The farmhouse’s name is La Masía. It was constructed in 1702 and is 6,500 square feet. In the 1950s, it was used as an office for architects and builders as they toiled on the huge building site right next door. That building site became the Camp Nou, and La Masía, looking incongruous alongside, dwarfed by the city that has grown up around it, became Barcelona’s “spiritual” home. Bought in 1979, La Masía became a residency for hopeful children looking to carve out a career at the club. More than that, it became a kind of indoctrination center in all things Barcelona.
Now, it has won the Ballon d’Or. Even those who never actually lived there are always said to be graduates of La Masía; it is a symbol of the club’s youth academy, which included Messi, Xavi and Iniesta. No wonder ‘El Mundo Deportivo’ splashed on “Masía Mundial.” Smug though it may have been, and opportunistic too, never before has former president Joan Laporta’s insistence that “some clubs buy Ballon d’Ors; we create them” rung truer than it does now.
The announcement on Monday was greeted by many as the success not just of Messi, Iniesta and Xavi or even of Barcelona, but an entire philosophy. It was a victory not just for those three players but the 500 children who have lived at La Masía and the rest who have come through Barcelona’s youth system; a victory for the coaches and scouts, for the system — and Xavi once described he and Iniesta as “sons of the system.” It is a victory for an idea, an ideology. And when it comes to footballing religions, few are as puritanical as Barcelona.
The Ballon d’Or, wrote former Barcelona player Eusebio, is “everyone’s success, recognition for a philosophy, for our values.” It is seen as the confirmation of a trend and the vindication of a commitment to a very specific way of playing that, initially brought in by Johan Cruyff, is imposed at all levels at Barcelona. When players make the leap to the first team, the transition is smoothed by the approach being essentially the same. All the more so under Pep Guardiola, the Masía graduate who became club captain, coached the B team and now coaches the first team.
Guardiola was more than just a Barcelona player; he was a disciple of Cruyff and, with his technical, pass-pass-pass approach, the embodiment of that self-consciously expressed Barcelona style as a player. It is a way of playing that is obsessed by technique and passing, by possession. All of it underpinned by the simplest of drills: the rondo, or piggy in the middle. Iniesta recalls the obsession being simple: It was “receive, pass, offer” over and over again. To see him on the training pitch in Barcelona this week going through the moves, explaining them, is to be struck by the technical excellence and its simplicity.
As one director put it: “Almost 20 years ago, Cruyff arrived and said we were going to play in a certain way and [his] vision [was] always about the technique of the children, the speed of the pass, the speed of the mind.”
“Barcelona,” Fernando Hierro said, “has worked for some time according to a certain philosophy and personality and built projects according to that image.”
Hierro is a former Real Madrid captain. Now, he is the sporting director at the Spanish Football Federation; now, he can smile rather more at Barcelona’s success. After all, when Spain won the World Cup last summer, seven of the starting XI were Barcelona players. Better still, six had played for Barcelona at the youth level — Gerard Piqué, Carles Puyol, Sergio Busquets, Xavi, Pedro Rodríguez and Iniesta — and Spain’s style was very much Barcelona’s style. Likewise, when Barcelona beat Real Madrid 5-0 recently, in what many have called the greatest performance ever, eight of the players were Masía graduates. When it won the European Cup in 2009, seven were.
Now, the three men who can be declared the planet’s best for 2010 are from Masía, too. And as if to prove the point, and to show that, although this is an extraordinary — and probably unrepeatable — generation of players, La Masía’s success continues. On Tuesday, just hours after the Ballon d’Or announcement, Barcelona faced Russian side Rubin Kazan in the Champions League. Barcelona won 2-0, with Andreu and Victor Vázquez scoring, and Thiago Alcántara, Marc Bartra and Jonathan dos Santos playing. All of them had been promoted from the side that sits fourth in Spain’s national Second Division: Barcelona B. The same Barcelona B that once housed Messi, Iniesta and Xavi.





























La Masia is definitely the best football academy in the world!
I find it funny how my arsenal supporting friends say their academy is better lol
Sid Lowe is a brilliant writer
What is so weird is that Sid is actually a Madridista! Watch Realmadrid TV and you'll see for yourself!
This is what makes the article even better in my eyes… But of course, he doesn't say such things on RMTV… LOL
Good read. Thanks!
I don't know about that. Yes, some ppl have accused him of such but over the time that I have followed his articles in Guardian and SI, I found him to be balanced and pragmatic, in fact even biased towards Barca.
Another writer and Spanish football observer, Guillem Balague, also seems to be biased towards Real – such as his opinions when ever he was asked in ESPN or 442, and yet his blogs and writings tend to lean towards admiring Barca.
One example of Guillem's articles can be found here http://www.skysports.com/opinion/story/0,25212,12….
Maybe some time I will publish some of his work here at tB.
One example of Guillem's articles can be found here http://www.skysports.com/opinion/story/0,25212,12….
Maybe some time I will publish some of his work here at tB.
One example of Guillem's articles can be found here http://www.skysports.com/opinion/story/0,25212,12….
Maybe some time I will publish some of his work here at tB.
One example of Guillem's articles can be found here http://www.skysports.com/opinion/story/0,25212,12….
Maybe some time I will publish some of his work here at tB.
One example of Guillem's articles can be found here http://www.skysports.com/opinion/story/0,25212,12….
Maybe some time I will publish some of his work here at tB.
One example of Guillem's articles can be found here http://www.skysports.com/opinion/story/0,25212,12….
Maybe some time I will publish some of his work here at tB.
I have got to say this.
Sid Lowe looked like one of those Madrid-biased journos.
But , now , my opinion has changed square one.
"when Barcelona beat Real Madrid 5-0 recently, in what many have called the greatest performance ever"
I would prefer "greatest performance up until now". I look forward to seeing this team pushing the boundaries of football even further.
All I'm sayin is that Sid Lowe is on the programme "extra time" at RMTV where he openly admitted he's a RM fan. BTW, on that programme, there are about 5 journalists who are ALL Madrid fans. One from l'Equipe, one from the Guardian, one from Marca etc…
Just sayin…
PS: Ballague is an Espanyol fan… That's why he's biased towards Madrid.
Speaking of La Masia, could somebody tell me where did Mino go??? It's been weeks since he played a game for the B-team… I really love the guy and I would appreciate any info related to the matter… Thanks
I'm not denying that. I too sometimes follow RMTV (only when nothing's good on TV or just to see their reactions to RM bad news) but what I'm saying is that these so-called RM-leaning football observers almost always have good words for Barca.
I didn't know Sid ever admitted he is a madridista as he never seems like it. He even backed Barca and Pep in the recent Osasuna debacle when almost all of Spanish based writers except Catalans openly criticised Pep's perceived unpreparedness. Could he be in RMTV because he is invited as a panel as his opinions is always sought by 442 and ESPN? And when asked, more often than not he chose to highlight Barca's ability to be above RM.
As for Guillem, that's another case. Yes, his opinions on TV almost always favours RM or belittling Barca chances, yet his blogs or articles will bow to Barca's supremacy when credit is due on the team.
Beautiful BARCA!
Trust me Sid is a Madridista! Like u say: he always gives credit where it's due! And even on RMTV he doesn't seem biased towards Madrid and that's why I respect the guy and I like his pieces, opinions etc…
Guillem is a pericon. Read or watch Revista next week on Skysports.com and you'll see that he'll be backing Espanyol vs Barca.
they're not biased towards barcelona they just don't have anything bad to say about them
http://www.barcacule.site40.net/
http://www.barcacule.site40.net/
http://www.barcacule.site40.net/
http://www.barcacule.site40.net/
http://www.barcacule.site40.net/
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we used to geth RMTV here in england on sky but we dont egt it no more i used to liek watching extra time even as a cule just to hear what they say i hate witha passion frederic hermel the l'equipe journo he is biased beyond doubt and even suggested once that a madrid player should break messi's leg to stop barca!!
Frederic huh? What a french dumbass!
To bad they don't do any extra time after clasico losses. LOSERS!
The only academies which can compete with La Masia is Ajax and Bayern Munich.
OT: what do you consider clairefontaine?
So true..
Guess what? After Clasico, I waited and waited for any reaction but all I get was…. of all things….. Raul's farewell ceremony (which happened months ago). My believe is that the local producers here could not bear reliving the humiliation that they want to relive the glorious days when Raul was their best player, which was around a decade ago; hence clips of past goals after goals and cup lifting. LOL
He is a terrific commentator who see things objectively. It is always my pleasure to read his piece or listen to his take on spanish football no matter how controversial the topic might be.
Incredible huh! I stayed once up to 4 am and all they put was matches vs Gijon, Atleti etc…
They I was watching on RMTV (official one in Spanish) and it's called La tertulia. It's extra time in Spanish. They didn't even put it until after the Valencia game where they won….
BTW, on Barca TV there is something similar: it's called ADN Blaugrana. But they only show it in the official channel which is in either Spanish or Catalan.
That's basically where lies my motivation to learn Spanish and Catalan. I understand a tiny bit Spanish but Catalan is hard… But I never change the language to Spanish on Barca TV coz I feel I'm betraying Catalunya…LOL
Sid Lowe writes the best articles out of Spain. Take a read on this one when you guys get the chance. Read it to the very last word.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/sid…
Sid Lowe writes the best articles out of Spain. Take a read on this one when you guys get the chance. Read it to the very last word.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/sid…
Sid Lowe writes the best articles out of Spain. Take a read on this one when you guys get the chance. Read it to the very last word.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/sid…
Sid Lowe writes the best articles out of Spain. Take a read on this one when you guys get the chance. Read it to the very last word.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/sid…
Sid Lowe writes the best articles out of Spain. Take a read on this one when you guys get the chance. Read it to the very last word.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/sid…
Sid Lowe writes the best articles out of Spain. Take a read on this one when you guys get the chance. Read it to the very last word.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/sid…
bayern munich academy? no way!
I really really like some argentinian sports writers as well. They wrote a couple of art pieces after the 5-0
Why not?
Bayern Munich has had quite a few notable players
Owen Hargreaves
Philip Lahm
Trochowski
Lell
Rensing
Schweinsteiger
Ottl
Kroos
Muller
Badstuber
Contento
Ajax academy was definately one of the greatest or perhaps the greatest but now its days of glory are long gone
he is not madrista..he is a life long espanyol supporter..and may be his bias against barca cud have been driven coz of dis in the past…anyways i have never found him to b against barca much..