Authors: Guillem Balague
Oberman was from Argentina Juniors and, celebrating after the
final, a thought crossed his mind. ‘We were playing with a kid who was at one of the most important clubs in the world and he treated us as if he had come from any team from the same level as us, always with humility; with frustration as well, because he would become annoyed during games sometimes, or he would moan when you wouldn’t pass to him or something … I always tried to follow his instinct, and always with the greatest of respect. It was a great pleasure to play with him.’
Gustavo Oberman would not play for his country again. His son is five years old and a fanatical supporter of Messi, Neymar and Ronaldo. When he told his son that he had played with Messi, the kid wouldn’t believe him:
– | When he played for Barcelona? |
– | Nooo, in Argentina. |
– | And when did you play for Argentina? |
And Oberman would put on the video of the goal that he scored against Spain after a pass from Leo, just at the point where the commentator begins to pick up the pace: ‘… Gago, Messi, Oberman … goaaaaaal!!’
– | Look, look Dad!! Mum, Mum!! Dad’s playing with Messi!! |
– | Did you dream about that moment? |
– | I won’t lie to you: I always dreamed about playing and being champions with the national side, but until it happened I wasn’t aware of just how beautiful it is to do a lap of honour wearing your country’s shirt. |
– | Were you aware that you were inspiring the whole of Argentina? |
– | It was incredible the reception we got, I couldn’t believe that it was happening. Now I just want to be with family, enjoy myself with my mum and dad [Jorge, 46 and Celia, 44], my brothers and sister [María Sol, 11, Matías, 22 – who has a greengrocer’s and a kiosk in the centre of Rosario – and Rodrigo, 25, who lives with Leo and Jorge in Barcelona, where he is studying to become a chef and with my nephews. |
– | The whole world is comparing you to Maradona. How do you |
– | [He blushes, and doesn’t answer] …With my family we went through many bad times. But as they say, this has been like a dream for me. I still haven’t come down to earth. It’s something unique that I will never forget. Winning the World Cup has been the happiest moment of my life. |
(
Gente
magazine, July 2005)
Leo emailed his mother after winning the title. ‘Mama, I can’t believe what is happening to me. I have to pinch myself to make sure that I am awake.’ He returned to Argentina a hero, the footballer the nation had been waiting for. His name appeared the following day in
L’Équipe, La Gazzetta dello Sport, El Mundo Deportivo
and
AS
.
‘I learned to love the national side when I was sixty years old. When you hear the national anthem, it kills you. It was a great source of pride to be able to have coached all of the side to victory, not just Messi and Sergio Agüero,’ says Ferraro today. ‘It was the high-point of my career. Only five coaches in the history of Argentina can say, “I was champion of the world”: Menotti, Bilardo, Pekerman, Tocalli and me. There is a poster in Ezeiza aiport where you can see all the coaches who were champions of the world and you can see my photo there hugging Messi and Ustari. It was the best moment of my life.’
The idea was to return to Buenos Aires, each to their own homes and their own battles. When they arrived at Ezeiza the players were surprised to see hundreds of supporters waiting to greet them. And television cameras, radio microphones, photographers. As they came out of the arrivals hall everyone was looking for Leo, drowning in a sea of journalists. His uncle, Claudio, and his father, Jorge, had come to pick him up in the van and decided to accept an invitation from a well-known television programme. After it, by which time it was the early hours of the morning, Leo fell asleep in the car taking him to Rosario along with Formica and Garay, who were playing for Newell’s at the time.
What happened next is well documented by Toni Frieros in his biography of Messi. Cintia Arellano, Leo’s school friend, had alerted the young people in the neighbourhood to prepare something, to collect some money to decorate the streets with bunting
and paint. ‘Leo, Our Nation’s Pride’ was daubed in white paint in front of the door of Cintia’s house. A banner from one side of the street to another said simply, ‘Welcome, Champion’. They waited until midnight for him to arrive, with drums and fire crackers at the ready. Along with three television cameras. The cold was getting to them and the wait was becoming longer and longer. Most people eventually went to bed.
At about five in the morning they heard the van approaching. The camera lights were switched on. Confetti was thrown across the van. There was shouting: ‘Leo’s coming, Leo’s coming.’ What was arriving was in fact a tired, cold, young man. He wanted to go to bed. But he reacted immediately: greeted everybody, kissed everyone, gave interviews.
The boy who had left five years earlier in tears had returned, champion of the world.
‘We knew that Messi was going to be better than Ronaldinho. I remember sitting in my office and reading in the paper that we were looking to buy Rafael van der Vaart. I looked at Frank. We’d just seen Barcelona B with Messi starring. Frank said: “Nah, we don’t need van der Vaart.”’
(Henk ten Cate)
D
uring the 2004−05 season Barcelona continued the necessary restructuring that would ensure that the ball would inexorably find its way into the path of Ronaldinho. Frank Rijkaard approved the departure of Edgar Davids, Patrick Kluivert, Michael Reiziger and Phillip Cocu, while Luis Enrique and Marc Overmars decided to retire. It was the end of an era, and the youthful push of Joan Laporta’s board brought with it a return to general optimism at the club. With the money recouped from transfers out, players of great quality and personality arrived: Deco (from a Porto side that had just won the Champions League), Ludovic Giuly (Monaco), Belletti (Villarreal), Edmilson (Lyon), Henrik Larsson (Celtic), Silvinho (Celta) and Samuel Eto’o, for whom Barcelona had to pay €12 million to Mallorca and the same amount to Real Madrid. In this list you could see the nucleus of a new Barcelona which, from that moment on, looked to a midfield combination of Rafa Márquez, Xavi and Deco (Iniesta was at the time the fresh pair of legs), and a skilful and productive front line in the shape of Eto’o, Giuly and Ronaldinho. Good results and the extensive makeover were also celebrated when
Ronaldinho was named FIFA Player of the Year in December 2004. But what was still lacking was a title that would rubber-stamp the certain feeling that, at long last, Barcelona was emerging from five years in the wilderness.
Leo Messi had made his first-team debut in the friendly against Porto in November 2003, but since that heady opener the doors of the Camp Nou had remained closed to him. Was that talented 16-or 17-year-old kid of no use to Frank Rijkaard despite the fact that he seemed to be progressing very fast? Doubts were being heard from the club and also from the player’s family – why was he not playing? How was he taking the lack of chances in the first team? In what would have been a confusing time for any adolescent, never mind one on the fringes of the elite squad, the club proposed that Leo should be examined by an Argentinian psychologist picked by Josep Colomer, the director of the academy at the club.
The role of a sports psychologist is a difficult one; he is seen by the players as a ‘grass’ and yet some of them take on that role as part and parcel of belonging to such a prestigious institution. The footballer is promised total discretion, but the enduring suspicion that any work done begins from a skewed standpoint is never far from the player’s thoughts. Colomer’s proposal was initially accepted by Leo, but it wasn’t long before he told the club that he had no wish to carry on talking with somebody whom he did not trust. And that trust was well and truly broken when the doctor brought in a group of psychology students to see how well he was working with the player. All that was serving no purpose for Leo, who stopped attending the meetings. He believed he could cope with all the pressure that came from being just a step away from the first team – mostly because he did not feel it.
His physical development continued: from August 2003 to April 2004 Leo put on 3.7 kilograms, primarily in muscle. The diminutive Leo was now a thing of the past. It was a growth strengthened not so much in the gym, but, rather, in the coaching sessions and his continued presence in the starting line-up of Barcelona B. The faith shown by Josep Colomer and the insistence of other coaches such as Guillermo Hoyos, Alex García, Tito Vilanova and Pere Gratacós was giving him confidence, too, the most important vitamin in a player’s development. ‘When he stops progressing, we’ll stop him
there, whatever level he’s at. But why stop him before he’s reached that level?’ the director of youth football told Leo’s dad.
Those were the days when, it seemed, if a footballer did not sport a beard and a moustache, he didn’t play in the first team. What had happened in Porto was a product of necessity rather than clear strategy; it was almost impossible for a youngster of his age to make it into Rijkaard’s team. So, Messi thought, perhaps they think I have reached my limit. For now, he had to carry on working hard in the B team run by Gratacós.
Gratacós knew that Frank Rijkaard relied on players in his squad who were tried and tested and of great quality and who were blocking Messi’s path, but none the less, in his side, Leo was a budding star and he began to pick him regularly. Thus a chink of light began to appear through the cracks of the Camp Nou gates. In exceptional circumstances, they prepared a training regime specifically designed with his physical characteristics in mind and he began to combine his training sessions with the B team and with Rijkaard’s side. The Dutchman told the player’s family that he saw in Leo some ‘extraordinary characteristics’ but insisted in ‘going bit by bit to exploit them at the appropriate time’.
Gratacós also knew that his obligation was to instil in the player certain things he had not yet incorporated into his game and that were necessary to enable him to fit in with the second division B side. But it wasn’t that easy to make him change some of his worst football habits. On more than one occasion the veterans of the side (rarely older than 21) would moan at the coach that Messi lacked the defensive work required of him. ‘He doesn’t press,’ they said to him. Pere was well aware of it and would remind the Argentinian in training sessions that the game still went on even after he’d lost the ball; but he also told his charges, in private, that they should not forget what he brought to the team: ‘No, he doesn’t press, but what about what he does when he’s got the ball? Don’t worry, lads, we’ll work on it.’
The leap for the 17-year-old was proving arduous. Compared with his stellar rise in the junior ranks, Leo seemed baulked in the first months of this new campaign with the B team. Despite playing every minute, in the first 12 games Leo scored on only five occasions, including one against Girona in the second game. He was
finding it hard to get away from defenders, to make a difference.
The team was also spluttering. In September, the Barcelona B side went to play against Zaragoza B. Technical staff thought they had given the right instructions to ensure a positive outcome, only to finish the wrong side of a convincing 3–0 defeat. Leo left the pitch upset and as soon as he was back in the changing room he began to cry. His reaction surprised Pere Gratacós: ‘Bear in mind that he had played well! We had to cheer him up, we told him that he had to persist, to get better, and that we had to convert this defeat into something positive.’ He was the only
blaugrana
who did cry in that fifth league match of group three of the Second Division B. For most of them, it was a game just like any other.
Messi trained every day with Gratacós, apart from once a week when he joined up with the first-team squad. This one day a week became two, and then three. The doubts expressed by Rijkaard’s technical staff began to disappear, although the Dutchman was still reticent. ‘He’s going well, he’s good, but certain aspects of his play must be improved,’ he answered when asked about Leo. He didn’t want to rush things. Rijkaard’s assistant, Henk ten Cate, thought he was ready. And then one day in October, Ronaldinho and Deco said to both of them that they were wasting time: ‘Gaffer, he should be here, playing with us.’
Ten Cate, the ‘bad cop’ to Rijkaard’s good, was responsible for keeping Ronaldinho on the straight and narrow, and generally counterbalancing with strong words and the stick what his analysing, decision-making boss did with the carrot. They worked well in tandem.
When Barcelona were looking for full-backs with the ability to go up and down the pitch, with personality and understanding of the football style needed, Gio van Bronckhorst fitted the mould admirably and was signed from Arsenal after an initial loan spell. Dutch footballers were all the rage at the time, being of similar upbringing to that of Barcelona youth players. Gio, today assistant manager to Ronald Koeman at Feyenoord, and Henk, whose last job was as coach to the Dutch side Sparta Rotterdam, met in the summer of 2013 in a restaurant in Rotterdam to reminisce about the arrival of Leo Messi into the first team.
Gio still talks about Leo with the smile of one who knows he has shared a changing room with perhaps the best ever representative of his profession. Ten Cate says that in 20 years’ time he will look back on his career not just as ‘the coach who had Messi’. No way. Henk was just a coach. Period.
HTC: We gave him his debut against Porto in the 2003−04 season when he was a teenager, even before he had trained with us. I got to know him for the first time at the airport on the way to Portugal. They had told us that he was very good and on that day we were very short of players. We said, why not? Later we invited him to train with us on a more regular basis.
GVB: Ronaldinho said in the first training session with Leo that this youngster was going to be better than him. And people laughed. ‘Yeah, right!!’ they replied. More than details, the only memory I have of his first session with us is a general feeling of being pleasantly surprised. And you?
HTC: I remember one thing. From the first minutes the Brazilians took him away and got him under their wing. Before starting training we used to do the
rondos
. You had a group of Spanish players (Puyol, Oleguer, Xavi, Iniesta) with you; then there was a second group of Brazilians with people like Eto’o and Rafa Márquez. It was Silvinho who said to him, ‘come over here, son’. And he joined up in the
rondo
with the Brazilians. Silvinho embraced him, not literally, but from that moment onwards he became like a father to him.
GVB: If you see a footballer who shines on television, you can shout out, ‘what a great player he is!’ But you only really know how good someone is when you train with them. It happened to me with Bergkamp, Henry and Ronaldinho. If you are playing with them every day, you discover just how special they are. With Messi, after the first training session you could already see it – I had never come to that conclusion so quickly before! Not even with the other three, even though they are superstars.
HTC: At the time there was an enormous difference between the first team and the young lads in the B side who played two divisions lower. Occasionally we relied on players like Joan Verdú,
perhaps the best of the reserves, but not good enough to take the place of the bigger players. But Leo …
GVB: Some weeks later, we were playing a training match between the B side and the first team. Messi used to play down the middle with the B and that area was being protected by Thiago Motta as defensive midfielder. And Messi was getting the better of him throughout.
HTC: Despite having played well at Porto, despite his self-confidence and quality surprising us, some time went past before we were convinced that he was ready to make his debut in an official match. About a year, in fact. Why? We had a lot of quality in that squad. Giuly on the right, Eto’o as a striker, Deco as leader in midfield and Ronaldinho on the left because we had to put him somewhere. We signed him as
mediapunta
(from PSG), but he kills you when we haven’t got the ball because he just doesn’t defend – so we stuck him on the wing. Xavi didn’t play every game, Iniesta even less, imagine the quality we had. Leo started to get called into the squad in the 2004−05 season, but he spent a lot of matches sitting on the bench.
GVB: The B side and the lower teams played a 3-4-3 and he was the
enganche
, the number 10, just behind the striker. So in the 4-3-3 system that we were using there was no place for him in the position he normally played.
HTC: With the reserves he was almost like a second striker. But the system isn’t important, it’s the position he naturally takes up when he’s on the pitch. And he couldn’t play in the middle. Our front target man had to be strong, playing with his back to the goal, able to receive the ball and turn. He wasn’t any good for that position.
GVB: What did the coaches say among themselves about all that, about his evolution?
HTC: Frank was a bit sceptical about his possibilities so early in his career. We had to wait, he said. We had a problem because he was very good, but there just weren’t many opportunities for him. He carried on training with us, more and more, but we didn’t play him. Who would we take off? His time hadn’t come.
GVB: Being a left-back, it often fell to me to mark him in training, because you put him on the right of the attack. Let me tell you,
thanks! And you saw that for him every ball would be his last one, he had great motivation for every training session. For every attack. It was like Ronaldinho when he turned up wanting to train: you could see they were happy, smiling. And of course there was no way of stopping them.
HTC: They would kill anyone who crossed their path. Leo showed himself to be strong whenever he had the ball. Sometimes you have players who you push to do a bit more. With him you had to put a rope around his neck to pull him back.
GVB: I remember them as good training sessions because we had some really great players. Sometimes we would warm up in the changing room before going out onto the pitch and me, just by seeing Ronnie, or Deco, or Leo do such wonderful things with a ball, I felt ready to train. What a pleasure! Did you have to give Leo lots of instructions? I don’t remember you being on top of him all the time.
HTC: Not many, and that’s the truth. These people are so talented and so intelligent – two things that usually go hand in hand. With just one word they would understand what we wanted from them on the pitch. Most of what he did on the pitch he carried inside him. What we tried to do was to teach him to become a professional. How to look after himself, how to train … Sometimes there were three games a week and if he trained like mad, he couldn’t play three games in the week, not even two. He needed to match his enthusiasm with his physical capabilities. When he started to play, his level of achievement would go up and down, but that didn’t worry us because you could see that here was a young boy who had extraordinary qualities. It’s logical that a player of 17 should lack consistency.
GVB: I used to love it when the day before the games we used to have a really good training session, it was a good sign. We’d start with a
rondo
then would come an exercise, depending on who your opposition was, and finally 11 vs 11 on a small pitch. And Leo would play as if his life depended on it. It was impossible not to give him his chance sooner or later.
HTC: Sometimes I would say to Frank, ‘Did you see that?’ He would get in between two or three [players] where no gap existed. And his shot had such power. With a normal player you can see what
his intention is, the movement of the leg, the moment that he pulls his leg back and shoots, all in a split second but with sufficient time so a defender can block it. With him, the leg doesn’t appear to move and yet the ball still leaves his foot with enormous power.
GVB: He seems to think before the rest of us. Or he sees a pattern in front of his eyes that allows him to understand exactly what play and movement is required. It’s like something from science fiction. All I see is the ball and a lot of legs. He sees the solution.