4:02 am | November 16, 2018 | Go to Source | Author:
Sporting greatness is a form of anesthetic — it has a numbing effect. The first time you watch Simone Biles skip across the floor, Roger Federer execute a perfect drop shot or Lewis Hamilton take a corner in the driving rain, you’re utterly enchanted. By the hundredth time you see them do it, there’s a danger that you will become immune to their sheer wonder, the same way you might if you’d grown up with your bedroom looking out toward the Northern Lights.
For that reason, there’s a risk that football fans will fail to cherish Lionel Messi. He does the extraordinary so often that it becomes, well, ordinary. As a result, we sometimes regard his breathtaking acts with the nonchalance of bar staff in Berlin.
Many of us have been guilty of this, this author included, but on the 15th anniversary of his Barcelona debut, a 15-minute cameo in a friendly vs. Porto, it’s worth reassessing his magic.
When Messi recently produced a masterclass against Tottenham Hotspur in the Champions League, a Wembley performance just as majestic as that he had given in the 2011 final against Manchester United, several people sneered something to the effect of, “Well, he does that every week.” Part of that snark was due to the fact that Messi seems to blow certain minds only when he excels against English opposition, but part of it came from so much familiarity with his brilliance. It thus seems important, at this point, to issue three simple guidelines as to how those jaded by his genius can still cherish Leo Messi.
The first thing is to judge Messi not by what he does, but by what is happening around him. The bullet train from Beijing to Shanghai reaches the astonishing speed of 302 kilometres per hour, but you only really get a sense of how fast that is once you look out of the window. It’s only then, once you see your train fly past high-performance cars on long stretches of parallel road, that you truly understand.