Invisiblewall.net: Gilberto Silva News

Invisiblewall.net: Gilberto Silva News

Archive for November, 2008

Thrilled Gilberto calls for cool heads

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

From uefa.com:

Panathinaikos FC midfielder Gilberto was delighted with the surprise away defeat of FC Internazionale Milano on Wednesday night which kept the Greek club’s European ambitions alive, lifting them into second place in Group B and within sight of the knockout rounds. “It’s up to us now,” said the Brazilian. “We just need to keep our heads.”

Gutsy display
Henk ten Cate’s men were without an away win in the UEFA Champions League for almost five years before overcoming Werder Bremen earlier this month, and resumed winning ways on foreign fields at the next attempt by claiming the scalp of group leaders Inter thanks to José Sarriegi’s solitary strike. The visitors were under pressure for long spells but only really looked in danger of conceding a goal in the final few frantic minutes when the Nerazzurri, who qualified despite the 1-0 reverse, pushed forward in numbers.

‘Massive win’
“It’s a massive win for us,” said Gilberto, a finalist with Arsenal FC in 2006. “It’s always hard to play against Inter, especially here at the San Siro, but we did well in defensive areas and we scored from a corner to get the result. We did really well to defend so well because Inter have so many talented individuals and they are also very strong as a team but we did a very difficult job in the proper way.”

‘Up to us’
Remarkable as their achievement was, Panathinaikos were three minutes away from being eliminated until Hugo Almeida scored for Werder Bremen at Anorthosis Famagusta FC to secure a 2-2 draw. Gilberto, though, had been unaware of Bremen’s comeback from a two-goal deficit in Cyprus, which breathed life into his side’s ambitions of reaching the last 16. “I didn’t know what was going on in the other match,” he told uefa.com. “I only realised the score at the final whistle, but things have worked out really well for us with our win and the result in the other game. Now it just depends on what we do in our next game. It’s up to us now. We just need to keep our heads.

‘Winning mentality’
“The Anorthosis match will be like a final because we will both be fighting to qualify for the next stage, but I’m sure we’ll finish the job at home. We’ll have to play intelligently because they have also got quality and we must make sure we keep our winning mentality. After two wins we are very confident, but we need to keep our wits. Against Inter we showed that we have enough quality to reach the next round, and now we must keep things simple and keep doing our jobs. If we play like we did tonight I’m sure we’ll go through.”

‘Memorable night’
Giorgos Karagounis also reveled in the win against the side he left three years ago, and whose supporters applauded him off when he was substituted in the second half. “It was a memorable night, that’s for sure,” said the midfielder. “If the crowd here clap you off after all the great champions they’ve seen play here, it’s wonderful for me. I don’t think it was an unjust victory, it was fully deserved. We played without fear and achieved a great feat – it means so much to us.”



Gilberto helps Pana to 1-0 win vs. Inter

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Gilberto has helped Panathinaikos beat Inter 1-0 at the San Siro! There’s a full match review from Goal.com (click), or here are the key informations:

It’s a Pana stunner in Milan, where Henk Ten Cate’s Greek outfit have earned a shock 1-0 win in against the Serie A champions

Panathinaikos has turned Group B on its head with a stunning UEFA Champions League victory in Italy, where the unfancied Greeks scored a deserved 1-0 win over Jose Mourinho’s Inter Milan.

It was a reminder of the gulf in class between the two sides that was perhaps not so conspicuous, given the resolve of Ten Cate’s men and the inability for Mourinho’s team to break them down consistently.

In fact, with the Athenians growing in confidence with the ball at their feet – just as they had done during a stunning win in Germany last matchday – they fashioned their first real chance of the match on fifteen minutes.

Appropriate perhaps that it arrived from a set-piece, with the Greeks not looking capable of posing a concerted attacking threat in open play given their defensive predisposition.

A Karagounis free-kick dropped to former Arsenal man Gilberto Silva in the box, who saw his close-range effort blocked before fellow countryman Gabriel wasted a wonderful opportunity from the rebound.

Go Bert!



Gilberto compared to Gallas

Friday, November 21st, 2008

James Dall wrote an article comparing Captain Fantastic (Mr. Gilberto Silva) against Captain Smellyface (Mr. William Gallas). Check it out.

Captain sensible?

William Gallas’ comments about unrest in the Arsenal camp have called into question his credentials to be Gunners captain. James Dall looks at the Frenchman’s latest outburst and assesses how damaging it could prove in the long run.

It is general consensus that William Gallas’ latest comments are a public stride too far for an experienced player that has the honour of being Arsenal captain.

Gallas was presented with the armband at the beginning of last season, usurping the now-departed Gilberto Silva, a Brazilian midfielder who served six years in the red and white.

Gilberto enjoyed an exemplary 2006/07 season as skipper, scoring 11 goals and – in a campaign when eight Premier League games were lost – not sticking his verbal oar in to stir up choppy waters in north London.

France international Gallas was a controversial appointment by his compatriot Arsene Wenger, there is no question. But fears over his attitude, Chelsea roots, displays on the pitch and leadership skills were largely pacified until 23rd February.

That Saturday at St Andrews was a dreadful day to be a Gunner. A horrendous injury to the increasingly sharp Eduardo, two points dropped so late on and then Gallas, the young team’s commander, losing his French head.

Gallas’ petulant exhibition was eye-opening, and yet he received the backing of Wenger. The image of a crest-fallen Tony Adams, tears in his eyes, crumpled on the turf does not sit well in the belly for the reason that it would not have occurred.
Scrutinised

The knives have been out for Gallas since; every sound-bite analysed, body language scrutinised, misdemeanours publicised. Gallas’ ‘player news archive’ on the skysports.com website screams of too many controversies for a man with power and responsibility.

A question on most lips is whether he should remain as captain – more than 80 per cent of those who voted in a skysports.com poll think not. But Wenger is a stubborn man and, while the pressure is mounting for him to relieve Gallas of his duties, it is expected he will lead the charges out at Manchester City on Saturday.

The counter-argument suggests Gallas’ position of power allows him the right to make such revelations of ‘complaining’, ‘insults’ and ‘problems’. But how far can a captain go before his honesty opens up an unhealable wound?

Talk of unrest, in what has already been a testing campaign for the Gunners, only serves to stir up further whispers of discontent. It seems odd to bring about a dressing room fall-out from last month’s game against Tottenham Hotspur. It serves only to renew past squabbles.

Perhaps Gallas’ quotes were taken out of context, perhaps he intended a rallying cry, although said theories look a bit like clutching at straws. At 31-years-old, he is not naive to the media’s ways. He knows, for example, a cringe-worthy pre-match teamtalk at Chelsea will be caught by television cameras.

Gallas went as far as to intimate he is uncertain where his footballing future lies next season. For this reason, Wenger may already be planning his replacement. Cesc Fabregas is a favourite in a many a fan’s eyes. He is a man who has demonstrated remarkable spoken maturity.

It is a conundrum Arsenal could certainly do without. But it is a debate that will rumble on until the Gunners lift silverware, Gallas steps down or leaves the club, or Wenger is bullish as chief and draws the curtain on what has so far been a failure of an experiment.

Source



Gilberto plays in 7-2 Brazil win

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Player Ratings: Brazil 6-2 Portugal

Finally, a friendly game that lived up to its promise, hype, and expectations. The free-flowing football between the two sides produced eight goals but there was no question as to who ended up as the dominant force. Goal.com rates the performers on the pitch.

Gilberto Silva – 7: As always, hung quietly deep inside his own territory. Barely heard his name mentioned, hardly saw his face on camera, but that does not mean he wasn’t in the contest. A typical unsung hero-styled performance.

Source: Goal.com



Gilberto plays in 1-1 Pana draw

Monday, November 17th, 2008

From The Offside:

Larissa and Panathinaikos scrapped to a 1-1 draw Saturday evening at the Alkazar Stadium. In a tense affair that was characterized by recurring scenes of fan violence, Maciej Zurawski gave the hosts the advantage early in the second half before Silva Cleyton pegged back shortly after coming on.

Mantzios would have given his side the advantage on 73 minutes had Kotsolis not produced a fine kick-save to keep the striker’s angled shot out.

Fifteen minutes later, Mantzios again caused headaches for Larissa’s defense, beating two markers and cutting back across goal, only for Cleyton to scoop his effort over the bar from close range. One minute later, it was Gilberto who let a glorious chance go begging, sending his sliding effort from Sotiris Ninis’ corner over the bar.

With the result, Panathinaikos have won only once in their last six Greek Super League encounters. The Trifili are on 16 points from 10 matches, while Larissa have 13 points from as many games. Panathinaikos return home to face lowly Thrasyvoulos in a week’s time, while Larissa travel to second-place PAOK in eight days.



Tim Vickery criticises Gilberto

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Excellent writer, and critic of Gilberto, Tim Vickery has written an article for Sports Illustrated:

Brazil is making a mistake by continuing to stick with Gilberto

As players, the two men currently in charge of the Brazilian national team — Dunga and Jorginho — were both terrific.

Dunga worked at his game so much that he transformed himself from a limited, battling ball-winner into a central midfielder adept at reading the game and making good passing choices. And Brazil has had some great right backs in its time, but Jorginho can measure up to any of them. He was a magnificent crosser.

But for all their achievements on the field, as coaches, there’s no doubt they lack experience. Dunga drew attention to this when the duo was appointed shortly after the 2006 World Cup. He was honest enough to admit they were going to make mistakes along the way.

I think they’re making one now — and it concerns our old friend Gilberto Silva. Regular readers may recall that I am not a fan of Gilberto. I’m old enough to remember when Brazil selected its best passers in the heart of the midfield rather than converted center backs. Gilberto can point to a cartload of titles and medals in his defense — but soccer is in constant evolution, and the tide of opinion in Brazil now seems to have turned against him.

Even after Brazil had won 4-0 at Venezuela last month in World Cup qualifying, 1970 World Cup great Tostão, the country’s most astute soccer writer, was unimpressed. Some magical moments from Kaká and Robinho had supplied the goals, while at the other end, only an excellent display from keeper Júlio Cesar had kept Venezuela at bay.

Tostão concluded that Gilberto had contributed little with the ball, and that he is “slow and marks the opposing players from distance.” He also predicted that Brazil’s No. 8 would be little use three days later in Rio de Janeiro against Colombia, when the team would “need midfielders who burst forward to shoot or give decisive passes. Gilberto does not do this well.”

A scoreless draw proved him right. After the game, former international striker Müller, now a TV pundit, almost had his head in his hands with anguish at the level of Brazil’s midfield play. Gilberto, he said, had no future with the national team.

How will Dunga and his assistant Jorginho deal with this criticism? It’s clear there’s something wrong with their team. Brazil shines only on the counterattack, when its stars are given space. Against well-organized opponents, its lack of midfield guile can be painful to watch.

Perhaps the worst mistake the coaching duo could make would be to bend to every criticism. Trying to play the populist card, giving in to the pundits and picking the team the public wants to see is a road with no future. It shows weakness, it undermines team spirit and, when it fails, the public will boo and jeer just the same.

But the opposite path is a mistake as well: ignoring all the criticism and plowing on as if nothing was wrong. Failing to take the necessary steps because you’re afraid of being seen to back down. It’s stubbornness taken to excess — and this is the line Brazil’s coaching staff seems to be taking on Gilberto.

A little more than a week ago, I took part in a roundtable debate on Brazilian TV, where Jorginho was the big name present. As always, he struck me as a man of integrity, but I was astonished by what he had to say when I raised the subject of Gilberto’s continued presence on the national team.

The midfielder, he said, had been a victim of Arsène Wenger’s rotation policy in his last season at Arsenal. This isn’t true. Gilberto lost his place to Mathieu Flamini, and played poorly on those occasions when the Frenchman was injured or needed a rest. Arsenal no longer wanted Gilberto even when it had reluctantly parted company with Flamini. The Brazilian was sold on to Greece’s Panathinaikos.

Arsenal had seen that Gilberto didn’t possess the dynamic passing and movement game that is needed to accompany Cesc Fàbregas. Moreover, his defensive skills have eroded over the years. The best defensive midfielders tend to have a low center of gravity. Now 32, the giant Gilberto is more prone to be caught off balance, hence the trait identified by Tostão: a growing tendency to mark his opponent from distance.

Jorginho described Gilberto as an excellent organizer of the midfield — and contradicted his own argument when he confessed the midfield’s lack of organization. Against Colombia, he said, they had kept trying to get the team to be patient in possession, to keep patient, keep passing and wait for the opportunity to slip a runner behind the defense.

It never happened. As he said, the center backs frequently launched hopeful long balls forward because there wasn’t enough movement in front of them, there was no patience, no midfield triangles. Jorginho emphasized the difficulty of playing in front of such a demanding crowd as the one in Rio’s Maracanã stadium, always quick to turn on the home side if there are no early goals. But, at the age of 32 and with a World Cup winners’ medal to point to, if Gilberto finds this hard to cope with, one wonders when he will be ready.

Jorginho said he found it hard to understand the negative climate around Gilberto. And the following day, Gilberto was named in the squad for next week’s friendly against Portugal.

While defending one’s players in public is a laudable thing, selecting Gilberto for this match is truly baffling. The World Cup qualification campaign doesn’t resume until the end of March. Brazil has this friendly and another one in February to have a look at fringe players or try something new. The central midfield area is surely crying out for some experimentation.

But there is none at all on this squad. There is no place for Hernanes of São Paulo, described by Palmeiras (and former Brazil and Real Madrid) coach Vanderlei Luxemburgo as the only true world-class player in Brazilian soccer. There is no place for Denílson, in such good form at Arsenal. The central midfielders are exactly the same as those selected for the recent games against Venezuela and Colombia — with the exception of the fact that Lucas Leiva of Liverpool has been left out.

What is the point of bringing Gilberto back across the Atlantic to win his 69th international cap in this friendly in Brasília? It looks like an overdose of stubbornness — that Dunga is trying too hard not to appear weak, so hard that he might be overlooking the fact that there are times when the strongest thing to do is admit your mistake and move on.

An alternative reading is that Brazil’s coaching staff genuinely sees Gilberto as part of its team for the 2010 World Cup. But do they honestly believe that he will be able to do a job in South Africa just a few months away from his 34th birthday?



Gilberto rated in Athens derby

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

From Goal.com:

Player Ratings: Panathinaikos 0 – 0 Olympiakos

The Derby Of Eternal Eternal Enemies ended in a stalemate at the OAKA Spiros Louis Stadium this evening and Goal.com’s Chris Paraskevas gives his verdict on the stars and strugglers…

Silva – 6.5: The Brazil captain was particularly influential during the first-half, during which his use of the ball was immaculate. Showed all of his experience from years of performing at the highest level of both domestic and international football as time after time he maintained possession for his side in key areas of the pitch. Set-up fellow countryman Gabriel for what was almost the opening goal of the match but his influence waned towards the end of an increasingly scrappy first-half. Won his midfield duel with international teammate Dudu.



Panathinaikos prove Gilberto’s point

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

From UEFA.com:

Gilberto insisted that an excellent all-round team display earned Panathinaikos FC their 3-0 win against Werder Bremen at the Weserstadion.

‘Excellent display’
The midfielder was one of the outstanding figures for Panathinaikos on the night. The 32-year-old hardly misplaced a pass and directed play from the centre of the park. Nonetheless, the Brazilian international refused to take any credit for the win. “It was an excellent display from the whole team,” he told uefa.com. “Everybody worked really hard to get a result here tonight. I was especially pleased with the way we passed the ball. We showed great quality out there today and that is what we need to take into the upcoming matches.”

Defensive diligence
Gilberto was particularly pleased with the way Panathinaikos played in defence. “I think we defended really well today and we showed real resilience,” he said. “We must remember that Bremen have excellent strikers in Markus Rosenberg and Claudio Pizarro and they are really difficult to mark. They also have Diego in midfield. Everybody did really well to stop them from scoring.”

No surprise
Though many were surprised to see the Greek side win so comfortably, Gilberto felt Panathinaikos had only fulfilled their potential. “I know a lot of people will be surprised by the result but I can tell you that we have a lot of quality in this side,” he explained. “We came here to win, we believed in our own ability and even when they put pressure on us early in the second half we waited for our chances and made full use of them when they came along. I always felt really comfortable during the game and my team-mates did too.”

Gilberto optimistic
With Panathinaikos now third in Group B with four points, the former Arsenal FC star is optimistic that the Greek outfit will progress to the knockout stage of the UEFA Champions League. He said: “We now have everything in our own hands again and that is great but we need to keep up the good work and then hopefully we will still be in with a chance of progressing when we take on Anorthosis Famagusta [FC] in our final group match.”



Gilberto plays in surprise Werder Breme victory

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Article taken from Goal.com

Panathinaikos Stun Bremen

Henk Ten Cate’s Panathinaikos blew the race for 2nd place wide open in Group B, as they recorded a stunning upset against Werder Bremen this evening, running out deserved 3-0 victors at the Weserstadion.

Importantly, they added a counter-attacking edge to their football that had been non-existent throughout the first-half and they should have taken the lead after ten minutes of play, breaking well through former Arsenal captain Gilberto Silva in midfield.

The Brazilian released Sweden international Mikael Nilsson down the right, whose low ball into the area found Karagounis unmarked at the far post. Opting to strike the ball first-time, the Euro 2004-winner wasted a glorious opportunity, skewing his effort both high and wide.

Amazingly, Gilberto Silva had the chance to cap an amazing night with a fourth goal when he tried to ‘round Wiese and finish from a tight angle moments later, as Panathinaikos added another famous European night to their already prestigious collection, blowing the race for 2nd place wide open in Group B.



Gilberto called up to Brazil squad

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

From The Northampton Chronicle

Former Arsenal ace Gilberto Silva has been named in the Brazil squad to face Portugal in a friendly in Brasilia later this month.

The midfielder, who moved to Panathinaikos in the summer after six years with the Gunners, is joined in the squad by British record signing Robinho, his Eastlands team-mate Elano and Manchester United midfielder Anderson.

Former World Player of the Year Ronaldinho, now with AC Milan, has been overlooked for the November 19 clash.