Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Men with magic hands carry teams’ fortunes

GOALKEEPER­S Over the years, blunders and wonders by men on the goalline have decided the fate of World Cups

- Himanshu Dhingra sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

England goalkeeper Gordon Banks made the save of the century against Brazil when he clawed out Pele’s goal-bound header to keep scores level but Jairzinho’s strike gave Selecao the win in 1970 World Cup quarter-finals. Moacir Barbosa’s life was a purgatory after his error cost Brazil the World Cup in 1950. Such is the role of a goalkeeper that no matter how spectacula­r a save was, people mostly remember the mistakes.

Neverthele­ss, football history is littered with great goalkeepin­g names and how their heroics inspired teams. Lev Yashin is regarded as the best ever; he played for erstwhile Soviet Union and while he never won the Cup, he was so good that the FIFA award for the best goalkeeper­s from 1994 to 2006 at the World Cups was called the Lev Yashin award before it was renamed the Golden Glove. The Moscow-born was once quoted as saying that secret to his brilliance was a cigarette to calm his nerves and nice vodka to tone his muscles before a match.

Goalkeeper­s, like any other player on the pitch can make mistakes but, on occasions, they can be required to correct others’ mistakes, especially if a penalty is conceded. A hero is born if a keeper saves a crucial penalty.

Joel Bats turned aside two penalties against Brazil to take France to the 1986 semi-finals. German custodian Jens Lehmann had notes in his socks against Argentina at the 2006 edition. We will probably never know whether it was just to psyche out the opponents but his right guesses took Germany to the last four.

CHANGE OF ROLE

If goalkeeper­s didn’t have enough on their plates already, more has now been demanded from the glovemen from modern-day coaches. With possession football the talk of the town, coaches prefer goalkeeper­s who can pass the ball well and not just clear it. At the club level, many keepers have fallen by the way side because they can’t do that. Joe Hart at Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City is the perfect example.

ARRAY OF STARDUST

Like in 19 previous editions, 2018 FIFA World Cup will see some of the best goalkeeper­s from all across the globe descend to Russia to showcase their skills. Manuel Neuer and Marc-andre ter Stegen have both been outstandin­g for their clubs and should the former fail to prove his fitness, Die Mannschaft have more than an able deputy to take them forward in defence of their title.

Like Germany, Brazil have two goalkeeper­s who have every right to think that they should be the first choice, but only one of Alisson of AS Roma and Ederson of Manchester City will start in goal. Other notable names manning the net for their countries in Russia include David de Gea of Spain, who has been Manchester United’s player of year four seasons running, and Hugo Lloris of France too has been outstandin­g for Tottenham Hotspur for a number of years.

In Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Neymar and Mohammed Salah, there is no shortage of people who have wands of left or right foot, but who takes the trophy could boil down to which team has the man with the magic hands. Yashin is the only keeper to have won the Ballon D’OR (1963). The best goalkeeper trophy at World Cups was called the Lev Yashin Trophy from 1994 to 2006, before it was renamed the Golden Glove. He is the oldest player in n history to win the World Cup in 198 82 at 40 years and 133 days. The 76-year r-old still holds the record for going g 1142 minutes without concedin ng in internatio­nals between 19 72 and 1974. He was at the wrong end of th he famous Diego Maradona ‘Hand of God ’ goal in 1986. Shilton jointly holds the recordecor­d ffor 10 clean sheets at World Cups with former France keeper Fabian Barthez . He has over 1000 games in the bag. He won the 1974 World Cup with West Germany. Starting in the outfield, words from coaches at TSV Haar "you're the laziest and fattest – you go in goal" pushed him to become keeper. The third keeper to captain his team to a World Cup title after Dino Zoff and Gianpiero Combi of Italy, Casillas is the only one to have more than 100 internatio­nal clean sheets (102). He has won a record 121 matches. The then 27-year-old saved two penalties in the 1990 quarters against Yugoslavia. He went on to repeat the feat in the semis against Italy and take Argentina to the final overshadow­ing Maradona. In the final though, the only goal came via a penalty, which he couldn’t save.

FIFA World Cups Clean sheets FIFA World Cups Clean sheets FIFA World Cups Clean sheets FIFAA World Cups Clean sheets FIFA World Cups Clean sheets

In the 1986 World Cup quarter-finals against Brazil, Bats was the hero as he not only saved a penalty in normal time from Zico but he did one better in the shootout to thwart Socrates. And with teams at 1-1 after four shots, Julio Cesar hit the post and Brazil lost.

FIFA World Cups Clean sheets

Luis van Gaal introduced him late in extra-time for the shootout in the

2014 quarters versus Costa Rica. Krul told the Costa Ricans he knew their plan and his mind games worked as he saved two penalties from Bryan Ruiz and Michael Umana to take Holland to the semi-finals.

FIFA Wworld Cups Clean sheets

He was key to Costa Rica making it to the quarter-finals of the 2014 World Cup. In the shootout, the Real Madrid goalkeeper saved the penalty from second-half substitute Theofanis Gekas to send his team in the last-eight stage against the Netherland­s.

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