Are we forgetting just how good Tevez is?

Date: 30th January 2012 at 2:22 pm
Written by Brad Pinard

How dull is the Carlos Tevez affair becoming? The Argentinean striker has caused controversy in every year that he has been in English football, whether it’s his fault or not, and many people will be glad to see the back of him, but not me.

The former Boca Juniors and Corinthians hitman was credited with keeping West Ham in the Premier League in 2007 after scoring vital goals in huge games that helped the Upton Park side beat the drop on the final day of the season at Old Trafford. His time in the East End though was overshadowed by the third party ownership from meddler and agent Kia Joorabchian that resulted in the Hammers paying around £25million over four years to relegated Sheffield United. Tevez unsurprisingly moved to Manchester United that summer where he felt he was harshly treated throughout by Sir Alex Ferguson even though he did manage to score 34 goals in 99 games that earned him a move to arch-rivals Manchester City for a reported £35million+ deal that is one of the biggest ever in English football.

Tevez, who turns 28 on Sunday, hit the prime of his career last season, becoming City captain, leading them to FA Cup glory, a Champions League spot and 23 goals in 39 games. The Argentine was a vital member of the Blues side that created history under Roberto Mancini. However, Tevez revealed he wanted to leave the Etihad Stadium in the summer with a move to his native Argentina the preferred option to allow him to be with his family. But City could not get the required funds from any club and Tevez was told to stay. Since then Mancini has claimed that Tevez refused to warm up in a Champions League defeat away at Bayern Munich and he has not played since after being dropped and suspended by the club. So it was a certainty that Tevez would leave Manchester in January, but with just over 24-hours to go of the transfer window, Tevez remains a City player.

But in amongst the lengthy transfer saga, I feel that the majority of people are forgetting just how good Tevez is and that on his day he is one of the best strikers in the world. Scoring 52 goals in 84 games at City and an overall record of a goal in nearly every other game in his career is certainly an attractive stat that should be remembered. Plenty of clubs wouldn’t go anywhere near Tevez in this window as his off the field history is the first thing that comes to mind when talking about him and City’s understandably high asking price is a stumbling block.

Unfortunately for Tevez his agent Joorabchian’s approach to transfers have definitely had an effect on his move but it would be nice to hear from the player himself. The main man at City last year will need a few weeks to get match fit after not playing for so long but it would not surprise me if he went on to score bundles of goals if he was to move on this week and silence any critics that don’t really know what has happened at City.

Tevez will always score goals, work extremely hard and win a team games, well worth the asking price in my opinion and someone will take him in the summer if not tomorrow. The striker is one cap away from 60 for Argentina and although he is not far off of turning 30, he may still have a good few years left in him. A bad attitude? I’m not sure, but a world class footballer? Yes.

What do you make of the Carlos Tevez affair? Let me know on Twitter @Brad_Pinard

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2 Comments

  • clevblue says:
    Date: January 30th, 2012 at 4:43 pm

    Just a couple of points, Carlos was seen on camera refusing to warm up in Munich, which is refusing to obey a direct command; Mancini had no choice but to punish him. Mancini went to Carlos’ house to try to build bridges, Tevez’s people said he had no problem with Mancini, then went AWOL. Now Joorabchian seeks to blame Mancini. Ridiculous. Carlos is a great player, nobody knows that better than City fans, but his ego is such that he can’t back down. Great footballer, not such a great human being. Aguero is a family man too, but happy in his work and settled.

    Reply

    says: Just a couple of points, Carlos was seen on camera refusing to warm up in Munich, which is refusing to obey a direct command; Mancini had no choice but to punish him. Mancini went to Carlos' house to try to build bridges, Tevez's people said he had no problem with Mancini, then went AWOL. Now Joorabchian seeks to blame Mancini. Ridiculous. Carlos is a great player, nobody knows that better than City fans, but his ego is such that he can't back down. Great footballer, not such a great human being. Aguero is a family man too, but happy in his work and settled.
    clevblue
  • H Salem says:
    Date: January 30th, 2012 at 10:10 pm

    As a passionate gooner I’d have him at the Arsenal, as with Tevez you know that for the next 18 mth to 2 years you have a serious talent on your hands, after that period of time though ….

    Reply

    says: As a passionate gooner I'd have him at the Arsenal, as with Tevez you know that for the next 18 mth to 2 years you have a serious talent on your hands, after that period of time though ....
    H Salem

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