‘’He took free kicks like no other.’’ Andrea Pirlo remarked.
‘’I just used to stand there in training and study him for days. I think I
learned something in the end.’’
Pirlo was of course talking about Roberto Baggio, one of the
bearded geniuses' idols. It can be easy to overlook just how good The Divine
Ponytail was at set pieces, given how brilliant he was at more or less everything
else on a football pitch.
He's among the best free kick specialists in Serie A
history, in the top five surrounded by illustrious names (Zola, Del Piero, Pirlo and Mihajlovic
are the other four) - and he inspired two out of the four to boot. That speaks volumes.
I’ve given myself the arduous task of trying to whittle down
Baggio’s top five free kicks from all competitions. As someone who has most of his
goals imprinted to memory as an ardent lover of the man from Caldogno,
there were some goals I’d somehow forgotten about and it was a joy just to sit
back on YouTube and marvel at his genius (as if anyone needs an excuse
anyways).
The difficult part was deciding which ones to leave out, so
I took into consideration things like importance of the goal, who the opponents
were and significance of the game.
So enough waffling from me and lets all marvel together at the ponytailed genius. If you felt there were certain goals I left
off the list I would like to hear suggestions.
5. Bologna vs Inter, Serie A 1997/98, 2-4
Having left Milan in the summer of 1997, seemingly heading
for Parma only for a young Carlo Ancelotti to put the brakes on the move (a
decision he would later regret), Baggio found himself signing for Bologna in
order to win back a place with the Azzurri ahead of France ’98. He had scored a
penalty on his debut in a 4-2 away defeat to Atalanta and in week two of the
season Bologna and Baggio where at home to Inter, but this wasn’t any old Inter
side, this was Ronaldo’s Inter.
The game was billed as Baggio vs Ronaldo; the meeting of old
and new, Ronaldo had usurped Baggio as the best player in the world at the ripe
age of 21. ‘’They all exaggerated this match as a challenge - me vs Ronaldo.’’
He said, ‘’but this will be exclusively Bologna vs Inter.’’
On a rainy day at the Stadio Dall’Ara, Inter raced into the
lead from a Fabio Galante header and added another goal from Maurizio Ganz.
Then with one minute before half time, Bologna won a free kick just outside the
Inter box. Baggio curled the ball up and across the wall with such velocity
that goalkeeper Gianluca Pagliuca had no chance of saving it, the ball screaming
into his top right hand corner.
Baggio would net another goal; this time from a penalty,
before Ronaldo added a sublime third goal for the Neazzurri and finally Youri
Djorkaeff scored a sumptuous chip to win a pulsating game for Gigi Simoni’s
side.
This game was the beginning of Baggio’s rebirth and he would
go on to score a further 19 goals for Bologna as he did reach his target of
making the squad for France ’98. The following season he would sign for Inter,
linking up with II Fenomeno and Djorkaeff.
4. Fiorentina vs Brescia, Serie A 2000/01, 2-2
Baggio’s first season at Brescia was a mixed affair, he
joined the newly promoted side in September 2000 after leaving Inter. Baggio’s
kryptonite, injuries, forced him to miss a chunk of the 2000/01 season and by
February he still hadn’t scored a goal for the Little Swallows.
He made his return to the pitch in this game against old
club Fiorentina (the one club he truly loved) and finally broke his duck in the
fourth minute with arguably the scrappiest goal of his entire career. If there
was ever a goal that was unbefitting for a man with Baggio’s quality, this was
it.
La Viola had turned the game around with strikes from Nuno
Gomes and Enrico Chiesa, then the away side got a free kick in the 67th
minute on the left hand side of the Fiorentina box. As Baggio stepped up, the
decibel level sharply rose as whistles from the home supporters increased.
Baggio remonstrated with the referee that the wall wasn’t back far enough
before he casually strolled back to the ball.
He delightfully curled the ball over the wall and it crashed
violently off the crossbar and down and up into the roof of Francesco Toldo’s net.
Baggio refused to celebrate (in an era before everyone and their dog refused to celebrate against former clubs) and the game ended in a draw.
Brescia’s target for the season was to avoid relegation yet
confounded critics to finish 8th in Serie A, gaining entry into the
Intertoto Cup. Baggio would start scoring with more regularity and would finish
the season on 10 goals.
3. Inter vs Parma, 1999/00 Champions League Play Off, 3-1
Both sides had finished the 1999/00 season equal on 58
points and thus a play off was needed to determine who would qualify for the
final Champions League spot. Nine days after the end of the season, May 23rd 2000, Parma and
Inter met at the Stadio Bentegodi in Verona in a one off match.
Baggio had endured one of the worst seasons of his career
under Marcello Lippi, who had now become his sworn enemy, more so than his
long-traditional rival, Arrigo Sacchi. Lippi had arrived at Inter in the
summer of 1999 and had asked Baggio to essentially be a spy for him in the
Inter locker room. Baggio, being a players’ player, instantly baulked at the
demands from his new manager and that set the tone for the course of the
season, Baggio always on the bench or in the stands but rarely on the pitch.
As the season neared its end, Ronaldo suffered a major
injury against Lazio in the Coppa Italia and with Alvaro Recoba being, well,
Alvaro Recoba and Ivan Zamarano reduced to the role of impact sub, Lippi had no
choice but to start Baggio in this crucial match.
Lippi was told by Massimo Moratti that if he lost this match
he would be sacked. It was all or nothing for the former Juventus manager.
In the 36th minute Lilian Thuram hacked down
Benoit Cauet down on the left hand side of the Parma half, just outside the
penalty area. The angle was very tight and most imagined that Baggio would
cross the ball into the box.
But the Divine One had different ideas, instead of crossing
it he bent the ball over the wall and past Gigi Buffon, who like the rest of
us, probably expected a cross, into his top left hand corner. A sublime piece of ingenuity.
Baggio would score another superb goal late in the game, a
volley from outside the box, to confirm Inter’s place in the preliminary rounds
of the Champions League. This was his parting gift to Moratti, who Baggio
always liked. Gazzetta dello Sport gave him a 10/10 rating the next day, a
rarity for the paper (they have only gave out six 10/10 ratings in their
existence).
It would all be for nothing however as Baggio left shortly thereafter and so would Lippi, as Inter were shockingly beat by
Helsingborg in the qualifiers and with that he was gone. His reputation in
tatters.
2. Milan vs Perugia, Serie A 1996/97, 3 – 0
Baggio was in his second season with the Rossoneri, his
first produced a second consecutive Scudetto but he wasn’t the key player
everyone had hoped. Fabio Capello shoehorned him into his system rather than
build around him and it always seemed that Don Fabio didn’t quite know how best to
harness Baggio’s majestic talent.
In the summer of 1996 Capello left Milan and Italy for Real
Madrid and in came Oscar Tabárez, future Uruguay manager. Tabárez had previously worked wonders with
Cagliari in 1994/95 and 1995/96, guiding them to a 9th and 10th
place finish.
Baggio was in and out of the starting XI in the
opening rounds of the season as Tabárez chopped and changed
his formation every week. On the 4th weekend of the season Perugia
came to the San Siro but Baggio was relegated to the bench, with George Weah
and Marco Simone leading the line.
Milan raced into an early lead through
the Liberian and he added a second late in the second half. Baggio came on at
the start of the second half for a young Massimo Ambrosini and in the 77th
minute Milan got a free kick.
The set piece was a good 25 yards from
goal; Baggio took a very quick sprint and beautifully curled the ball up and
over the wall into the top corner of the Perugia net. The real beauty of the goal
is viewing it in with a different angle as you can appreciate the technique of the
strike. There was Bend It Like Baggio long before the term was coined for David
Beckham.
This strike would arguably be the
highlight of Baggio’s season. Milan had a disastrous season and Tabárez would be sacked in
December ’96. ‘’I feel so sorry for him.’’ Roberto remarked, ‘‘The role Tabárez made
for me was perfect.’’
In a cruel twist of fate, Silvio
Berlusconi brought Baggio’s adversary Arrigo Sacchi back to the club. As one can
imagine, Baggio’s season didn’t get any better after that. Sensing the writing
on the wall, Baggio left the club in the summer of 1997.
1. Borussia Dortmund vs Juventus, UEFA Cup
Semi Final 2nd Leg 1994/95, 1-2
The 1994/95 season was bordering on
being historic for Juventus, under new coach Marcello Lippi La Vecchia Signora were competing on three fronts. They were
first in the league, in the final of the Coppa Italia and now in the semi final
of the UEFA Cup against regular '90s foe Borussia Dortmund.
The ponytailed one had been enduring a
mixed season, injured for large portions of it and suffering from a huge World
Cup hangover where he was made a scapegoat by the country for having the gall
to miss a penalty in the final in which he single handedly dragged Italy to meant
he wasn’t having the most stellar of seasons.
Yet as the season was nearing its end
his form began to pick up again as Juve headed to Germany for the second leg of
the semi final. Despite how good a young Alessandro Del Piero was performing as
his understudy, if Baggio was healthy, he started.
The first leg ended a 1-1 draw, with
Baggio scoring from a penalty and the second leg was expected to be a tight
affair.
Sergio Porrini scored an early goal for
Juve, a header from Baggio’s corner. Dortmund equalized not long after and then
in the 31st minute Juve win a free kick after Rene Tretschok hacked
down Angelo Di Livio. Baggio took charge of the ball.
Throughout the course of his career he had various ways of
taking free kicks, one such method was to simply take a step or two and hit the
ball with his instep (goal no.4 on the list)
Another technique, one that he mostly used during his time
at Juve, was to run at the ball as if he was going to hit it with his laces,
yet at the last second he would bend the ball beautifully with the inside of
his foot. It was this technique that he called on here.
As he hit the ball it arched majestically, travelling ferociously into Stefan Klos’s top right hand corner, the German international barely
moved as the ball clipped the underside of the crossbar and into the net. It
was a goal worthy of any occasion. He ran over to celebrate with Lippi, jumping
on him (given everything that transpired between the two later, a very surreal
image indeed). Simply an outrageously sublime goal and for me his greatest ever
free kick.
Juve would go on to win the game and make it to the final
where they would lose to Parma and be denied of the treble. It was to be
Baggio’s last great goal for the Bianconeri as he would depart in the summer of
1995 to rivals Milan after refusing to take a wage cut and not being guaranteed first team football.
So that's Roby Baggio's best free kicks, in my humble opinion at least. Would love to know peoples opinions on any I omitted, if so you can find me on twitter!
ReplyDeleteHi! I found valuable football match video.
AC Milan against Juventus FC in 1995.
Famous player Baggio,Weah,Deschamps.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNySdezo7cs