There are heroes in every team, players who do miracles with the ball, and for many, they are the people who make the game–football–worth watching. This is true.
They do magic with a single touch, with a beautiful dribble, but there’s more in football than the players who do magic, especially the ones who keep helping the heroes to continue their magic.
There are many figures in football that go unnoticed, players without whom the team wouldn’t have been the greatest. Messi, of course, is a hero for Barca, a game-changer. But then there is Sergio Busquets, the holding midfielder of Blaugrana, an average player with average skills who wouldn’t be noticed much in the game if it wasn’t for his vision and intelligence. He would have become an unnoticed player in Barca as the team is almost ‘All Star’, and yet analysts around the world consider him to be the best of his trade in this era.
‘Busi’, for clues, hails from Catalonia and has been part of a few academies in his youth. Just like Messi, Busi is also known for being a ‘one club man’, and it’s almost 11 years he’s been starting regularly for Barca.
In Barcelona, even the Goalkeeper is considered to be an outfield player as they always keep a ball playing; in the language of football, a sweeper keeper. Among these 11, Busquets stands tall not only for his control over the ball but also for his control over the game.
Knowing how important Busquets are will be enough to watch what the defenders, as well as the midfielders, do when they get confused. When they’ve got no way upfront, they search for Busquets, and he’ll be ready, waiting for them to pass the ball.
As Steven Gerrard, the legend of Anfield, rightly said, once he has the ball, it’s almost impossible to take it back. He’s got a 360° view of the entire ground for 90 minutes and more. He accurately anticipates the position of every single player on the ground and where they’re headed and uses this vision for faking passes, getting fouls, and doing strategic fouls. And above all, he has mastered the Art of deception. He plays with his opponent’s mind, and he passes when the opponent becomes vulnerable.
His commitment towards the team made the retired Barca Captain Carlos Puyol, a player known for his sportsmanship and fair play, request the team management to give his number ‘5’ to Busi, who used to wear 16. His hard work and dedication made him one of the four captains of FC Barcelona. He has been contributing immensely to the team and was very instrumental for Spain, which won the World Cup in 2010 and the Euro in 2012.
He’s been part of three Champions League-winning Barcelona squads and has won several La Liga titles and other major cups, such as the Club World Cup. Without his feints or tackles, none of these would have been possible as the defence would be so shambolic, and there wouldn’t be anyone connecting the attack and defence of Barca.
Xavi and Iniesta did their roles perfectly in the game, but mostly in the attacking half, while Busquets ruled his own half. He manages to be in the latter half for attack and in his box for defending. Even without the ball, he is well-placed for interception and for supplying the ball. His long legs make it easy for him to steal the ball and very difficult for the opponents to take it back.
He’s omnipresent on the court, and that’s what made the Spanish Coach Del Bosque say, “If you watch the whole game, you won’t see Busquets, but watch Busquets, and you will see the whole game.” He starts the pass leading to a goal and defends the shots, which would have been a goal, throughout the match, saving the day for Barca. Without him, Barca would’ve suffered just like the team suffers without Messi. Busquets are the brain and heart of his team, doing all the thinking while playing and pumping the ball to wings and back wherever necessary.
He is one of a kind, a genius considered by many football legends like Johan Cruyff, yet he is not considered a defensive maestro by many football watchers around the globe. His pass accuracy is always more than 80, and he makes the most number of tackles for his team in almost all games, especially for Barcelona.
He’ll turn 31 this year and is about to end his international prime career. Spain and Barcelona will surely miss their engine when Busi retires because finding a suitable replacement will be arduous for both, and his retirement will be a great loss for the football world.
As mentioned in the beginning, there are heroes in football. The heroes who put the crowds in stands by dribbling past the entire opposition. Heroes who stupefy the entire stadium with a kick of the ball or with an excellent save. But Busi, obviously, is not such a hero.
He’s the kind of hero who would make the miracles possible and disguise himself in the celebration of the team as any other ordinary player. He’s the kind of hero the crowd would never pay much attention to. The unsung hero who connects and completes the team.
Images credit: Sergio’s Twitter account
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