Why can't Messi be stopped?
Lionel Messi, who won all the trophies that needed to be won and perhaps made the most difficult things to do seem very easy, left his mark on the last 20 years of our lives. Why is Messi, who fascinates with his goals, his view of the game, his appearance and his intelligence, so perfect and special? Maybe we can talk about the problems Gvardiol faced in their semi-final match in Croatia. In this article, let's tell Gvardiol, who is 15 years younger than Messi and 15 cm taller, the secret of having an explosive pace, feet that can bend at high speed and hips that can rotate against physical vibrations. Koach Robert Moreno, who worked with Messi in Barcelona for three years, said: “He is like the Matrix. Remember the scene where the character moves his body and all the bullets go slow? “For me, this is how Messi plays,” he says and continues: “So it's normal that he can confront Gvardiol and make him feel like he's a little kid playing with an adult. The same thing he did to Jerome Boateng in the Champions League in the past. Because he thinks faster than others. And he can do what he thinks. I haven't become a professional player, but sometimes when you play you think you're going to do something but you can't do what you think. He can do this. “He has the capacity, the coordination, the flexibility to move his body where he wants, when he wants, and that means he can do what we saw against Gvardiol.” Moreno also makes an interesting comparison between Mbappe and Messi, another star of the World Cup. “You can wait for Mbappe and try to stop him. But you don't know what Messi will do. He has so many options to choose from that he does it so quickly that it becomes impossible to stop. He combines all this injection of speed by moving slower than most other players.”