Messi bags another award thanks to Barça triumphs

Messi bags another award thanks to Barça triumphs

ZURICH - Reuters

Lionel Messi. AP photo

Lionel Messi’s exploits with Barcelona won him the World Player of the Year award for an unprecedented third year in a row on Jan. 9 at the age of 24.

The Argentine swept home with 47.88 percent of the votes in the survey among national team coaches, captains and selected media, receiving the trophy from former Brazil striker Ronaldo, himself a three-time winner of the award, though not successively.

Although FIFA listed only the players’ nationality when they published the full results, it was clearly Messi’s stunning performances for Barcelona which earned him the plaudits.

Messi, followed by Real Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo and Barcelona teammate Xavi in the poll, was last season’s top scorer in the Champions League with 12 goals in Barça’s triumphant campaign and netted 31 times as the team won La Liga.

By contrast, he was roundly criticized after Argentina, hosting the Copa America, went out in the quarterfinals to Uruguay in July.

Meanwhile, Uruguay’s exploits in winning the Copa America failed to earn the team a nomination in the coach and players’ shortlists, or even a mention in the team of the year.

Uruguay coach Oscar Washington Tabarez was fifth in the coach of the year poll, won by Barcelona’s Pep Guardiola.

Manchester United’s Alex Ferguson was second and Real Madrid’s Jose Mourinho third.

Former France captain Michel Platini said afterwards Messi would still have to shine for Argentina before he could be considered among the greats.

“Look at Diego Maradona, everyone remembers what he did in 1986, nobody remembers so much what he did with Napoli, with Barcelona,” Platini, president of UEFA, told reporters.

“It’s still the World Cup which still sticks in people’s minds.

“Messi will always be great with or without the World Cup ... but the World Cup does something special.”

Before the ceremony, Messi, who has played in two World Cups and seen Argentine lose in the quarterfinals to Germany on both occasions, admitted Argentina was not at their best.

“The reality is that we are very far from being the best national team in the world,” he told a news conference.

“There are many in front of us but we have the ambition and the desire. There is still a lot of time to go before (the next World Cup in) 2014 and we have to improve a lot but we will get there.”

Outstanding service
Brazil and Santos forward Neymar won the award for the goal of the year, a stunning effort in a Brazilian championship match against Flamengo, while Ferguson took the FIFA presidential award for outstanding service to the sport.

The ceremony, co-presented by former Netherlands striker Ruud Gullit, also featured Japan’s Homare Sawa being voted women’s player of the year, ending a run of five successive wins for Brazil’s Martha.
Norio Sasaki of Japan won the women’s football Coach of the Year award after his side won the World Cup.

Beforehand, Martha had made her familiar appeal for more support for Brazilian women’s football. “I do what I can, but it has to come from everyone, and from the federation,” she said. “There are lots of people who could do something to improve women’s football in our country.”

Japan goes sweet on heroine Sawa

TOKYO – Reuters

Japan captain Homare Sawa’s FIFA women’s Player of the Year award triggered a fresh wave of delight in local newspapers and on television after a big night for the team in Zurich.

Sawa, who led Japan’s women to an astonishing World Cup triumph in Germany last year, posed for photos with triple men’s winner Lionel Messi while dressed in a traditional kimono.

“My first thought was that the trophy felt so heavy,” Sawa told Japan’s NHK television on Tuesday. “It’s humbling to write a new page in Japanese football history.

“It still hasn’t sunk in,” added the star, whose brilliance in Germany last year halted a run of five successive wins for Martha. “Just for making it among the nominees, I wanted to say ‘Well done!’ to myself. When I went up to get the award my heart was pounding and I was sweating. It was a surprise to win.”

Named after a frilly pink flower, Japan’s “Nadeshiko” embodied the spirit of a nation in its battle to recover from the disaster.