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    New Babel Interview

    Saw this on YNWA. Interesting insight into Babel who seems a bit weird a la Agger.

    Ryan Babel still lives alone in Liverpool - or accompanied only by
    the Lord, as he sees it - but he needs company. "We're still deciding
    whether my mother will join me, or my girlfriend," the footballer
    confides. "In Holland I hadn't moved out of my parents' home yet.
    That's a big step." Can he boil an egg? "No, that doesn't work."

    Though Liverpool paid {GBP}12m for him this summer, the Dutch striker
    still seems something of a nai{"}f. Above that big body is a little
    boyish face, with slight buckteeth and the faintest beard. His hair
    is shaven into a neat square.

    Babel is 20, but you would guess him to be younger. Talking in the
    Dutch national team's beach hotel beside the dunes the other day, he
    offered a refreshingly innocent view of England and its football - a
    game he has all the qualities to conquer.

    Babel was born in Amsterdam, but his accent reveals family origins in
    Surinam, the former Dutch colony on South America's northern tip.
    There are only 70,000 Amsterdam Surinamese, but they produce more
    footballers per capita than possibly any other ethnic group in the
    world. Their stars - Ruud Gullit, Frank Rijkaard, Clarence Seedorf,
    Patrick Kluivert and Edgar Davids - would staff half a world 11, and
    behind them are many other Dutch internationals and hundreds of good
    professionals.

    Babel joined Ajax Amsterdam aged 11. Everyone saw his gifts - the big
    kid who moved like a gymnast and did wonders with the ball - but he
    rarely scored. Nobody could quite work out what he was for. Criticism
    was unceasing. Two Ajax youth coaches told me about a kid by the
    weird name of Babel, who, when the legend Marco van Basten had
    arrived to help coach his team, remained entirely blase{'}. "Aren't
    you pleased Marco has come?" one coach asked him. Babel just shrugged
    beneath his baseball cap. "Mwaaa," he said.

    Nonetheless, by 18 he had become the youngest man to score for
    Holland since the war. Yet when Van Basten, by this time Holland's
    manager, inquired after his career plans, Babel replied: "I'm going
    to go into music, coach." A devoted rapper, he has approximately
    5,000 songs on his iPod.

    In the beach hotel, Babel recalls the chastisements of Ajax's coach
    Henk ten Cate, another Surinamer. If Babel got too intricate trying
    to dribble past a defender, Ten Cate would scream: "Ryan, you're the
    fastest in Holland, dammit! Just kick the ball and run."

    Babel never became a key player for Ajax, but over this summer he
    improved quickly. "Purely because of confidence," he told me. In June
    he led Holland to victory in the European Under-21 Championships,
    during which the Dutch football journal Hard Gras noted this
    vignette: Babel, at a gymnastics training session, standing on a
    balancing bar with a ball on his foot.

    Rafael Benitez, Liverpool's manager, had had Babel watched since the
    boy was 16. This summer Benitez signed him. Entering Liverpool's
    legendary Anfield stadium, Babel was unawed. "At first it did nothing
    to me. It still doesn't." Doesn't he like legendary grounds? "It
    doesn't matter to me. I feel happiest if the stadium looks decent."
    He does admit to touching the legendary "This is Anfield" sign before
    taking the field, but only because his team-mates do.

    His bigger priority in Liverpool was finding a church. "I drove past
    a couple, but in principle you can't understand people in Liverpool.
    It's a very strange dialect."

    Stranger still were British taboids. Benitez, who is "like an uncle",
    instructed him: "If they ask something, they want to hear A, but you
    think B, and you say C."

    In training, Babel noticed that Liverpool's players didn't berate
    each other as was customary at Ajax. If he screamed, "Where's your
    control?" everyone looked at him uncomprehendingly. Another surprise
    was how much Liverpool practised defending. "We are very compact, and
    then we come out with two, three passes, like madmen, and shoot."

    Yet judging by his first, good performances, he has Benitez's licence
    to run with the ball. "Of course. When it comes to attacking in
    matches, he has said almost nothing to me. I have tasks only when we
    defend."

    At Ajax, Babel had learned his trademark but ineffective "hip shot",
    struck from underneath the body with almost no backlift, from Gaston
    Sangoy, an obscure Argentine reserve. At Liverpool, he imitates a
    more celebrated team-mate. "I just use Steven Gerrard as my shooting
    coach. He really can shoot."

    Physically, surely, Babel is already complete? "A big body doesn't
    mean you're strong. I understand from Robin van Persie at Arsenal
    that Julio Baptista isn't strong at all, even though he's a massive
    guy." Is Babel strong? "I feel strong."

    Are Liverpool, top of the league, strong enough to win their first
    title since 1990? "At first, when people said we had to be champions,
    I thought, 'Well, I don't know about that.' But now we're growing."
    Not half as fast as Babel is, though.
    The Crushing Machine MKII

    #2
    Is it me but are we seeing more interviews with our players than ever before? Even Rafa's getting in on the act
    White liquid in a bottle = Milk

    Purslow = C*nt

    Comment


      #3
      with slight buckteeth and the faintest beard. His hair
      is shaven into a neat square.
      Torres Fan Club Member #2, Lucas Leiva Fan Club Member #1

      going limp; HARRRRRRRRRRRR

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Dhavlos View Post
        Is it me but are we seeing more interviews with our players than ever before? Even Rafa's getting in on the act
        Both this and the torres interviews were done with the national teams. Torres also has a blog that he seems to do regular interviews for.

        We're hearing more from Rafa as the press were trying to stir up trouble over Stevie G.
        The Crushing Machine MKII

        Comment


          #5
          If Babel got too intricate trying
          to dribble past a defender, Ten Cate would scream: "Ryan, you're the
          fastest in Holland, dammit! Just kick the ball and run."
          Just believe and you never know what will happen.

          According to Benitez it's important not simply to go out to win but to go out prepared to win, which means players have to put in the same level of work on a daily basis. Anything else is unacceptable.

          Comment


            #6
            Rafa's master tactics...

            Another surprise
            was how much Liverpool practised defending. "We are very compact, and
            then we come out with two, three passes, like madmen, and shoot."
            Just believe and you never know what will happen.

            According to Benitez it's important not simply to go out to win but to go out prepared to win, which means players have to put in the same level of work on a daily basis. Anything else is unacceptable.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by SpeedyG View Post
              Stranger still were British taboids. Benitez, who is "like an uncle",
              instructed him: "If they ask something, they want to hear A, but you
              think B, and you say C."

              Comment


                #8
                V interesting read, thanks for posting

                Interesting that a) rafa doesnt really tell him what to do going forward
                and b) 'like madmen'
                Sack swinging like Dub-D40 on a door hinge

                Comment


                  #9
                  Also the gymnastics stuff! No wonder he looks like twinkle toes
                  Sack swinging like Dub-D40 on a door hinge

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Weird but revealing interview.

                    I can just imagine Carra's reaction to 'where's the control'
                    Quote of the year :

                    "With monkey me, dogface dishwasher bitch and chimp the ****ing champ you. We are turning into a raving party here arent we"

                    Comment


                      #11
                      he sounds like a blert.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        That's an interesting read. It's a reminder of how tricky it must be for players who move to a new country.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Rafael Benitez, Liverpool's manager, had had Babel watched since the
                          boy was 16.
                          This is the kind of thing that impresses me about Benitez.
                          The Crushing Machine MKII

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by wiwma View Post
                            V interesting read, thanks for posting
                            NP, in a lot of these interviews you get any insight into Rafa's mind. I love them for that.
                            The Crushing Machine MKII

                            Comment


                              #15
                              What a weird interview

                              Comment

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