There is one player who has divided Milan fans more than most in recent memory. At the age of only 23 years old, his career has transcended to the heights of scoring records and the depths of the injury list. So I suppose it is appropriate that fans’ loyalties would follow. Of course, I speak of the one and only Alexandre Pato. But this post is not for the haters. You know, the fans who blame him for being injured, or discuss his relationship with Barbara Berlusconi with base terminology and juvenile comments. Let’s just put it this way: if you are less mature than my children, please just stop reading here. This post is for people who have a reading level above the 3rd grade level, who have some form of aptitude in the art of logic, and can differentiate between opinion and fact. Haters Need Not Apply.
This is how I will remember Pato at Milan... all 67 goals worth of this |
Myth: Pato’s injuries are all his fault
Pato’s
injuries have mainly been muscular lesions in his thighs as well as injuries to
his ankles. I have heard of self-mutilation, and I know people who seem to be
clumsy and have a lot of accidents, but this concept that Pato has purposely
given himself muscle tears is quite far-fetched. Particularly since we’ve
witnessed so many of them live on TV. In fact, many doctors have attributed the
injuries to the rapid development of muscles he underwent in 2009-10. Oh, and
that little game called football. All of his injuries occurred while playing or
training. How that is his fault, I will never understand.
More incentive than distraction |
Myth: Pato’s relationship with Barbara Berlusconi
has affected his performance on the pitch
This
is a strange one, because there has been no indication of this whatsoever in
the realm of reality. Pato’s stats while playing have been amazingly
consistent, even coming back from injuries. The saying “When Pato plays he scores” is perhaps more true than the one about
Pippo being born offside. He has behaved entirely professionally on and off the
pitch regarding his relationship, and his teammates have attested to this in
interviews. She simply has not been a distraction.
Myth: Pato is lazy
This
one is mindboggling. As poachers go, Pato runs more than most. He bulked up and
became better at muscling off those pesky defenders under Allegri’s tenure,
too. Then there are the double training sessions. After much harsh criticism by
Allegri in the media as well as being told he needed to bulk up, Pato would
often come in for double training sessions when no one else was. While injured,
he was incredibly disciplined and hard working at training however he could,
and his teammates have always praised him for being one of the hardest working
players on the team.
If you have to go to these lengths to prove your ignorance, you might be compensating for something |
Myth: Pato is made of glass
Okay,
someone actually went so far as to make a Pato figurine out of glass, just to
prove this myth true. But the fact of the matter is, glass does not have
muscles which tear, so this one is a no brainer. He is also not even fragile
like glass, as his injuries were almost exclusively limited to the repeat
muscular and tendon injuries. No broken bones, no ACL tears, no concussions,
etc. No, Pato has some specific problems that are unique to his body, but he is
certainly not made of glass.
Myth: Pato’s career is over
If
Pato’s career is over, someone should tell Corinthians, as they’re about to
drop €15m on him. No, I would venture to guess that in a healthy environment,
Pato will still have a long and productive career. Sure, he may always have
concerns with those thighs of his and have muscle tears again. But they aren’t
career ending injuries. And anyone with a little faith can see that he is still
valuable.
16 different injuries, 83 games missed since 2010, all diagrammed for you here (via @Milanello) |
Myth: Pato is useless to the club
Useless?
I don’t think so. In fact, this season, despite only starting 4 games and
subbing on 3 times in all competitions, he has two goals and an assist. That’s
with only 5 shots taken. Those are incredible stats, particularly for an
oft-injured striker. And completely out of reach for players like a certain
number 10 that plays every game, shoots wihout abandon, and doesn’t score. I think Corinthians are
wise to think that if they take better care of him, all of those numbers will
rise, most importantly the number of appearances. Certainly, if he were to stay
at the club, he would not be useless. Even Allegri has said as much, and he
typically reserves most of his praise for his favorite players.
Now
then, a comparison I’ve made that really makes the haters angry: Marco van
Basten. He was also oft injured, plagued with ankle injuries from his very
first season at Milan, but when he played, he scored, too. His first season he
only made 11 appearances, then averaged 30 appearances over the next four
seasons. But his sixth season he only made 15 appearances, and his final two
seasons, he stayed on at the club trying to fight back from his injuries, but
made zero appearances for two whole years. So he was older, and the club still
kept faith in him to the tune of two years’ salary without a single appearance.
Hmm. And he came to the club at the age that Pato is now: 23 years old. Milan
believed in van Basten until he finally retired at age 31.
Another oft injured Milan striker who earned the faith of the club |
For
those of you still choking on your food or whatever and marveling that I would
be so bold as to even mention such a legend in the same sentence as Pato,
consider this: When van Basten didn’t get along with Arrigo Sachi, Berlusconi
fired the coach and kept van Basten. That is a precedent that was set that has
not been kept this time around, despite Allegri having problems with so many
other players, too. The results are obvious. That Milan went on to make history (with van Basten as Capocannoniere,) this Milan is more like a crippled homeless child, with Pato not
even being allowed to play when he is
fit. I would not usually advocate choosing a player over a manager, but if ever
there were a situation that it might be appropriate, this would have been it.
And
now you will be saying, “But Pato asked to leave.” Yes, after he was put on the
auction block last January for cash. After fans have mocked and harassed him
for being injured and more. After Allegri has publicly criticized him and his
style of play and asked him to bulk up in the first place, which is when his repeat
injuries really started to happen. After he has been benched or left out of the
lineup countless times due to “injury” when he was actually fit and available
to play. After he has put in double sessions when no one else was, trying to
prove his commitment level and improve his playing style to meet Allegri’s
standards.
The kid even had a good attitude when injured, why kick him to the curb? |
For
me, Pato leaving is one of the biggest mistakes Milan has made in recent years,
and lately, they have made so many to choose from. He is a player who is still
so very young, and has developed and grown at Milan. And yet, in the current
squad, he has more seniority at Milan than most of the other players. Even
injured, he would be the perfect player to transition the younger players. And
when you consider that his resiliency and ability to score after so many long
injuries is still so impressive, I really don’t understand why we are letting
him slip away. When you consider that Milan are selling him outright, and are
only interested in a percentage of his future sale, it’s clear that they care
more about money than the player. Only they are fools, because they are losing
more money by selling him than by keeping him at this point. But they made the
same choice with others, too, so we shouldn’t be surprised.
Haters
are gonna hate, but Milan are absolutely losing on this one. Pato is an
exemplary athlete who has been treated poorly and struggled with injuries. All
the more reason for the Milan family to wrap their proverbial arms around him
and show him the loyalty he deserves for his 67 goals in 5.5 years. He is also
young, and so much more likely to bounce back from these consistent injuries
than other players that we’ve put faith in before. Plus, his scoring prowess is
simply amazing, and his speed, even after so many injuries, is still
breathtaking. A loan to get out of the negative environment would make sense.
But selling him outright is a mistake. I know many have lost faith in him, and
I always enjoy a healthy debate, but let’s not be children about this one.
Haters Need Not Apply.
Thanks to Anthony Banovac for sharing this video
This post inspired the music of Jane
Siberry’s “It Can’t Rain All the Time”
Our next match is
Milan
vs. Siena
Sunday, January 6
• 15:00 CET (9am EDT)