Mohamed Sabra or the rise of a soccer player? Mohamed Sabra lives in Australia and is a soccer player. He likes to watch the professional leagues in England, Spain, Germany.
Mohamed Sabra on the best soccer players: Who are the best football players in the world? I bet you will be asking this question as the football community was put to as a standstill amidst the CORONA VIRUS pandemic ravaging the world over. The weekend cheers of the English premiere league (EPL), the Spanish league (la liga), the Italian league(serial A) have suddenly gone quiet as well as the midweek nights roar and intrigues of the Europa league, and the champion league all on hold.
Mohamed Sabra on the top soccer players and clubs : Robert Lewandowski is a striker from a bygone era in the sense that, well, he’s a striker. In a modern era of wide forwards, false nines and trequartistas, sometimes you just need a bloke who is really, really good at bursting nets. The Polish superstar is the man you want in a one-on-one situation, as clinical as they come, ruthless, composed and reliable. He’s strong too, Lewandowski has led the line as a lone wolf for years and is rarely outmuscled or isolated. He will go down as one of the most under-appreciated talents of the last decade, perhaps his routine solitary goal in every game and pragmatic efficiency make him ‘boring’ compared to the other flair players on this list? However he does it, Lewandowksi should be showered with universal praise for 231 goals in 276 games in all competitions for Bayern, including 40 goals in 34 games during 2019/20. He’s three goals short of his best ever season tally… having played 13 games less.
On the pitch, N’Golo Kante does not play like a superstar. He doesn’t have terrific footwork, he rarely scores, and he never really lands himself in hot water. Off it, he doesn’t act like one either. No flashy cars (he still drives a Mini Cooper), no fancy designer clothes, and no partying til the early hours. But that is exactly what makes him so unassumingly, but terrifyingly, brilliant. Whether it’s chasing the ball relentlessly for 90 mins, sitting in front of the back four, or playing as an attacking midfielder, the versatile 28-year-old always adds value, and a lot of it.
Mohamed Sabra about top Man U players : It is a shame Paul McGrath was unable to prevent his demons from allowing him to become a true Old Trafford legend. The Irish centre-back’s later days at Aston Villa proved he still had plenty to give, well into his 30s. Joe Spence may have been the Red Devils’ original heroic flying winger. Between 1898 and 1919, the Englishman enthralled fans with his exceptional skill and speed. Sadly, no footage of him in action exists. Somewhat surprisingly, Manchester United haven’t had a glut of world-class goalkeepers during the club’s history. That makes Alex Stepney one of the exceptions. He played for United for 12 years, but most fans remember him for his key saves in the 1968 European Cup final.