I don't think levels of play have anything to do with understanding the game.
Mourinho and Wenger hardly kicked a ball in their careers and did alright for themselves.
It's also why we can look at games and have opinions and ideas on tactics or players or the financial state of global football likely without having played at any level.
To say you have to have been at the top of your profession in order to have your knowledge be taken seriously is patently ridiculous.
Some people seem to use the excuse that women's football is not the same level as men's, so how can she be an expert on it?
Adam Virgo is an excellent co-commentator and pundit and often talks about football way above the standard he ever played. Is that the same?
The Albion are pushing women’s football so much at the moment, and apart from a number of ‘look how PC I am’ posters on here, I don’t know anyone who is interested in it. It seems like there’s even more stuff on social media these days then there is about the men’s team. Yesterday I logged on to Instagram to be told ‘Defeat for Albion today’. Their constant marketing clearly isn’t working for me, because I’m ashamed to admit that the first word that came to my head was ‘Good’.
Alex Scott is one of the best pundits around at the moment... puts Souness and the likes of Sutton etc to shame
Reckon Alex Scott has a great future in the media. Like Dan Walker, recently promoted to the Beeb's breakfast programme, she always comes across as relaxed, positive and knowledgeable. Girl done good
Yes. It is pretty much exactly the same. How seriously would you take his analysis of a Champions League match compared to, say, Graeme Souness? .
But that doesn't address why the airwaves are not full of lower league male footballers giving their opinion on matches at the highest level. Credibility is required to back up those opinions and, in football, that comes - with a few, mostly derided, exceptions - from having played or coached the game at the level you're talking about. How else can you give real insight otherwise? That's why pundits are there.
To be clear, I'm not anti women's football at all. I hope it takes off. Different type of game to men's football and watchable in its own right. I'm just against the exaggeration of the standard and over-promotion of its current 'stars'.
I don't think levels of play have anything to do with understanding the game.
Mourinho and Wenger hardly kicked a ball in their careers and did alright for themselves.
It's also why we can look at games and have opinions and ideas on tactics or players or the financial state of global football likely without having played at any level.
To say you have to have been at the top of your profession in order to have your knowledge be taken seriously is patently ridiculous.
But that doesn't address why the airwaves are not full of lower league male footballers giving their opinion on matches at the highest level. Credibility is required to back up those opinions and, in football, that comes - with a few, mostly derided, exceptions - from having played or coached the game at the level you're talking about. How else can you give real insight otherwise? That's why pundits are there.
To be clear, I'm not anti women's football at all. I hope it takes off. Different type of game to men's football and watchable in its own right. I'm just against the exaggeration of the standard and over-promotion of its current 'stars'.
The Football Ramble
Guardian Football Weekly
Totally Football Show.
BT Sports Champions League Goals Show (on TV)
All excellent podcasts (+ 1 TV show), pretty much solely male-based, with people talking eloquently and in-depth about top level football....presented and contributed to by people who never played professionally. That's fine.
A WOMAN who has played for her country over 100 times DARES to speak about BLOKES FOOTER and the level she has played at is highlighted as a reason not to listen to her
What I’m quickly learning is that all the criticisms used against women’s football, are rampant and seemingly acceptable in the men’s game. Take your “exaggeration of the standard and over-promotion of its current 'stars'.” - I could name endless male players way over promoted and exaggerated. Take Wayne Rooney for example. This flat-track bully, summer chubster and all-year boozer was often refered to as world class.
I would
She shouldn't be offering her opinions because she hasn't played at the highest level, that's nothing to do with her gender.I can think of plenty of men who got the pundit gig simply because they were decent footballers but mostly spout unintelligible gibberish; I simply cannot watch self-styled Paul "the Guv'nor" Ince with his "wetbopbippop digchopflipflop innit" drivel or Robbie "Yeeeaaaaaaa hahahaha" Savage.
To suggest she shouldn't be offering opinions on a football game because of her gender is ridiculous and such attitudes belong in the 1950's
If that's the best example to back your argument, totally laughable.
Personally, I don't give a fig about the opinions on the podcasts either. You only have to hear them talk about a club you know well to realise that most of it is based on shallow knowledge at best. Information about foreign leagues from the likes of Sid Lowe, Guillem Balague - sure, that can be interesting in terms of hearing about up and coming players, news from from the clubs etc, but once they stray into tactics I take it all with a pinch of salt.
Fans and journos chewing the fat about football is not the same at all as analysis of a live TV game. Pundits are supposedly chosen - and paid handsomely - for what they can add in terms of expertise and insight. So you're comparing apples with oranges.