Skorenzy
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- May 2, 2011
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It's definite proof to me that football ws not nearly as good in the Puskas years as it is now. He hadn't played football in 2 years but he could walk into the best team in Europe at age 31 despite of that. I also wonder if he'd get the same criticism that Berba got here because he scored bucket loads of goals against relegation fodder. For example, in his first season more than half of his league goals came in 4 matches. Real Madrid's amazing goal tally last season was the norm every season back then for Real and Barca.
People can dig up the very old legends as much as they like but I don't believe for a second that the standard of football was close to what it is today. Those players didn't even have to deal with 10 men behind the ball every match like Messi and co have to deal with week in and week out.
But that is a feat that is unique to the current Barcelona, nobody else in the current era has this same problem...
I don't know where to start with your 1st paragraph though; yes football was generally far more offensively orientated in the 50s and part of the 60s (although catenaccio came to the fore as well for a while), so that makes up for a large chunk of the extreme goalscoring that happened around that era, but even then no contemporaries of Di Stéfano or Puskás came close to replicating their records... For example, the legendary Just Fontaine had as a career record in Ligue 1 "only" a gpg ratio of 0.83, in a weaker league than the Spanish one, compared to a 31-39 year old Puskas' 0.87 in La Liga.
And yes Puskas scored many goals against relegation fodder, what striker doesn't?, you neglected to mention that he scored in countless finals (1952 Olympics, 1954 World Cup, he scored 4 goals in the 1960 EC final, 3 goals in the 1962 EC final against Eusébio's Benfica), he scored 14 goals in Clásico's, he was 4x top scorer of La Liga, 3x top scorer of the European Cup, retrospectively awarded the FIFA Golden Ball for the 1954 World Cup, etc...
Like I said, I don't think the inherent quality of era's is that much different, the main differences are in style/tactics or technology, but the relative difficulty of playing football stays the same; for example, if nowadays a 0.50 gpg rate is considered the average, then Messi and Ronaldo are blowing their contemporaries out of the water by being closer to 0.75 (career-wise); if in the 50s/60s the norm was let's say 0.75 gpg, then Puskás was far above it with a career gpg of around 1.00; relative to their eras they are all dominant. You can not go comparing era's in an absolute way, it has to be relative to the conditions of each era.