Costel Pantilimon

bornblueegg

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Interesting article

Costel Pantilimon could do with a change of fortune. The man who dislodged Joe Hart as Manchester City's No1 at the end of October was dropped by Manuel Pellegrini after the 6-3 drubbing of Arsenal at the Etihad Stadium a month ago, despite having done little wrong.

The sharp-eyed Pellegrini may have noted a couple of questionable takes of high balls by Pantilimon during a run in the first XI that numbered seven Premier League games and a Champions League outing.

The statistics show that in the league Pantilimon conceded seven goals and kept three clean sheets, while registering a saves-to-shots ratio of 71%. In Hart's nine matches until being dropped he was beaten 11 times, also kept three clean sheets, and returned a saves-to-shots ratio of 62%. Yet as City welcome West Ham United for Wednesday evening's Capital One Cup semi-final first leg, the Romanian's place is again in the balance.

So far, Pellegrini's policy has been to select his second-choice keeper for cup competitions. Pantilimon was in the XI that drew 1-1 at Blackburn Rovers in Saturday's third-round FA Cup tie, so by rights should again be named to face the Hammers. Yet the Chilean refused to confirm if he will be. "Tomorrow we will see the 11 starters," the manager said.

Unlike the outfield player who can move around if displaced from his specialist position, the second-choice No1 is firmly on the outside. The irony here is that Pantilimon did not grow up wanting to be a keeper. As a young boy he dreamed of emulating Romania's greatest footballer, Gheorghe Hagi. Then his own father, Costica, intervened and the desire to be the new "Maradona of the Carpathians" faded.

"I used to play as a striker, I always went forward to score goals. I hated staying in goal," Pantilimon recalled. "I had good technique, that's why my first club signed me. When I was eight or nine, my dad told me it was better for me to become a keeper. He said that I'm tall enough to do well as a goalkeeper. I thought it was a good idea, and I started to like saving shots. I was very courageous – I jumped after every ball, no matter how far it was from reach or how hard the surface was. I had wounds all over my body, but didn't care."

Roberto Mancini, Pellegrini's predecessor, bought Pantilimon for £3m after he impressed for Politehnica Timisoara during City's 3-0 Europa League aggregate win over them in August 2010.

Yet for Jonathan McKain, a former team-mate, the transfer was unexpected as Pantilimon's 6ft 8in frame belied an introverted persona. "Playing in the national team [at that time] will have helped Costel, but it was a bit of surprise because City are such a big club. But congratulations to him because he's a good goalkeeper," the defender says. "The coaches at Politehnica worked on making Pantilimon more of a presence. When I played with him he was only young, 18 or 19. He was very tall, a very quiet guy. He didn't have a big personality. He was a great shot-stopper, good with his feet, agile for a big man. Really a nice guy so I think he needed to have more of that dominating feeling that goalkeepers need.

"The coaches and manager talked to him about dominating his penalty area a bit better. Obviously he's got a lot better because his shot stopping and distribution with his feet was very good, so that was the aspect he's developed in the last few years."

Pantilimon played first for Aerostar Bacau, the hometown club that was the works team of the company that employed his locksmith father. By 16, he was first choice for Bacau, then of the Romanian third division, and departed two years later when Politehnica bought him for €100,000 (£83,700).

Costel Sofronie, Pantilimon's coach at Aerostar, says: "He was very tall and slim, and was nice to everyone else. Costel was a sociable kid, he used to speak a lot because he didn't get the chance to talk too much at home with his parents [Pantilimon's parents are both deaf]. He listened to whatever I had to tell him.

"He started in goal and stayed there. He was the only kid who didn't ask to play as a striker or midfielder in his first day with us. Many of the kids run home right after training. Costel wasn't like that. He asked me to stay and work after everyone was gone. Even in the holidays. That happened for five or six years in a row. He was very stubborn and even meddling, but I now realise it was all worth it.

"His biggest weakness was playing the ball with his foot. I asked him to play hundreds of hours of football-tennis in order to improve his technique."

Sofronie adds: "He trained more than everyone else. We had to feed him supplementary food. He used to eat three-times as much as a normal kid. I helped him with vitamins, clothes and money. Costel was aware of the fact that football was his chance to succeed in life. He never said the training was too hard."

Pantilimon made his debut in Romanian top-flight football for Timisoara in a 1-1 draw with Dinamo on 4 March 2007, a year before his international bow, a 2-1 win over Georgia. But after making 15 appearances for Romania he lost his place after the move to City.

Now, Pantilimon keeps his fingers crossed that he will once again not be the unfortunate fall-guy.


<a class="postlink" href="http://www.theguardian.com/football/2014/jan/07/costel-pantilimon-manchester-city-goalkeeper-joe-hart" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.theguardian.com/football/201 ... r-joe-hart</a>

Around good guy
 
This article has highlighted the greatest downside of becoming a goalkeeper. Either you are first choice and start every game or spend most of your time languishing on the bench. A real pity because there is almost no way to dislodge the first choice goalkeeper unless he makes a hash of things.

Hopefully a club will come in for Pantillimon soon and he can start playing regularly. Meanwhile, we should try sticking him up front if we are ahead by a couple:)
 
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billfromthehill said:
That's life for a keeper
He'd walk into most prem starting elevens.

I like Costel, seems like a nice guy and will support him even after he leaves us but I think he will start for less than 10 of the teams in the PL.
 
mat said:
Got a feeling he'll start tonight.
I hope he does; get that mistake out of his system from the weekend.
 
I hope he starts tonight, but WTF didn't he catch that ball? I suppose that current goalkeeping coaches couldn't catch 'emselves so never pass it on. I remember Bert diving and catching, jumping and catching and just catching and catching!
 
There are too many good replies in to here to quote, but virtually agree with all, and great article. Well written. Was a shame he didn't play in the FA Cup Final, but that was the nature of Mancini.

I'd love to be a fly on the wall and see how Pellegrini conversed with the pair of them over Hart's dropping. Did he tell Hart he'd be back in a month/siz weeks? In which case was it a secret from Pantillimon. Did Pantillimon know? If so, he's covered himself in glory. He did really well deputising, especially if he knew it wouldn't last. He's not in the press engineering a move now either, crying poor me.

I hope we go on to win tonight, and evetually reach Wembley and win where he'll play. The way we are now, it's rare we'll be drafting in players for a month or two to cover injuries the squad being so deep, but Costel might be last of a cult hero for some time.
 

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