If he carries on like this, I genuinely think he’ll win the PFA POTY.
It already seems like a two horse race between him and De Bruyne. As things stand, it would be genuinely farcical if anyone else got it.
If he carries on like this, I genuinely think he’ll win the PFA POTY.
It already seems like a two horse race between him and De Bruyne. As things stand, it would be genuinely farcical if anyone else got it.
All things being equal, I think David’s age and service for the club (and consequently on these shores) will just swing it for him over KDB, assuming they both keep playing as they are. KDB will peak in around three years. Injuries permitting, he’ll win the award in that period.It already seems like a two horse race between him and De Bruyne. As things stand, it would be genuinely farcical if anyone else got it.
Salah is in with a shout. And he has the advantage of not playing for City
Sadly, it was written in stone, 5000 years BC, that, that honour was to be exclusively reserved for rags or red dippers.It already seems like a two horse race between him and De Bruyne. As things stand, it would be genuinely farcical if anyone else got it.
was Kane, now it's Salah in the anyone but City stakes.
Player of the Season: Salah.
Young Player of the Season: Lingard.
Writers Player of the Season: Pogba, because of what could have been.
Manager of the Season: Dyche.
Bloody pass sideways merchant.
David Silva
Understated and still underrated, Silva remains the one master magician in the Premier League. Philippe Coutinho, Christian Eriksen and Mesut Ozil may stake their claims, but nobody touches Silva’s golden crown.
Using Stan Collymore’s opinion as a barometer of anything is dangerous, but he spent a recent column detailing why Silva should not be remembered as a Premier League all-time great, placing John Terry and Didier Drogba ahead of him, amongst others.
I use the examples of Terry and Drogba for a reason, because Silva is their antithesis. In celebrity (and punditry), it is often those who shout the loudest who get heard and therefore remembered, and we increasingly tend to take memorability as a synonym for excellence.
The same is true for football, with Collymore explaining his preference for Drogba and Terry because ‘they were dominant over several years and demanded your attention’. His reasoning is shared by many others.
It is so easy to overlook Silva, partly because he has been doing the same thing for so long and partly because what he does is so smooth. Football’s version of celebrities demanding attention to be noticed and thus remembered is players with power and pace sticking in the mind, and Silva has neither in abundance. He is, to be frank, not the type of player FIFA enthusiasts want in their team.
Yet bizarrely, it is also Silva’s sheer quality that sees him taken for granted. If we can see the cogs turning in a player, and see the effort put into every ounce of brilliance, it makes them easier to appreciate. Silva makes the difficult look so damn easy that eventually we are persuaded that it must indeed be easy. And so it is overlooked.
What is true is that Silva is in the form of his life at the age of 31. Three players in the Premier League have scored at least five goals and assisted at least five goals this season, and all three play for City; Silva is one. It is no surprise that Guardiola has got the best out of a diminutive Spanish midfielder with a wonderful ethic who thrives when making intricate short passes.
Rather than doubting the greatness of Silva because you don’t notice him, it is precisely that ability to go under the radar that makes him so special. For all the lasting legacy of Vincent Kompany, Pablo Zabaleta, Yaya Toure and Sergio Aguero, it is Silva who the majority of Manchester City supporters will miss most when he has gone.