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Barcelona, Tom Brady and the Future of the Muslims

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The players fell to their knees. The fans jeered. The press and everyone else laughed. The mighty Barcelona Football club had just been totally and utterly humiliated by Paris St Germain 4-0 in the first leg of their Champions League knockout match.

The defeat in the first leg (or play-off for our North American readers) was all the more excruciating because Barcelona were used to dishing out beatings like this on other teams, never actually getting a taste of their own medicine. This was a club that had a proud history of winning championships and winning them in style. This was a team of World Cup winners like Iniesta and superstars like Messi and Neymar Jr. All these players were obviously past their prime.

They were supposed to hide their faces out of humiliation. They were supposed to quietly slink away into the trashcan of history. They were supposed to give up.

It seems someone forgot to send the Barcelona team the memo.

Instead, Barcelona trained hard and talked about their “strategy” for defeating Paris St. Germain in the next match. They would score 5 goals to win the next match and go into the next round.

Crazy talk.

Journalists rolled their eyes. In the history of the Champions league, no one had ever reversed a 4-0 deficit. For our North American readers, it would be like being down 25 points midway through the 3rd quarter of the Super Bowl and talking about how you were going to win.

Like I said – crazy talk.

But Barcelona were not being crazy. They were being deadly serious. They were planning, preparing and training not just to make the final score a little more honourable in defeat. A 4-2 or 5-3 loss would not be so bad, but they had no intention of being heroic failures. They were in it to win it.

The match started and it started happening. Goal! Barcelona was ahead. A few minutes later another goal scored by Barcelona. People were getting interested. Then Barcelona scored a 3rd goal. 4-3. Wow, they were serious. People couldn’t believe it. They started calling their friends. “Are you watching this???” Social media started lighting up like firecrackers on Chinese New Years. #Barca started trending worldwide.

Then it all fell apart.

Just as hope was rising up and people were starting to think that the impossible was possible, Paris St Germain scored an away goal. The dream was over. It was time to wake up. Everyone slumped like Floyd Mayweather just punched them in the gut.

Everyone except the 11 men on the pitch wearing the Barcelona shirt.

They picked themselves up and just kept going as if nothing happened. In fact, Barcelona had planned for this. When Luis Enrique (their coach) said that their deceptively simple strategy for the match was to score 5 goals, an incredulous reporter asked what Barcelona would do if Paris scored too.

His reply? We’ll score 6 goals.

And with 10 minutes to go, that is exactly what they did. Barcelona had gone from 4-0 down to 5-3 down to somehow score 3 goals in 10 minutes including the winner in the very last few seconds. They had achieved the impossible.

It is easy to see what this has to do with Tom Brady and his New England Patriots. Their heroics in the last Super Bowl were just awe-inspiring even to people like me who don’t get American football.

But what has this got to do with the future of the Muslims?

Today the Muslim world finds itself in the same situation as Barcelona found itself in when they were 4-0 down or the Patriots were 24 points down. We find ourselves the owners of a proud legacy and past glories, but these count for little in the present. We find ourselves with a hugely talented team, but unable to make them work together in any coherent manner. We find ourselves not being given a snowballs chance in hell by any pundit or commentator. We find ourselves totally, utterly and humiliatingly defeated.

Worst of all, we find ourselves without hope.

And like Barcelona or the Patriots, we find ourselves with a choice.

Are we going to give up, walk away, complain and make excuses? Or are we going to pick ourselves up, work harder than we have ever done before and come together as a team?

Are we going to educate ourselves so that we can lead a new golden age of discovery and invention? Are we going to reform our systems so that we can be models of good governance rather than bywords for corruption and nepotism? Are we going to remove the cancers of racism, sexism, hyper-nationalism and sectarianism so that we can go back to being a net positive on the world? Are we going to prevent oppression and violence against others and ourselves without resorting to either?

Most importantly, are we going to believe in our hearts that we will rise again from our current depths while remaining true to our faith?

This isn’t just about having hope or being positive. It is about changing the narrative from fear, persecution and hopelessness to one of success.

In essence, do we believe that we can win 5-4?

The fate of the world depends on what we do next.

Game on.

Dr. Muhammad Wajid Akhter - National Council Member, Muslim Council of Britain | mcb.org.uk - Lead, National Muslim Covid Response Group | covid@mcb.org.uk - Council Member, British Islamic Medical Association | britishima.org - Founder, Charity Week for Orphans and children in need | charityweek.com - Co-Founder, Islamic History Channel | islamichistorychannel.org - International Director, FIMA Lifesavers

4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. MK

    April 4, 2017 at 6:38 AM

    Alas! The muslim team is lost to personal pride, uncompromising ego and petty worldly desires. Where is the one ummah feelings?

  2. Hassan

    April 5, 2017 at 10:09 AM

    First of all, no one in right mind can think that Messi (29 years) and Neymar (25) years past their prime. Iniesta may have reached end of his career.

    Secondly Luis Enrique (the coach) is not very creative. Ever since Dani Alves went to Juventus, the right side has weakened a lot. Messi/Alves had very good combination on right. Sergi Roberto is make-shift right back, but that is not his ideal location. Also with injury of Aleix Vidal, its even weaker.

    Moreover, he bought a dumb donkey called Andre Gomes, who needs taxi to move around pitch. The only position he has relatively done well is holding/defensive midfielder.

    On the day Barcelona lost, Enrique was playing, Sergi Roberto on Right Back, Gomes the donkey on right midfield, and Messi right upfront. As you can guess there was not a single attack from right side, only Neymar was doing something on left. Also lately Messi is moving inwards as traditional number 10, and he needs good right midfielder to complement that. When Denis Suarez played right midfield, team was awesome, but Luis Enrique has to justify his waste of money on Gomes, so he keeps giving him chances.

    Since that loss, he became somewhat courageous, and changed formation from 4-3-3, to 3-4-3 and it has worked better. Now coming to Barcelona vs PSG second leg, it was just chaotic. I am happy that Barcelona won, but that has to be worst match I have seen in my life in terms of tactics. Barcleona played very unlike itself, with more direct play, and PSG had no strategy whatsoever. All they had to do was to play their natural game and don’t give possession unnecessary. Not sure why coach did not play Di Maria from start as well.

    • Aisha

      April 5, 2017 at 3:56 PM

      Assalamalaikum..
      Classic example of a missed point.

      • Hassan

        April 5, 2017 at 4:33 PM

        Classic example of not knowing audience.

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