Here's Part II of my breakdown on the Elite Four going head to head this weekend at the
2020 Silph Arena World Championships. (Part I can be found
here, if you missed it.) Let's take a look at Teams
Speediest and
Meronp!
SPEEDIESTCHIEF2
SKARMORY Just when Skarmory seemed to be on the outs with many, getting knocked down a couple pegs, here comes the big buff to
Brave Bird and it's a whole new ballgame for the metal raptor. Shrugging off all Grasses, Psychics, and Fighters on opposing teams except sometimes Machamp, as well having the ability to pick off Mantine, Munchlax, and Alolan Muk, Skarmory is well positioned to be a thorn in the side of Speediest's opponents here.
Strengths: - Directly counters the majority of two opposing teams
- Brave Bird boost is a nice renaissance for Skarmory that is still being felt out by opponents
- That sweet Steel/Flying combination resists Fairy, Flying, Ground, Normal, Psychic, Steel, Dragon, Grass (x2), Bug (x2), AND Poison (x2)
Weaknesses: - Deathly afraid of Electric and Fire damage, and one of those is a BIG problem here (hint: ⚡)
- Each opponent has at least two reliable counters to Skarmory, somewhat offsetting its projected success
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis will surely turn to Zapdos and/or G-Fisk, both unwelcome sights for Skarmory
- Ventuski is weakest to Skarmory, with Machamp and Umbreon able to fend it off, but neither very convincingly... Skarmory is almost a must-play here
- Team Meronp is pretty well set with Melmetal, Stunfisk, AND Rainy Castform being among the very best Skarmory counters
SWAMPERT Probably don't need any introductions here: Swampert is a known menace in all three GBL Leagues and, along with its fellow Mud Boys, is so good it's been banned from a few Silph Arena Cups for being too oppressive. (And got its cousin Whiscash banned in this format too.) It hits the hardest of the Mud Boys--and has arguably the best moves with
Hydro Cannon and
Earthquake for on-type beatings or
Sludge Wave for above average coverage--but is also comparatively quite flimsy. With Earthquake you get Sableye while Sludge Wave wins Wigglytuff... and Wiggly is on this same team, so Quake is the best bet and what we can expect Speediest is likely running. Either way, if it's Ground, Poison, oe Steel (or Sable or Munchlax or Shadow Hypno or others in the right scenarios), Swampert can bury it.
Strengths: - Able to punish anything that doesn't resist Water and/or Ground, even in losses
- Famed weakness to only Grass (x2) while resisting Electric, Steel, Rock, Poison, and Fire damage
Weaknesses: - Helpless against Grass, needing a massive energy advantage to escape alive... and both drafted Grasses are on opposing teams
- Can beat everything on Speediest's team... so everything that can most easily best Swampert is on opposing teams
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis threatens Swampert with Cresselia, Dewgong, and can even win with smart Zapdos play
- Team Ventuski is best wielding Venusaur (basically forcing Speediest to run Skarmory or Forretress to counter), but can also win with Mantine, Umbreon, and even Machamp
- Team Meronp has the brutally oppresive Tropius, again basically forcing Skarmory or Forretress as Swampert bodyguards, but other than perhaps Medicham, nothing else wants to really face Swampert
OBSTAGOON Goonie has made a name for itself primarily in Ultra League, but make no mistake: this is a very smart pick in Great League as well, and hats off to Speediest for what may seem like a reach, but is actually a good bodyguard for his Swampert, Skarmory, and Alolan Raichu especially (and is itself backed up pretty well by Wigglytuff). Obstagoon handles the Darks that threaten AhChu and Skarmory, Dewgong that's a pain to Skarm and Swampert, and even the Flyers (Zapdos, Tropius--thanks to the threat of
Gunk Shot, primarily--and potentially even Mantine) that harrass Swampert, as well as doubling up with other teammates against Hypno, Munchlax, G-Fisk, A-Wak, and even Cresselia. Again, not playing favorites, but I really like this pick for this team.
Strengths: - Piles damage on very quickly with moves that threaten a wide swath of the field, and the lurking threat of Gunk Shot keeps even savvy opponents on edge
- Swampert and especially Wigglytuff are among Goonie's harder fights, but happen to be teammates here!
- A shrewd pick on this team that backs up Swampert, Skarmory, and Alolan Raichu well
- Handy resistances to Dark, Psychic (x2), and Ghost (x3)
Weaknesses: - Simply cannot tangle with any other Fighter, with a double weakness to Fighting damage (cannot even beat Superpower Melmetal as a result)
- Suffers a perhaps unexpected loss to Cresselia, and a known lpss to Venusaur, two matchups Speediesy must be wary of
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis threatens best with Toxicroak, but as noted, Psycho Cut Cresselia handles Goonie surprisingly well... but the rest of the team is at a disadvantage, with even Zapdos unable to guarantee a clean win
- Team Ventuski has much to fear with Umbreon, Hypno, and Munchlax all deathly afraid of Goonie... but Venusaur and especially Machamp get the job done with relative ease
- Team Meronp fends Goonie off best with Medicham and even Melmetal (as long as Menonp doesn't panic), and Stunfisk and Castform essentially draw even with Obstagoon too; Tropius does fine as long as it avoids a fatal Gunk Shot
ALOLAN RAICHU I don't want to make assumptions about moves, because AhChu is a very flexible little mon that can be tricked out a couple different ways, but I think it's relatively safe to assume it won't include
Grass Knot, since the only Mud Boy here is a teammate.
Wild Charge is probably a safe assumption, and then likely
Thunder Punch on top of that. Why? Because
Psychic (the move) helps the most with the mirror (which won't happen in this format!) and possibly with Sableye, but all-Electric is plenty threatening there too. And double Electric is AhChu's best bet against Machamp (where sheer speed trumps the super effectiveness of Psychic), Tropius, and Cresselia, some of the more troublesome threats for this team overall. In short, though: AhChu bests all opposing Waters, Steels (with the notable except of G-Fisk, of course), Fighters, Psychics (as long as Cress isn't packing Confusion), and of course Flyers (Razor Leaf Trop is scary, but I'm betting Trop is being run with Air Slash, which is a nice win) and pairs well with several of its teammates.
Strengths: - Other than Venusaur, many of AhChu's teammates can scare off all of AhChu's hard counters... it could have a lot of room to roam
- Represents the hardest counter in the field of 24 against Waters and even the Fighters that are key parts of opposing teams
- Built-in resistances to Fighting, Flying, Psychic, Steel, and Electric are all very relevant in this format
Weaknesses: - Vulnerabilities to Ghost, Bug, Ground, and especially Dark unfortunately all just as relevant as the resistances
- Rather frail body means things that can stand up to its punishment--and/or deal super effective damage--stifle AhChu pretty quickly
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis counters AhChu hard with G-Fisk and Sableye, Cresselia can go either way, but rest of team very vulnerable
- Mixed bag for Team Ventuski, with Umbreon and Venusaur as solid counters, but again, rest of team doesn't really want AhChu making an appearance
- Team Meronp is particularly vulnerable, with Stunfisk as the only safe counter... not even Alolan Muk can outrace AhChu without energy or shield advantage
WIGGLYTUFF They banned Clefable, but forgot to ban the best Charmer in Great League, the ruiner of Jungle Cups, the herald of the Wiggocalypse itself: Wigglytuff. Blessed with the highest HP of anything here, handy resistances, and lots of juicy targets on opposing teams (and three of its better counters on THIS team), Wigglytuff could run a little rampant here... but MUST avoid dangerous Steels, Grasses, and Poisons on opposing teams. As hard a counter as it can be, it can also be HARD countered if locked in itself.
Strengths: - Leaves a WIDE wake, taking down nearly everything not Grass, Poison, or Steel, and shields cannot save the opposition
- Three of its few hard counters--Skarmory, Forretress, and Swampert--are all teammates
- Handy Fairy resistance to Dark bolstered by unique-to-Wiggly resistance to Ghost as well (Sableye, Munchlax, Hypno Shadow Ball)
Weaknesses: - Getting locked in against a Steel, Poison, or Grass = sad, slow, farmable death
- Despite wide field of wins, each opponent has at least one very solid answer
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis' hard counter is G-Fisk, but Dewgong, Cresselia can win too, and even Toxicroak with a good Sludge Bomb
- Team Ventuski's Venusaur is an incredibly hard counter, but rest of team is worryingly vulnerable
- Team Meronp's best answer is Melmetal, A-Muk typically wins, and rest of team besides Medicham put up a lot of fight
FORRETRESS Truly unique among these 24 picks; Bug is an underappreciated typing with its hate on Dark, Psychic, and Grass (all key pieces on their respective teams). Also blessed with the wonderful defensive typing of Steel, giving it a long list of resistances and a sole weakness to a typing that's nowhere in sight here (except MAYBE on Hypno). Can bait its way to a lot of wins and has a wide and varied movepool that can keep even the veteran players here guessing, but is at worst a good specialist against opposing Darks, Psychics, and Grasses.
Strengths: - One of the very hardest counters here to the plentiful Psychics and Grasses, and handles enemy Darks capably as well
- Unpredictable movepool makes Forret a lethal shield baiter in the right hands that can flip the Fisks, Dewgong, Castform, and even Melmetal and Medicham to wins
- Only vulnerability is to Fire, seen ONLY as an optional move on Hypno; resists Psychic, Steel, Ice, Normal, Fairy, Bug, Dragon, Grass (x2), Poison (x2)
Weaknesses: - Pretty helpless against Fighters, Grounds, and Waters slotted in on opposing teams
- May have a hard time finding actual play over other teammates
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis can shut the door pretty well with G-Fisk and Toxicroak, though a good Earthquake from Forret flips that table completely over
- Team Ventuski has Machamp and… uh… well, here's the good case for Fire Punch on Hypno!
- Team Meronp does best with Stunfisk and Castform (and decent with Medicham), though cannot get baited or even those can turn to disaster
MERONP32
TROPIUS To at least some degree, this comes down to which fast move is settled on.
Razor Leaf makes Galarian Stunfisk, Alolan Raichu, Cresselia and Waters in general easier, whereas
Air Slash is the way to best guarantee wins over Venusaur and Toxicroak, and turns anti-Fighting matchups into more certain wins. Either way, Tropius is a very unwelcome sight for the many Waters, Fighters, and even Darks here, and Trop just outbulks things like Wigglytuff, Munchlax, Umbreon, and (usually) Cresselia. It is a flying tank that just hangs around and brutalizes most things that don’t resist it and/or have a very direct answer (usually Poison or Flying).
Strengths: - Capably balances Grass role (anti-WateGround) and Flying role (anti-Grass/Fighting) in one flexible package
- Meronp wisely drafted several things with a direct answer to Trop by taking Melmetal, A-Muk, and Medicham with its worrying Ice Punch, setting Trop up for success
Weaknesses: - Has worrying weaknesses to Flying, Ice, Poison, and Rock found on opposing teams, and struggles versus Steels as well
- High bulk a blessing, but also a curse if in a negative matchup… can be pretty heavily farmed
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis has no hard counters, but Zapdos and Dewgong do well, Cresselia can win out, and Toxicroak is actually a big problem with Sludge Bomb threats against Razor Leaf Trop
- Team Ventuski is in for a tough fight here, especially if Trop is packing Air Slash (taking away any advantage Venusaur would have with Sludge Bomb)... Mantine is actually the best hope, and that’s not a great place to be with steady Grass damage incoming
- Team Speediest is best equipped against Tropius with excellent counters Forretress and Skarmory, and everything but Swampert has at least a puncher’s chance
MEDICHAM No longer the all-powerful beast it was throughout Season 1 of Silph Arena play, but Medicham still has some very good things going for it. It does all things you’d ask of your Fighter (pounding Darks, Steels, Ices, and Normals into dust), as well as threatening Flyers, Grounds, and Grasses with
Ice Punch and nearly everything with
Psychic, assuming that’s the direction Meronp has decided to go with Cham.
Strengths: - Effective Fighter that can beat things like Zapdos, Machamp, Swampert, and Venusaur thanks to effective charge moves and/or unique resistances
- A Fighter that resists Fighting damage, always a nice perk
- While moveset is probably known, you can never be too sure it’s NOT trying to slam the door with Dynamic Punch or nab a shield with Power-Up Punch
Weaknesses: - Still very afraid of incoming Flying, Ghost, or Charm damage, at least one which is present on all opposing teams
- Still loses to Toxicroak and all opposing Psychics and Flyers out there, which make up a large percentage of the field and are all on opposing teams aside from Tropius
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis is well set up with Sableye, Toxicroak, Cresselia, and Zapdos all ready to rally
- Team Ventuski is good with Mantine, okay with Hypno, but will gnaw off his nails with anything else
- Team Speediest is in good shape with Skarmory, Wigglytuff, and Alolan Raichu, though Medicham is a bully against the rest
MELMETAL Bastiodon banned… no problem. Melmetal is here to ruin the day of those pesky Flyers, and Psychics and Grasses and Ice and Fairy, and most other Steels while it’s at it. Melmetal is arguably the top anti-Flyer in this format, brutalizing anything that takes to the skies along with that smattering of other goodness I just listed. And so spammy is it with
Superpower that it turns the tables on Munchlax and even Obstagoon to beat them both. Melmetal goes “brrrrrrrr!”
Strengths: - Flyers fly home to their mamas, crying about the boogyman
- Cresselia and Wigglytuff and Venusaur and Dewgong and Forretress are right behind them
- Relative frailty masked by incredibly spammy charge moves that force even hard counters to have to shield or risk giving the match away
- Huge list of resistances includes Flying, Fairy, Grass, Psychic, Ice, Steel, Rock, Normal, Bug, and Poison (x2)
Weaknesses: -Can hammer Fighters and Grounds with Superpower, but really doesn’t want to have to take any of them on, taking rapid super effective damage
- Handles Zapdos but goes down to Alolan Raichu and even straight Thunder Punch spam from Shadow Hypno, a particularly disappointing loss
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis pretty well set with G-Fisk, Toxicroak, and Sableye all as solid counters
- Team Ventuski will want to lean on Machamp, but Umbreon and Hypno get the job done, or even Venusaur with very slight energy lead
- Team Speediest good with Swampert and alright with Alolan Raichu, but Obstagoon is NOT usually a winning proposition, and rest of team would be blown out
STUNFISK As if Melmetal wasn’t enough to cover Tropius and Medicham against Flyers, here comes original recipe Stunfisk too. But that’s where their overlap ends, as Fisky goes from there to also handle opposing Electrics and Sableye that can cause Mel issues, as well as all Fighters on opposing teams (Machamp, Toxicroak, and Obstagoon). It may seem a little silly to run two heavy anti-air Pokémon on the same line of three, but then again, considering the large number of potent Flyers and Waters that Mel and Fisky can both handle, and how Fisky fills some of Mel’s bigger blind spots, don’t be completely shocked if at some point, the Asia Pacific champion does just that!
Strengths: - Hates on Flyers, Waters, Fighters, and Electrics, a unique spread
- Super spammy moves can overwhelm in neutral matchups… a Stunfisk with any kind of shield or energy advantage can be extremely hard to stop
- All resistances (Flying, Steel, Rock, Posion, and 3x against Electric) relevant here
Weaknesses: - Is the Ground type that loses to other Grounds and the Electric type that can lose to Waters, as well as Grass and Ice
- Excellent at busting down shields but lacks closing power, relying on multiple consecutive charge moves to get the job done on its own
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis can roll in with Dewgong and G-Stunfisk, but both can flip to devastating, blowout losses with just one misclick or improper shielding decision
- Crunch time for Team Ventuski… Mantine: nope, Machamp: no, Munchlax: nuh-uh; Venusaur, you’re our only hope (and Um-bre-on Kenobi, kinda)
- Team Speediest needs Swampert here… Stunfisk is more than capable of beating everything else head to head
ALOLAN MUK A-Muk looks like a bit of a specialist here, capably handling Psychics and Grasses and emerging victorious over Mantine, Sableye, Zapdos, and Wigglytuff. All good wins, no doubt, but that’s about it in the head to heads. Decent backup for Stunfisk or Castform against Grass, or as an anti-Psychic assassin, but not sure that’s going to be needed, honestly. At least with it being on the same team as Tropius, that’s one less thing Trop has to care about.
Strengths: - Pretty mean to those Psychics and Grasses, at least
- Single weakness to Ground and high bulk makes it a pretty safe swap option, not getting blown out except by heavy Ground (or sometimes Fighting) damage
Weaknesses: - Has a pretty niche role and doesn’t do much outside of it
- Doesn’t suffer blowout losses, but wins are not often blowouts either… rarely will be able to farm energy to throw at following ‘mons, at least not without risk of wins tipping to losses
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis wants to keep Cresselia and Sableye away, but even they have wincons
- Team Ventuski must protect Hypno and Venusaur, but otherwise not too scary
- Team Speediest really just needs to watch it with Wigglytuff, but his entire team can beat A-Muk one on one in a pinch
RAINY CASTFORM Some are probably wondering “why not Lanturn?” and may be surprised to hear that Rainy Castform is likely a better choice on this particular team. Why? They share a lot of wins, but what Lanturn (with Spark) can uniquely defeat between the two of them is Zapdos and Wigglytuff, with very close potential wins over Machamp and Obstagoon. Thing is… those are all rather capably handled by Meronp’s team already. What are NOT handled so well by anything not rhyming with “Cropius” are Swampert, Toxicroak, and Galarian Stunfisk, all of which Rainy Castform can beat and Lanturn usually cannot. Rainy C may often play the role of Lanturn’s understudy, but there are formats where it’s just the better bet. This looks like one them.
Strengths: - Fully capable of beating every Water, Ground, Flyer, and Steel on opposing teams with no muss, no fuss
- Takes out Toxicroak and Sableye with relative ease too
- Weather Ball is very oppressive against anything that doesn’t resist it, and Castform is bulky enough to fire off several
Weaknesses: - Very dead against any opposing Grass or Electric, weak to both with no effective answers
- Cannot overcome bulkier opponents, to include Cresselia, Hypno, Umbreon, Wigglytuff
Key Matchups: - Team Mephis could be in a bit of trouble, with Cresselia outbulking Rainy C and Zapdos usually having the upper hand, but rest of team vulnerable
- Team Ventuski in good shape, with only Mantine a true write-off against Castform
- Team Speediest will want Alolan Raichu in there, as basically everything else but Wigglytuff is a very dicey proposition
And that's it! Like I said, I left the discussions on the draft and all to other analysts, but here's my piece of the picture. At this point, the Elite Four going at it this weekend likely don't need my help, but if this is able to help you guys as well, all the better. Good luck!
Be safe out there, Pokéfriends, and catch you next time! Until then, you can find me on
Twitter for near-daily PvP analysis nuggets, or
Patreon. Cheers!
submitted by The year is 2017. Top scientists have finally cracked the ability to stop ageing, and the world rejoices. The discovery prompts an immediate FIFA investigation into exactly what this means for world football from now on. How will the careers come and go when every team can just preserve their best stars? How will the next Messi break through? The Qatar FA suggest restricting it to only Qatari players, a motion that's only narrowly defeated. In unrelated news, a bunch of mysterious Qatari bank accounts are seized the day before the vote. Eventually, a compromise is decided upon between. Only those players who’ve proven themselves to be in it for the sport, and their team, can use it. The players who have stuck with their team through thick and thin, who’ve turned down bigger money offers to stay where they are. One-Club Men. However, should their loyalty ever waiver, and they choose to leave, those players will lose their right to an everlasting career, and have to face the advance years once again. Who will remain loyal the longest? Who will ride out the lowest of lows to stay at their lifelong club?
Unfortunately for those of you hoping I’ve found a secret miracle, that’s just the best nonsense I could come up with to frame this scenario. In less dramatic terms, using FM 2017, I'm going to select 50 one-club men from the top 5 leagues and de-age them to around 22. Every 5 years I'll de-age them down to 22 again, unless they abandon their loyalty. I'll also be adjusting everyone's contract to expire in 2020 to make it equal, and undoing international retirements where necessary. Nothing overly complicated, but I’m expecting this one to run a long long time if I’m going to have everyone leave, so I’m good with it not being too complicated.
Reddit side note! It's me again. Some may remember my experiments from ages ago. I'm back and writing again, but as you can probably tell, with a new name and website. If you want to see this post with much better formatting, all the images, and everyone's profile at the end, go here to read it in full: link You can stay here if you prefer though! So who actually qualifies for this? I've restricted it to players from the Top 5 leagues of England, Italy, Spain, Germany and France, and only included those that have been at their clubs the longest. As well as the genuine candidates like Messi and Totti, loaned out players like Lahm qualify, as do those like Iniesta who haven't left in FM 2017, and even those that have left in-game, but are known for their careers at one club. Buffon is a good example of the latter. I've included a link to an image with all 5 players here:
link With all this loyalty around, I wanted to mix it up a bit by adding in one final player. Someone completely opposite to everyone picked so far, the anti-one-club man, the journeyman of all journeymen. And after some research, I came up with the perfect candidate. Sebastián Abreu, a man who in his career has played at an impressive 29 different teams in 11 different countries, setting a Guinness world record along the way. Abreu will receive the same treatment as the loyal players, except it won’t stop when he moves team. I
want him to move around more, spread his wings, see how many teams he can collect over an illustrious career.
That’s enough explaining for now. Should be pretty clear what’s going on, just a bunch of footballers never getting old. Time to get things rolling and see who eliminates themselves. Who can stick it out the longest, who will become THE one-club man?
2016/17
With our younger one club men unleashed on the world, many of them attract instant attention from new clubs. For a while it stays quiet and looks like the first transfer window may pass without incident. Only a few loans crop up... until
Javi López because the first man to fall. With Espanyol not meeting his standards, he makes a £2.4M trip down the coast to join Valencia. He proves to be the only summer casualty by the time the window slams shut.
January brings the winter window, and the Premier League clubs start to sniff around, ready to throw bags of cash at unsuspecting players. It doesn’t take long before the next two players are reeled in by money and lose their eternal youth. First
Marcel Schmelzer in a £20.5M move to Liverpool, followed by
Bruno joining moneybags Man City. By the end of the window,
Nacho also heads to the north of England, joining rivals Man United. I’m not sure if any of them have realised how damn cold it is up there. That window swiftly ends, settling the bottom 4 finishers in the competition.
Returning to the world of actual football results briefly, and there aren’t many shocks to be seen. Man City finish 6th, Everton get relegated and Borussia Mönchengladbach reach the Champions League Semi-Finals. A few players see their team relegated, as Werder Bremen, Caen and Freiburg go down, so there could be a few casualties once that disappointment has set in. But all in all, the footballing world has coped just fine.
Loyal Players Remaining: 46
Abreu Club Count: 23 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: None
2017/18
With everyone’s transfer budgets warmed up, it doesn’t take long for the action to get back underway. The previous season has barely finished before
Chris Solly trades in his morals for a Premier League move to Norwich.
Sergio Álvarez joins him in England, making the slightly odd move to Bournemouth before a big £52M move sees
Koke trade loyalty for a big move to Man City. That’s the most surprising move so far, as I expected many of the players at top clubs to stick around. The final two transfers of the window take us to sunny Spain, where both
Xabi Prieto and
Mario become massive glory hunters, trading in their life long clubs for Atletico Madrid and Barcelona respectively. Javi López, having left Espanyol to join Valencia last year, immediately realises his mistake and rejoins Espanyol. It’s too little too late though, his status as a one-club man is already ruined.
The winter window comes and goes without even a hint of action, so things may already be starting to quieten down. Over in Brazil, Sebastián Abreu has his contract with Bangu come to an end after a good season but fails to attract any new suitors before the European season ends.
Around the world, things keep ticking on relatively normally. Watford take a surprising FA Cup win despite finishing rock bottom of the league, meaning they’ll have European nights alongside their Championship campaign. The loyalty of Seube, Höfler and Bargfrede is rewarded, as Caen, Bremen and Freiburg are immediately promoted back to the top tier. Las Palmas head in the opposite direction, which causes David García to hand in an immediate transfer request. The Spaniard could very well be the next player to go.
Loyal Players Remaining: 41
Abreu Club Count: 23 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Watford (FA Cup)
2018/19
My suggestion that things may be quietening down is immediately disproved by the biggest move so far. Bayern Munich legend
Philipp Lahm makes a huge £82M transfer to Manchester City, throwing away all he’d built up at Bayern so far. But it doesn't end there, as 2 more huge transfers are finalised right after. First
Claudio Marchisio drops Juventus, clearly not happy with them losing the title to AC Milan, and moves to Real Madrid. Then
Daniele De Rossi trades in Roma for Barcelona. Whilst both have moved in real life, I didn’t expect either to fall so early in this, being icons at such huge clubs. A little later,
David García makes his predicted move away from relegated Las Palmas, opting to stay in Spain with Osasuna. And then on the final day of the window, one last move.
David Zurutuza decides the Premier League is more to his taste and joins Noble at West Ham. Javi López continues his tour of Spain, realising rejoining Espanyol doesn’t earn him back everlasting youth, and so heads to Sevilla instead. Currently, he’s moved around more than the specific journeyman player I chose to actually move around. Talking of, Abreu does find a new contract, heading back to Uruguay to join River Plate Montevideo.
The winter transfer window is again mostly quiet, with very little potential action. There are still some transfers though, as
Robin Knoche becomes the 15th person out, heading to Borussia Dortmund. Then a legend moves on, as
Iker Casillas decides that barely getting any game time behind Keylor Navas isn’t worth it, and so joins Monaco for a mere £11M. I guess you can't escape the real world after all.
The summer of 2018 means a World Cup, a tournament which regularly creates bizarre results in Football Manager. This year is no exception, as the likes of Italy, Belgium and Argentina fall in the group stages, before South Korea beat both Germany and France in the knockouts. The final between Brazil and Croatia proves 100% less heartbreaking than the real 2018 final for the Croatians, as they become champions of the world. In domestic football, Man United take all the English trophies on offer in a Quadruple, whilst Freiburg find themselves relegated yet again, as do Montpellier.
Loyal Players Remaining: 34
Abreu Club Count: 24 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Croatia (World Cup)
2019/20
Another season, another transfer window, another set of swirling rumours around our one-club men. Borussia Dortmund manage to steal away another of our competitors from a German rival, taking
Timo Horn early in the window. Having been relegated yet again last season,
Nicolas Höfler decides enough is enough and leaves Freiburg for Hertha Berlin. Over in Italy, and Chievo Legend
Sergio Pellissier finally caves, leaving his relegation-threatened lifelong team for European battlers Fiorentina. But that's all the entertainment I can offer, no big signings this time around I’m afraid. Let's go see what Javi López is up to instead. His merry-go-round of clubs continues yet again, moving over to Deportivo de La Coruña in the latest of his ever-decreasing value of transfers.
January retains its typical bleak and dull atmosphere, with no sign of action whatsoever until the final day of the window.
Hugo Mallo decides to try and add to his trophy cabinet and heads to Man United. Not the worst career move to throw away eternal life for considering their dominance right now. And with his departure, the total number of players that we've lost hits a nice round 20.
In the Premier League, Man United claim their 4th title in a row, exerting total dominance over everyone. But where one dominance rises, another falls, with Dortmund claiming the Bundesliga to knock Bayern off their perch. The shock of the season comes in the Coupe de France, where 3rd tier LB Châteauroux knock out Lyon, Auxerre and PSG before falling to Caen in the semi-finals. With Monaco having fallen to 4th tier SA Spinalien, Caen beat an easier opposition of RC Lens in the final, leading to Seube lifting the teams first-ever Coupe de France. Not bad for a player I expected to never lift a trophy. On a less joyous note, Höfler having left relegated Freiburg, sees his new team Hertha relegated immediately too. It seems there is no escaping the 2. Bundesliga!
On the record front, Gianluigi Buffon sets a huge benchmark, breaking the 200 cap mark for Italy. With no-one else close to him, he’ll stay the leader for a long time. Messi also breaks a boundary, climbing through 400 league goals during his career at Barcelona. Like Buffon, he’s way clear of any competitor, and unless a miracle happens that sees him abandon Barcelona, I can’t see anyone catching him soon.
Loyal Players Remaining: 30
Abreu Club Count: 24 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Caen (Coupe de France)
2020/21
2020 arrives, and with it, two important points arrive too. Firstly, everyone gets de-aged for the first time in this experiment. The 20 that have left get to watch from a distance thinking about what could have been. Second, the initial contracts are set to expire, so anyone that hasn’t re-signed will out the door. Which is exactly what happens to
Víctor Valdés. Having barely appeared for Barcelona since his return, he leaves the club on a free and heads to the southern French coast to join Marseille. A day later and someone else leaves France, as
Romain Danzé who decides one de-ageing is enough and moves to Schalke.
Tony Hibbert also struggled for games at Everton despite his new youthful look, and so he walks out the door. He opts for Aston Villa, who to my great surprise have sunk to a mid-table League 1 team. Feeling left out, Spain joins in, with
Oier Sanjurjo departing Osasuna and moving to Villarreal. The window is then capped by a bizarre final free transfer. Despite appearing regularly,
Xavi isn’t offered a new contract by Barcelona. Man City can’t quite believe their luck and snap up the Spanish wizard a few days before the window shuts.
Winter brings with it just one transfer in its usual action-heavy way.
Roberto Torres leaves Osasuna, making a £35.5M switch to Atletico. I’m not sure whether Atletico thought they were getting a different de-aged Torres because that can only be described as an overpayment. Either way, that means we've now lost over half the competitors.
Euro 2020 passes, and Croatia prove their World Cup victory was no fluke, becoming both champions of the World, and champions of Europe. On the Continental front, things have been fairly predictable so far, at least until this years Europa League. Hoffenheim escape a tough group and go all the way to win the entire thing. Not bad for a team that barely qualified in the first place. Oh, and Messi wins a little thing called the Ballon d’Or for the 10th time. I think he’s only just getting started.
Loyal Players Remaining: 24
Abreu Club Count: 24 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Hoffenheim (Europa League)
2021/22
The 21/22 season begins with two transfers on the first day.
Loïc Perrin makes his way to the Premier League to join Leicester. But that's a minor splash compared to the other move, as after 768 appearances and 302 goals,
Francesco Totti leaves Roma. It seems wrong to see it, but he’ll now be wearing a Man United kit. Dortmund continue their run of stealing loyalty, this time bringing
Tony Jantschke into the fold. Another contract is run to the end, forcing
Álex Bergantiños out of Deportivo without much choice, before being picked up by Cagliari.
Mikel González opts to end his time at Real Sociedad, joining Pellissier over at Fiorentina. And as August comes to a close, it looks like Totti may be the only big departure. That is until
Gianluigi Buffon decides to call time on his Juventus career. It’s an odd move, with the legend going sorta sideways from a regular starting Juventus spot to Bayern Munich. But there’s no going back now, as his 636 league appearance career with the Italians comes to a close. Two legends down in one window.
No season is complete without a single winter signing to warrant an entire separate paragraph, and this season is no different.
Sergi Roberto moves away from Barcelona, in a £24M move to French giants PSG. A good way to guarantee yourself plenty of titles I guess. Abreu also makes a winter move, adding Guarani in the Brasilian second tier to his collection.
Roberto’s decision proves to be a good one, as PSG go on to claim their 10th one in a row. Not many surprises elsewhere, although Real Oviedo get close to pulling off a shock in the Copa del Rey. The second tier team beat Osasuna, Barcelona and Sevilla on the way to the final, but ultimately Real Madrid prove a step too far. Elsewhere everything is won by a team you’d probably expect. Exciting stuff.
Loyal Players Remaining: 17
Abreu Club Count: 25 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: None
2022/23
With the pool of players rapidly decreasing, very few of the crew are even wanted by other clubs anymore. Perhaps deterred by their steadfast loyalty? A few moves do still happen though, so we’re not dead yet. Firstly
Anthony Lopes gets fed up of PSG dominating his league and moves to AC Milan for a better shot at a trophy. It’s not long before that story is forgotten, as the biggest transfer fee in the competition so far is dropped.
Andrés Iniesta is stolen away from Barcelona, in a huge £86M move to Man United. The midfield maestro fell 2 appearances short of 600 league games for Barcelona, but with his new £300K per-week contract it’s not hard to guess why. That proves to be all the action for the summer window, with no-one willing to top that huge move.
After half a season of hearing their noisy neighbours gloating about their star signing, Man City snap. And if there’s one thing City are good at, it’s splashing the cash. In probably the easiest negotiation over fee Barcelona has ever had,
Sergio Busquets makes a £95M move to the sky blues. Yeh, that’ll show United. Once again no-one wants to get in the middle of the awkward Manchester squabble, and the winter transfer closes with a whimper.
The second World Cup of this experiment comes and goes. This time all the giants make it safely through the Group Stages, but it’s Africa that really excels. Morocco make the knockouts, Egypt battle through to the Quarter Finals, but Nigeria come out best. They beat South Korea and Argentina before falling valiantly to France in the Semi-Finals. A 1-0 victory of Italy does see them finish in an impressive 3rd place, becoming the first African team to finish in the top 3 of the World Cup. France win the title on penalties after a deceivingly action-filled 0-0 draw with Spain. The domestic scene follows that with a similar lack of real shocks. In the Carabao Cup, Bournemouth beat Arsenal, Chelsea and Man United on the way to lifting the trophy. But it’s the lesser Cup, so outside of Bournemouth no-one really cares. PSG finally have their grip on the Ligue 1 broken, as Casillas leads Monaco to a fantastic title. Otherwise, all the league titles and cups fall to teams you’d expect them too. Another thrilling year.
Loyal Players Remaining: 14
Abreu Club Count: 25 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Bournemouth (Carabao Cup)
2023/24
Literally nothing happens.
Thomas Kessler decides that no team can ignore his existence for 20 seasons in a row and get away with it, leaving Köln to join Trabzonspor. So as I said, literally nothing happens. Even Javi López moving to yet another club would be more interesting than that.
The same applies to the footballing season. Asides from Casillas captaining Monaco to a Champions League title, or Atletico winning the title again, exactly 10 years after their last win, everything is frustratingly normal. And even those two events are hardly shocks.
Before I start to lose hope, there are a few interesting moves over the last few years from the losing group that are worth highlighting. First season mover Bruno didn’t make the impact he hoped and found himself moving to the lovely Stoke. Robin Knoche barely received any playtime at Dortmund and found himself cast out to Dinamo Zagreb. Even in League 1, Tony Hibbert could barely get any game time at Villa and so moved on the Scunthorpe in League 2. But the winner of the oddest move has to be Zurutuza, who somehow manage to pull off a move to Liverpool after West Ham found themselves relegated, only make a few disappointing performances, before being released on a free to join Al-Arabi in Qatar. Not quite the career he was anticipating when joining the Premier League I bet.
Loyal Players Remaining: 13
Abreu Club Count: 25 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: None
2024/25
The summer transfer window arrives for another season, and with it finally comes a huge deal! Javi López has found yet another club! Hooray! As for actual competitors, absolutely no movement whatsoever. Even from Abreu, who’s been at Guarani for 2.5 years now. Manceau, Lewington and Seube complain to their managers about playing time or relegation, but none of them actually make a move anywhere. So our final 13 will add another 5 years onto their career length.
There are some fun statistics from our 51 worth mentioning at this point. Buffon leads the way with both total league appearances (935) and international caps (259). His caps are at a point where they’re too high for the game to display, as the value is stored as an unsigned 8-bit integer, and so has rolled over to just show 3. Most appearances for a single club goes to Dean Lewington however, who thanks to being a regular sits at 857 league appearances for the MK Dons (or 889 if you include Wimbledon). In the goals department, the winner is obvious. With almost 500 league goals, 100 international goals and 14 Ballon d’Or awards, Messi sits on top of everyone. On the international scene, he’s run close by Müller and the fast-approaching Kane, but for league goals, it’s not even close.
2024 brings with it a Euro tournament, which doesn’t provide much in the way of surprises, but brings with it some exciting high scoring matches. All ending in a 4-3 victory for a Thomas Müller led Germany over neighbours Netherlands. Which I’m sure went down very well. The domestic scene decides to spring a few shocks though. In Serie A, Roma claim an impressive title thanks to main striker Iheanacho, their first since 2001. The German and French cups provide surprise winners, in the form of Hertha Berlin and Dijon. Both cap an impressive run by beating their respective league winners, Bayern and Monaco. Even the continental tournaments turn up too. First Monaco cement their place as a top power in football by winning their second Champions League in a row. That coming a week after the best win there could possibly be. Tottenham win the Europa League! Screw the other stuff, that last part is all I need!
Loyal Players Remaining: 13
Abreu Club Count: 25 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Dijon (Coupe de France), Hertha Berlin (DFB Pokal)
At this point though it’s fair to say that the competition results are more interesting than the movements of the players. Which is the perfect signal that things need to speed up a little bit. So from now on, updates will be every 5 years, which lines up perfectly with player age resets, letting us see who has made it to the next checkpoint.
2025-2030
Another round of de-ageing hits, and you’d think that would incite some interest in our final 13. Instead, it’s a ghost town. We do have an immediate dropout though, as
Nicolas Seube finally gets fed up with his lack of playtime at Caen and heads for Panionios in Greece. A year later the situation is repeated. I’m not entirely sure what his unhappiness was about, but
Iker Muniain decides he’s had enough of Athletic Club and moves to Hamburger SV. At least he left on exactly 100 goals for Athletic though, a nice round number. With 11 left, a standoff to reach the top 10 ensues. For 3 years no-one budges in their show of loyalty, until in 2029…
Dean Lewington leaves for Derby County on a free. It’s a huge move, with Lewington becoming the first man to break through 1000 league appearances for a single club before leaving. But he’s moved on now, and it won’t be long before that record is broken. That move means we’re left with our final 10 contestants. Terry, Iraola, Messi, Susaeta, Noble, Jourdren, Müller, Kane, Manceau and Bargfrede have secured a top 10 spot, and now all that’s left to do is fight it out for number 1.
Over in Brazil, our anti-one-club man continues his journey, although it remains in Brazil for the moment. Only 2 clubs are added to his count, with a long stay at Atletico Goianiense followed by a £2M move to top tier Coritiba. I’m kind of hoping he starts to make enough waves in the Brazilian league to move to Europe and add some new countries to his history.
Those that fell before the first de-ageing are retiring, finishing off their magnificent, or in some cases very un-magnificent, careers (as losers). Javi López finishes his fine anti-loyalty tour around Spain with 7 transfers to his name. Schmelzer, Nacho, Solly, Álvarez, Koke, Mario, Prieto, Marchisio, De Rossi, David García, Zurutuza, Knoche, Höfler, Pellissier, Mallo, Horn and Hibbert end their careers. Many, such as Nacho, Horn and De Rossi stay just as committed to their new clubs as they did their old, finishing out their careers after just a single transfer. Of the pensioners, Sergio Pellissier manages to rack up the most career league appearances and goals, at 894 and 246, although that’s largely thanks to a huge head start. De Rossi dominates on the international scene, earning a whopping 197 caps over his 30-year career. Naturally, all those records will be blown out the water once the next group start retiring, but it’s nice to have some benchmarks.
Around the world, plenty has gone on worth hearing about. The Netherlands claim their first-ever World Cup win, beating Brazil in the final, whilst in the Euro’s Germany win their second tournament in a row. The Gold Cup throws up a few interesting results too, as first, the Mexico B team win it, with their A team tied up in the Confederations Cup. Then 4 years later Canada take the title, only the second time in their history. Over in Italy, Lazio find themselves relegated as the league starts to shake itself up a bit. But other than that, domestic football remains relatively unspectacular. Oh except… TOTTENHAM WINNING THE LEAGUE. Didn’t even have to reset it and we won it before Arsenal did. North London is very much Lilywhite now, suck it Gooners!
Loyal Players Remaining: 10
Abreu Club Count: 27 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Tottenham (Premier League)
2030-2035
Another 5 years pass and to start with it looks like the top 10 are going to hold firm. Eventually though, the temptation of money proves too much for one man. That man is
Geoffrey Jourdren who trades in his starting slot at Montpellier for a cosy backup contract at PSG. Then comes… dead silence. Not even a rumour, or an unhappy player. No-one even hints at leaving for the next 4 years, which means we end the period with nine players on the books. The real waiting game has begun. Even our journeyman Abreu is moving in a very slow way, as a five year Coritiba stint finishes with a free transfer to Red Bull Brasil. I think my hopes for a European move have died.
At least there are a lot of retirements to run through. Bruno, Lahm, Casillas, Valdés, Danzé, Oier, Xavi, Torres, Perrin, Jantschke, Bergantiños, González, Roberto, Iniesta and Busquets hang up their playing boots. That does leave us without some noted legends, with Lahm, Casillas, Iniesta and Busquets reaching 200 caps for their country. You’d think Spain would have won more with that golden generation. Casillas and Xavi also both hit 1000 league appearances thanks to a strong head start before the experiment. But it’s Andrés Iniesta who is the most loyal of the bunch, racking up nearly 600 appearances for his original club before departing.
Five years leaves plenty of time for interesting results once again. England take a World Cup win, which is always a sign of the apocalypse, only made more bizarre by Scotland making the semi-finals in the same competition. Portugal take the other title in that period, whilst the Euros also see a surprise winner in Switzerland. France provides the biggest shock at club level, as Lille come from nowhere to win Ligue 1, and then immediately revert back to mid-table once again. Otherwise, the time belongs to Manchester City. The oil bar… sky blues take 4 out of 5 titles in both the Premier League and Champions League, with all that cash flinging finally paying off.
Loyal Players Remaining: 9
Abreu Club Count: 28 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: England (World Cup), Lille (Ligue 1)
2035-40
With just nine players left, once again we get a transfer fairly early on in the period. Early as in the first transfer window, which makes me wonder why they waited so long. Anyway,
Mark Noble has had his patience tested by West Ham’s yoyoing between the Premier League and Championship a bit too much and finally caves. He makes a £20M move to Burnley, who… are doing the exact same thing. Not sure that was the brightest idea. Like the previous 5 years though, one transfer is all we get. None of the others move, despite some pretty heavy unhappiness from Bargfrede and Manceau. Abreu keeps up his trail, running out his contract with Red Bull Brasil and opting for Chapecoense to reach 29 clubs in his career.
With very few moving recently, that also means less and less are retiring, as just 7 ex-competitors leave the game. Totti, Buffon, Lopes, Kessler, Seube, Muniain and Lewington call time on their football life. The fact they all stuck with it for so long means there’s so impressive stats between them. Totti racked up 1154 league appearances, with 768 at Roma. Dean Lewington, after leaving MK Dons with 1003 appearances finished with a total of 1287. Italian legend Gianluigi Buffon finished with a whopping 1307 league appearances, but perhaps more impressively, 334 international caps. But the single most surprising statistic goes to Thomas Kessler. Despite barely playing in Germany he manages to notch a grand total of 7 goals after his move to Turkey. Maybe if he’d been a striker he’d have actually played at Koln. Oh and Seube ends his career Greek. Because why not.
As per every time, a quick look around the world’s results is needed. Spain win back the World Cup titles, whilst Italy take a Euro win. Argentina, Mexico and Australia claim all their continents international trophies in the window, so no massive surprises there. The domestic world isn’t exactly littered with shocks either. Brescia win a Coppa Italia, and Nîmes Olympique grab 4 top 5 finishes in a row in France, but there’s not really much to shout about. I think it’s best to just get on with the next de-ageing.
Loyal Players Remaining: 8
Abreu Club Count: 29 clubs in 10 countries
Odd Winners: Brescia (Coppa Italia)
2040-45
Down to 8 now, so it’s getting tougher. And a lot slower, so slow in fact that not a single transfer in our group happens in five years. For a moment I was excited to see Manceau at Recreativo de Huelva, but that was just a loan. So I was back to being crushed. On the plus side, Abreu makes some huge steps. He adds not just 1, but 2 new countries to his history! The first is Portugal, in a huge step up to join Braga. As usual, it’s just until his contract ends, before he moves on to Frankfurt in the Bundesliga. He’s hardly setting Europe alight but I don’t care, he’s actually moving!
There’s only one retiree to talk about too, as pretty much everyone has already gone. Geoffrey Jourdren finishes up with 925 total league appearances. It probably could have been a bit more, if he’d not spent 10 years of his career being a backup at PSG and Bayern. On a far more interesting note, Terry breaks through 1500 career league appearances. Kane also hits 256 international goals, which results in the number resetting to 0 just like caps. So the game has him on 96 caps with 11 goals, when the actual numbers are a stunning 352 caps with 267 goals.
Having seen my disappointment last time around, the world decides to liven things up. Denmark become both Champions of the World and Champions of Europe in 2042 and 2040, although they lose the European title to Germany 4 years later. At the continental level, the Champions League stays on track, but the Europa League brings some bizarre winners into the mix. Nîmes Olympique, Real Sociedad, Leicester and Bristol City all win a trophy. It seems Mark Noble finally made a right move transferring to Bristol City, as the club is now a strong top 6 Premier League side. Manceau wins a Coupe de France at Angers, but it’s still Nîmes making waves, forming a big three with PSG and Monaco. It may not be long before either Nîmes or Bristol City win their league, which is not something I expected to be saying.
Loyal Players Remaining: 8
Abreu Club Count: 31 clubs in 12 countries
Odd Winners: Nîmes Olympique/Bristol City (Europa League), Angers (Coupe de France)
2045-50
2045 kicks off and once again Manceau deceives me. This time it’s a loan spell in Denmark with Brøndby that had me thinking he was gone. Well you know what they say, fool me once shame on you, fool me twice… I’m probably gonna fall for it. It looks like there’s going to be no moves whatsoever once again, until June 2047 arrives and I notice a contract is set to expire. Imagine my shock when
Lionel Messi is not offered a contract by Barcelona and is let go. It’s made doubly worse by the fact that of all teams to pick him up, it's Atletico Madrid. Apparently, 37 Ballon d’Or awards aren’t good enough for Barcelona anymore. I don’t even care that nothing else happens. That’s enough to stun me.
Over in the retirement home, Mark Noble moves into a room. After an up and down career, the Englishman did manage some silverware with Bristol City and ended his career with 1317 league appearances. He even earned not just 1, but 90 England caps across his 44-year career.
Around the world, interesting results are still cropping up. England grab their third World Cup win beating Colombia, whilst Honduras win their first-ever Gold Cup. Much to my bitter disappointment, Arsenal win 4 of the 5 Champions Leagues on offer, as well as 3 Premier League titles. Chelsea have a period of bottom 10 finishes which deeply upsets Terry, whilst over in France, Chamois Niortais begin to try and join the top 3. Don’t worry I’ve never heard of them either.
Loyal Players Remaining: 7
Abreu Club Count: 32 clubs in 12 countries
Odd Winners: Honduras (Gold Cup)
2050-55
With the world still reeling at the fact the Messi has moved from Barcelona, everyone kinda forgets to make any moves. In fact, Messi is the first person to move yet again, leaving Atletico in a very cheap 34.5M move to Man City. Which is more in line with where I originally expected him to go. Abreu finishes one contract, at Hapoel Be’er Sheva, and moves onto the next, but it’s with Monterrey so doesn’t count. Sebastian, it has to be new clubs. John Terry is starting to get frustrated with a Chelsea team that has really fallen from grace. The Londoners barely survive relegation in 2052/53, so Terry may be the next to go. Or maybe I know nothing and it’s completely random.
No-one retires this year, so let’s take a brief look at some statistics of our remaining 7 + Messi. All our players have now reached 1000 appearances, with Bargfrede in last at 1173. Messi has crossed 1000 league goals, now a full 300 clear of the chasing pack of Abreu and Kane. On the international level, Thomas Müller becomes the first player to need a rollover of caps twice, moving on to a massive 524 international caps. But it’s Kane who still leads the international goal stat, nearly breaking 350, a full 50 ahead of the German.
Müller does, however, grab a World Cup win for Germany so I’m sure he won’t be too upset. At least until they’re deposed by Holland 4 years later. On the continental level, Bristol City win another Europa League title beating previous champions Espanyol. Middlesbrough also nearly earn a trophy, having joined Bristol as a top 6 team. But the winner of the biggest shock, although I did say this might happen, goes to Chamois Niortais, who topple the dominance of PSG and Monaco to capture a miraculous Ligue 1 title in the last season of the period.
Loyal Players Remaining: 7
Abreu Club Count: 32 clubs in 12 countries
Odd Winners: Chamois Niortais (Ligue 1), Bristol City/Espanyol (Europa League)
2055-60
The summer window of 2055 opens and as I warned may happen, there’s an almost immediate transfer. Fed up with Chelsea’s mediocre finishes,
John Terry decides to move on. Unfortunately for Chelsea fans, Arsenal is his next club, which I’m sure will cause a few shudders. A year later and another move comes around, once again due to unhappiness over the club’s performance. Surprisingly it's
Thomas Müller,who's annoyed by the fact that Bayern haven’t won a Bundesliga title since 2048, and so runs down his contract. Leverkusen almost earn his signature, but eventually its the glory of PSG that proves too much to resist. But we’re not done there! Another player runs down their contract, opting to move to Vitoria de Setubal in Portugal.
Vincent Manceau finally makes a real move rather than constantly faking me out. So with another 3 players down, we’re left with our final 4. The race for the top 3 is hotting up now!
We do have a retirement this time thanks to the transfer window livening up. The world's best-ever player, Lionel Messi, retires from football. He ends up on a total of 1858 league appearances, scoring a massive 1068 goals in this time. 1430 appearances and 895 goals of those belonging to his 45-year career at Barcelona. On the international scene, he earned an impressive 505 caps and 276 goals. But it’s the awards where he shines. 279 individual awards, 82 team titles, 22 league titles, 6 Champions League titles, 45 Ballon d’Or awards. What makes it even crazier is 41 of those Ballon d’Or awards were in a row, as he earned every single one from 2015 to 2056. I don’t think I’ll see another player like that crop up in any save, truly the world’s best player.
Looking out on the world, I can say that it’s a Chamois Niortais player that breaks Messi’s streak, as the French team claim another two Ligue 1 titles. It’s hard to say they’re a “surprise winner” at this point. Bristol City finally make the full step up to join the big guns, winning 3 Carabao Cups, 1 FA Cup, 2 Premier League titles and even a Champions League trophy. If any Bristol City fans want this save to give themselves hope over the future, I can send it over. Internationally it's the era of Portugal, as they claim both the Euro and World Cup trophies.
Loyal Players Remaining: 4
Abreu Club Count: 32 clubs in 12 countries
Odd Winners: Bristol City (Premier League/Champions League), Lyon (Relegation)
With so few players left, now is probably a good time to speed it up once again. The final four will be tough to budge, so how about we move to 10-year intervals to try and cut down on dead years. And I'll be moving to the comments, because I've hit reddits character limit.
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