The Irish hero never got to reach the promised land after a falling out with, then manager, Jack Charlton led to the winger being dropped. The Dubliner missed World Cups in Italy and America.
4. George Weah
[credit: gettyimages]The 1995 world player of the year never had a hope of going to a major let alone a world cup. Having said that, the Liberian would still have been terrific to watch on the biggest stage of them all.
3. Eric Cantona
credit: wiki.org
‘The King’ as he was known to the Old Trafford faithful, never really figured for ‘Les Blues’ and possibly the biggest footballing shame of world cup ’98 was that their best striker wasn’t playing.
2. George Best
[credit: sport.com]Maradona good, Pele better, George Best. The Belfast born winger had a chance to go to Spain 1982 but couldn’t get fit in time. A European winner with United in 1968, Best was a massive absence from the World Cup.
1. Ryan Giggs
[credit: guardian.com]The Welsh wizard is the most decorated footballers in the history of the beautiful game. Giggs has won two World and European Cups with United but has never featured at a major of any description. Germany 2006 was as close as he got, when Wales finished third in qualifying.
Keane: On the way out? [credit: 3football.ie]The two have enjoyed remarkably similar careers at club level and broken transfer records on several occasions over the years, but while Keane found stability with Tottenham Hotspur between 2002 and 2008 (where he scored over 100 goals) Bellamy has failed to ever settle, never spending more that four seasons at any one club.
Both are recognised as great leaders and senior statesmen for their national teams, though again Keane is far more prolific than his Welsh counter-part. The Ireland striker has scored 61 goals in 130 senior appearances, compared to Bellamy’s relatively tame tally of 19 goals and 73 caps, though it should be pointed out that injuries have curtailed Bellamy’s influence on the game, the Welshman failing to string more than 14 consecutive games together in his first 12 years as a professional. Keane, by comparison. has managed to avoid any major injuries through-out his career.
This gulf in numbers can be explained by the difference in the pair’s styles of play. Keane is more in the traditional poachers mould, cropping up to finish from a couple of yards and generally staying in-and-around the box, occasionally dropping deep to set up attacks and take the pressure off the midfield. Bellamy, on the other hand, relies on his pace, running at opposing defenders and regularly switching out onto the wing.
Bellamy and Keane have both also enjoyed extended runs as captains of their national teams, Robbie being handed the armband in 2006 while Craig succeeded Ryan Giggs as Wales captain a year later. Bellamy stood down as captain of Wales in January 2011 however, just two months after a divisive ‘club v country’ debate, citing injury troubles.
Indeed, Bellamy’s tendency to get himself in trouble (more than once) has affected his career for both club and country, his fiery disposition causing problems both on and off the field. Sir Bobby Robson, Bellamy’s manager while at Newcastle, once described him as “a great player wrapped round an unusual and volatile character”, and later commented that the Cardiff-born player “could start an argument with himself“. In contrast, Keane very rarely gets booked and is rarely in the news for anything other than his performances.
Bellamy in one of his last appearances for Wales [credit: mirror.co.uk]Bellamy has cited the need for young players to stand up and be counted as one of his reasons for retiring. With a new crop of Irish talent currently emerging and young strikers like Shane Long and Robbie Brady chomping at the bit, will Keane also decide that the time has come for him to step aside?
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