Bright Stars Shine in America
14 July 1994
DALLAS, Texas -- Watch them when they score. Watch their faces.
Everyone else stares in wonderment at the sky or into the stands, the better to understand his achievement and remember his glory.
Not these guys. They close their eyes. They need look at nothing, because they have seen it all before.
They require no understanding, as if they have known their task since birth.
They are heroes. This is their time.
Roberto Baggio of Italy. Hristo Stoitchkov of Bulgaria. Romario of Brazil.
Two years' worth of soccer has unveiled three genuine stars.
The World Cup semifinals Wednesday were likely to feature these three men, special in that their level of play has risen along with the stakes.
They are expected to carry not just their teams, but the remaining days of this tournament.
Because of their names, America is still interested. Because of what they can show us, America might still watch.
"The great ones have the ability to lift themselves on the world stage," said Clive Toye, the soccer entrepreneur who brought Pele to America. "The great ones use the World Cup to say, 'Here I am!'"
And here they are -- just what America loves, athletes with the stuff to hit the winning home run in the ninth, or the winning 3-pointer at the buzzer, or the last triple axel on a Saturday night.
World Cup organizers bemoaning the elimination of such glamour teams as Mexico and Argentina have forgotten our passion for glamour players.
We admire not just the athlete who performs under pressure but the one who pines for that pressure, who yells for the ball, who appears from nowhere when his team needs him most. Jordan. Bird. Magic.
These men are those men in other lifetimes.
There is Roberto Baggio, a man no taller than a stalk of wheat, and with the gall to wear a braided ponytail, but a man with a heart as big as Montana and legs like anvils.
What will he do this time?
Will he take a pass and juke past the goalkeeper before making a game-winning shot from a nearly impossible angle, as he did in the quarterfinals against Spain?
When asked to describe that goal in detail, he refused. The great soccer players always do, as if there is nothing they can say that will make anyone understand "I have the determination and conviction to show the world I am a great player," he says.
Then there is Hristo Stoitchkov, unshaven, swaggering, rude, compared by one writer to baseball star Kirk Gibson, and properly so.
What will he do this time?
Will he outrace one defender and run over another en route to scoring a stunning first goal, as he did in the second round against Mexico?
"I am used to games like these," he said calmly after a dramatic, once-in-a-lifetime shootout victory over the Mexicans. "I prepare for matches like these."
Finally there is Romario, known to his parents as Romario de Souza Farias, known to opponents for his speed and timing.
What will he do this time?
Will he take the ball from near midfield, race toward the net around two defenders and score a game-saving goal as he did in a first-round tie against Wednesday's opponent, Sweden?
"This is my cup," Romario says. "I will give my blood for this cup."
All three will. And so they are here, whereas Valderrama, and Klinsmann and Maradona and Bergkamp are gone.
More than anything, the survivors relish the timing. They know the late rounds of the World Cup were written for soloists.
"Nobody has to worry anymore about tactics that will help a team in the standings, because there are no more standings," former Italian star Giorgio Chinaglia said. "Right now, this is all about winning. These guys are freed to do whatever that takes. They know they can become the heroes. And they do."
They also do not concern themselves with pressure. "If anything, the World Cup is a vacation for the great players," said Paul Gardner, noted soccer author. "These are some of the highest-paid athletes in the world who play for European pro teams where every move is scrutinized. They feel more pressure every day in Europe than they do during an entire World Cup."
Each of the three stars began this World Cup slowly.
Baggio did not score until the fourth game. Stoitchkov took five shots in the opener and blew every one. Romario took only four shots in the first two games. He scored twice, but he was barely noticed.
But since the knockout rounds, when the burden of their countries has fallen on their shoulders, they act as if their load has been lightened. In their last two games, those three have scored six goals.
"When everything is on the table, that is when these guys want it the most," Chinaglia said.
Everyone else stares in wonderment at the sky or into the stands, the better to understand his achievement and remember his glory.
Not these guys. They close their eyes. They need look at nothing, because they have seen it all before.
They require no understanding, as if they have known their task since birth.
They are heroes. This is their time.
Roberto Baggio of Italy. Hristo Stoitchkov of Bulgaria. Romario of Brazil.
Two years' worth of soccer has unveiled three genuine stars.
The World Cup semifinals Wednesday were likely to feature these three men, special in that their level of play has risen along with the stakes.
They are expected to carry not just their teams, but the remaining days of this tournament.
Because of their names, America is still interested. Because of what they can show us, America might still watch.
"The great ones have the ability to lift themselves on the world stage," said Clive Toye, the soccer entrepreneur who brought Pele to America. "The great ones use the World Cup to say, 'Here I am!'"
And here they are -- just what America loves, athletes with the stuff to hit the winning home run in the ninth, or the winning 3-pointer at the buzzer, or the last triple axel on a Saturday night.
World Cup organizers bemoaning the elimination of such glamour teams as Mexico and Argentina have forgotten our passion for glamour players.
We admire not just the athlete who performs under pressure but the one who pines for that pressure, who yells for the ball, who appears from nowhere when his team needs him most. Jordan. Bird. Magic.
These men are those men in other lifetimes.
There is Roberto Baggio, a man no taller than a stalk of wheat, and with the gall to wear a braided ponytail, but a man with a heart as big as Montana and legs like anvils.
What will he do this time?
Will he take a pass and juke past the goalkeeper before making a game-winning shot from a nearly impossible angle, as he did in the quarterfinals against Spain?
When asked to describe that goal in detail, he refused. The great soccer players always do, as if there is nothing they can say that will make anyone understand "I have the determination and conviction to show the world I am a great player," he says.
Then there is Hristo Stoitchkov, unshaven, swaggering, rude, compared by one writer to baseball star Kirk Gibson, and properly so.
What will he do this time?
Will he outrace one defender and run over another en route to scoring a stunning first goal, as he did in the second round against Mexico?
"I am used to games like these," he said calmly after a dramatic, once-in-a-lifetime shootout victory over the Mexicans. "I prepare for matches like these."
Finally there is Romario, known to his parents as Romario de Souza Farias, known to opponents for his speed and timing.
What will he do this time?
Will he take the ball from near midfield, race toward the net around two defenders and score a game-saving goal as he did in a first-round tie against Wednesday's opponent, Sweden?
"This is my cup," Romario says. "I will give my blood for this cup."
All three will. And so they are here, whereas Valderrama, and Klinsmann and Maradona and Bergkamp are gone.
More than anything, the survivors relish the timing. They know the late rounds of the World Cup were written for soloists.
"Nobody has to worry anymore about tactics that will help a team in the standings, because there are no more standings," former Italian star Giorgio Chinaglia said. "Right now, this is all about winning. These guys are freed to do whatever that takes. They know they can become the heroes. And they do."
They also do not concern themselves with pressure. "If anything, the World Cup is a vacation for the great players," said Paul Gardner, noted soccer author. "These are some of the highest-paid athletes in the world who play for European pro teams where every move is scrutinized. They feel more pressure every day in Europe than they do during an entire World Cup."
Each of the three stars began this World Cup slowly.
Baggio did not score until the fourth game. Stoitchkov took five shots in the opener and blew every one. Romario took only four shots in the first two games. He scored twice, but he was barely noticed.
But since the knockout rounds, when the burden of their countries has fallen on their shoulders, they act as if their load has been lightened. In their last two games, those three have scored six goals.
"When everything is on the table, that is when these guys want it the most," Chinaglia said.
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