
As
John Terry's Chelsea career comes to an end, where does the ex-England
captain rank?
In assessing Chelsea's title win it's customary to rank it against the
club's previous successes. But as Gary Neville pointed out on
Monday
Night Football, there's one big problem for anyone hoping to acclaim
Antonio Conte's team as the Blues' best ever.
It's the Chelsea side of 2004/05.
The 95 points picked up that season, Chelsea's first title in 50 years, is
still a Premier League record. Just as remarkably, they conceded only 15
goals and kept 25 clean sheets. The tallies of 15 away wins and only nine
goals conceded on their travels also remain records.
"For me, hands down this team is by far the best Chelsea that there has
probably ever been," Neville told Sky Sports. "It was probably one of the
hardest teams I've ever played against. Fifteen goals conceded? That is an
incredible statistic."
o mean were Chelsea that season that their top league scorer was Frank
Lampard with 13 goals - a record low for a Premier League title-winning
team. The success was built on Jose Mourinho's brilliant defence and the
newly-arrived coach was clearly the catalyst for it all.
However, the team's key player was their captain.
John Terry won the PFA Player of the Year award for his performances that
season and was also named as the UEFA Club Defender of the Year. It should
not be surprising given that he was the outstanding player in arguably the
strongest Premier League team ever assembled.
And yet, his reputation outside of Stamford Bridge is such that this status
is not willingly conferred. In a sense, that's understandable. Personal
revelations and allegations have tarnished Terry's image.
A 2012 FA charge, fine and ban for racially abusing an opponent is trickier
to brush aside, though he was found not guilty of racist abuse at
Westminster Magistrates' Court.
These many flaws cannot - and should not - be extinguished from the record.
They must be considered in any evaluation of the man. But the troubling
incidents also appear to have had an impact on the on-field assessments of
Terry the player too.
The glee with which rival supporters greeted his penalty slip in the 2008
Champions League final was to be expected. Likewise, the decision to dress
up in his kit to be a part of the celebrations in Munich four years on
invited ridicule.
But the focus on Terry's lack of pace and the belief that Rio Ferdinand's
more statuesque style made him superior did not always stand up to scrutiny.
Terry was formidable in the air but underrated on the deck too; a
right-footed defender with a left foot of real quality.
Tellingly, Ledley King recalled him being a "midfield general" when the pair
played together at youth level in the capital. As Sky Sports pundit Jamie
Redknapp pointed out, Terry's physical qualities were coupled with tactical
and technical excellence too.
"We always think about the times he puts his body on the line and cuts out
crosses at the near post," said Redknapp. "But when I watch him play I
always marvel at how technically good he is with both feet. He's never
really had credit for how good he is on the ball.
"How many times do you see him hit cross-field passes with his left or right
foot without a problem? He's very comfortable on the ball. As well as his
technique, he's got a football brain that surpasses pretty much every
defender we've seen in the Premier League."
Terry's passing stats even in the years after his pomp tell some of the
story. Despite an impressive range, he has consistently completed more than
87 per cent of his passes - dating back to a time when this was highly
unusual for Premier League defenders.
Prior to losing his place in the Chelsea side early this season, Terry
ranked among the top three centre-backs for passing accuracy in five of the
previous seven campaigns. Characterised as the definitive stopper
centre-half, this defender could really play.
So while Ferdinand was seen as the archetypal continental-style defender,
any juxtaposition is unfair. In the only World Cup that the two men were
paired alongside each other it was Terry who made FIFA's squad of the
tournament. No England player has done so since.
Indeed, the esteem in which Terry is held by his peers at home and abroad is
not in question. As well as the 2005 UEFA award, he won the prize again in
2008 and 2009. The men who broke his run? Carles Puyol and Paolo Maldini. No
one won it more than Terry.
A genuine world XI candidate in his prime, the longevity has been amazing
too. A key figure in Premier League title wins a decade apart, the gap
between his first and last PFA team of the year appearances is even longer
than that. He was Chelsea's player of the year in 2001.
More than that, he was a leader. Carlo Ancelotti described Terry as the
"perfect captain" and Claudio Ranieri called it an easy decision to first
pass the armband to him. "Baresi never went round saying, 'I am the
captain', he just led," explained Ranieri. "John is the same."
It's unlikely that Terry will ever be afforded the same reverence as Franco
Baresi outside the confines of SW6 but in Premier League terms his
accomplishments are without equal. The competition's best ever? Sky Sports
pundit Jamie Carragher certainly thinks so.
"There have been a lot of great centre-backs in Premier League history, but
I think he has been the best that we've seen," said Carragher. "For the next
20 or 30 years, that position at the near post, when we see other defenders
doing it, we'll call it 'the John Terry position'."
Carragher added: "We're not just talking about a big aggressive centre-back.
Terry is always in the right position. His understanding of where to be, his
reading of the game and reading crosses cannot be matched.
"I don't think we've ever seen anyone better."