跟读练习: Robert Pires - The Right-Footed Magician Arsenal Abandoned - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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He was a World Cup winner,
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He was a World Cup winner,
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an Arsenal invincible, a winger who just seemed to glide across the Highbury turf with this effortless grace.
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Robert Pires was on top of the footballing world.
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So why, when we talk about Arsenal's legends,
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is his name sometimes a footnote rather than a headline?
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How did one of the Premier League's most elegant players went from untouchable to almost forgotten?
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A journey that kicked off with a shocking substitution in Paris and ended in the footballing wilderness of India.
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How did a player so crucial,
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so decorated become a ghost of his own glorious past?
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To really get how deep that fall was,
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you have to understand the incredible heights he reached first.
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When Robert Pires arrived at Arsenal in 2000 for a £6 million fee,
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he was already a World Cup and European champion with France.
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He was given an impossible task,
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replace Marc Overmars, a winger with blistering pace who'd just left for a record fee.
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Pires was a totally different kind of player.
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He wasn't a sprinter, he was a dancer.
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His lanky frame and that high-socked,
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slightly pigeon-toed running style looked almost awkward,
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but with the ball at his feet,
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he had a balletic grace that almost nobody could match.
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But Arsene Wenger saw a football brain that moved at lightning speed,
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even if the legs didn't.
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Wenger had wanted Pires for years and knew his quality.
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He gave Pires the one thing a player like him needs to thrive – freedom.
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Pires would later call Wenger a second dad for giving him the confidence to just be himself.
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Slowly, then all at once,
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Pires didn't just adapt, he transformed.
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He didn't try to beat the league with power, he out-thought it.
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He wasn't a traditional winger who hugged the touchline.
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Instead, he became a pioneer of the inverted winger role,
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drifting in from the left onto his stronger right foot.
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This simple tactical shift was revolutionary.
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It threw defenders into chaos,
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should they follow him inside or hold their position.
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It opened up space for the overlapping Ashley Call and most importantly,
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forged one of the most lethal partnerships the league has ever seen.
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By the 2001-2 season, he was unplayable.
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He led the Premier League with 15 assists.
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He was the creative engine of a team that won the league and cup double.
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He was so good he was named the Football Writers Association Player of the Year,
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even after a cruciate ligament injury ended his season two months early.
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And then came perfection, the 2003-4 Invincibles season.
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While Anri supplied the godlike finishing and Vieira brought the colossal presence,
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Pires was the team's artistic soul.
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He glided through games, scoring 14 league goals and providing 7 assists,
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making him the team's second top scorer.
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He was an invincible, a hero,
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a player who defined an era of beautiful, winning football.
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But in football, the top is a slippery place,
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and the fall can be as quick as it is brutal.
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For Pires, it would begin on the biggest stage of all,
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in his home country, in a moment that would break his heart.
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The Invincibles were a perfect storm of talent and timing that couldn't last forever.
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By the 2005-2006 season, the landscape at Arsenal was already shifting.
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The club was getting ready to move from historic Highbury to the modern Emirates Stadium,
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a move that symbolised a broader change in philosophy.
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The old guard was ageing and Wenger,
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always looking to the future,
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was building his next great team.
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The midfield, once Pirates' domain, was being refreshed.
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In came Alexander Hleb, a tricky dribbler.
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At the heart of it all,
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a young Spanish prodigy Fabregas was taking over as the team's new conductor.
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These players were different, quicker, more dynamic.
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Wenger's tactics were evolving to compete with the rising powers in Europe.
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Piri's, now 32, was starting to look like a relic from a previous era.
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His game, built on intelligence and technique,
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was seen as a step too slow for the high octane football Wenger now envisioned.
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His influence started to fade.
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He was still a key member of the squad,
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but no longer an automatic starter.
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This wasn't some dramatic collapse in form,
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but a slow, creeping obsolescence.
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The club had offered him only a one-year contract extension,
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a standard policy for players over 30,
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but it felt like a slap in the face to a player of his stature.
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Pires wanted a two-year deal.
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He wanted to feel valued.
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The contract standoff created a constant, low-level tension.
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He was still a vital part of the team's incredible run to the Champions League final that season,
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a run built on a record-breaking defence.
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Yet, the signs were all there.
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He was a senior statesman in a younger, faster team.
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He was the past and Wenger was building the future.
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All this simmering tension was about to boil over on the
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biggest stage of all in his hometown in what would be his final,
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fateful match for the club.
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May 17th, 2006 The Stade de France,
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Paris The UEFA Champions League final Arsenal vs Barcelona For Robert Pires,
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this was supposed to be his coronation.
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The ultimate prize in club football in his home city in front of his family.
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After six incredible years in North London,
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this was also meant to be his last game for the club.
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It was the perfect goodbye.
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Or so it seemed.
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The game was just 18 minutes old when disaster struck.
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Goalkeeper Jens Lehmann came rushing out,
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brought down Samuel Eto'o and was shown a straight red card.
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Arsenal were down to ten men.
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A substitution had to be made.
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The backup keeper, Manuel Almunia, had to come on.
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An outfield player had to be sacrificed.
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On the pitch, Pires was calm.
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He later said it never crossed his mind he'd be the one sacrificed.
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He thought it would be Haleb or the young Fabregas.
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Pires was the experienced head,
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the one with that telepathic link to Henri.
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Taking him off seemed crazy.
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He was standing there super confident when Thierry Henry walked over.
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Titi tells me I'm the one coming off, Pires recalled.
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Confusion turned to disbelief.
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What?
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He looked to the sideline and saw it,
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the number 7 glowing on the board.
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He described the feeling as awful.
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It was more than a sub,
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it was a public statement.
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In the biggest game in Arsenal's history,
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in the moment of greatest crisis,
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Wenger, the man he saw as a second father,
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had decided the team was better off without him.
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The trust was broken.
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As Pires walked off, the world's cameras fixed on his face.
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He passed Wenger, and the two didn't even look at each other.
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The coldness of that moment said everything.
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Pires sat on the bench,
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his face a mask of fury and shock.
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It was his last game for the club,
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a Champions League final in his hometown in front of his family,
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and it had lasted just a handful of minutes.
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He felt it was proof the manager no longer trusted him.
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For Pires, it was a triple blow.
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Humiliated in the final, his team had lost and the dream ending was a disaster.
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Two days later he told Wenger he was leaving.
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Wenger was shocked but for Pires a rupture had occurred.
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That week, in his own words, was horrible.
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He was subbed in the final,
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lost the final and then discovered he'd been left out of France's squad for the upcoming World Cup.
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The substitution was the final straw.
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The exit from Arsenal was quiet.
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Pires joined Spanish side Villarreal on a free transfer in the summer of 2006.
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Back in England, where he'd been a superstar just two years before,
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the move barely made a ripple.
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He was yesterday's man.
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Out of sight, out of mind.
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His time at Villarreal was respectable,
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but a world away from the glory of Highbury.
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He joined a talented team managed by Manuel Pellegrini,
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who had wanted to sign him after Arsenal knocked them out of the Champions League.
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Pires became a solid contributor for the yellow submarine,
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making over 100 appearances in four seasons.
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He even got a small measure of revenge,
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scoring in a win against Barcelona,
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the source of his great pain.
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But there were no more major trophies,
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no headlines, and none of the worship he'd known in London.
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While his old teammates Anri,
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Vieira and Jungberg were still competing for major trophies at clubs like Barcelona and Inter Milan,
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Pires was quietly playing out his career away from the main stage.
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The man who had been a household name in England was becoming the answer to a trivia question.
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Hey, whatever happened to Robert Pires?
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The answer was that he was still playing and playing well,
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but almost no one was watching.
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This period at Villarreal, as respectable as it was,
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marked the real beginning of his slide into obscurity.
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In the fast-moving world of football,
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out of sight truly is out of mind.
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In 2010, at 37, his contract ended.
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Most thought he'd retire.
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Instead, he made a bizarre and forgettable return to the Premier League,
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signing for Aston Villa, managed by his old French teammate Gerard Houllier.
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It was a move that only highlighted how far he'd fallen.
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The dynamic, goal-scoring winger was gone,
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replaced by a player who'd lost his pace.
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He made just nine league appearances for Villa and didn't score a single goal.
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The stint was short and,
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to be blunt, a total failure.
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He was released after a few months and this ghostly return to England confirmed the narrative.
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The winger of the Invincibles was a distant memory.
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After three years without a club,
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his career had one last strange chapter.
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In 2014, at 41 years old,
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he joined FC Goa for the first season of the Indian Super League.
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It was a final payday in a fledgling league,
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away from the bright lights of the Premier League.
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He officially retired in 2016 at 42.
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The journey from the peak of world football had petered out into quiet irrelevance.
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Today when fans talk about the Premier League legends or the architects of the Invincibles,
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the same names always come up.
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Thierry Henry for his explosive talent,
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Dennis Bergkamp for his sublime genius,
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Patrick Vieira for his conquering leadership.
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But Robert Pires, a Arsenal fans voted the club's sixth greatest player ever is often an afterthought.
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So why is his legacy so underrated?
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Why is a World Cup winner,
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a two-time Premier League champion and a star of the only unbeaten season in modern English history so often overlooked?
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Part of it is down to personality.
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Henry had that electrifying star power.
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Bergkamp had an almost mythical genius.
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Vieira had the raw, aggressive leadership that defined the team's spirit.
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Pires was quieter.
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His brilliance was more subtle,
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a series of smart decisions and graceful moves rather than explosive moments.
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He was the artist, and in football history tends to remember the Warriors and Kings more vividly.
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His decline was also brutally public.
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That humiliation in the 2006 final serves as a definitive end point to his time at the top.
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While Henry, Bergkamp and Vieira all left Arsenal as undisputed icons,
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Pires' departure was Messi.
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His forgotten years at Villarreal,
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Aston Villa and in India meant he just drifted from the mind of the average football fan.
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His career didn't end with a bang but with a long drawn out whimper.
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And yet the stats tell a different story.
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They show a player who wasn't just a supporting actor but a leading man.
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In his Arsenal career he scored 84 goals and provided 63 assists in 284 appearances.
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A phenomenal record for a midfielder.
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He was named to the PFA team of the year three seasons in a row.
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He was the Football Writer's Player of the Year.
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You can't truly understand the Invincibles without understanding Robert Pires.
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He wasn't just a cog in the machine,
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he was one of its chief designers.
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In the end, the story of Robert Pires is a brutal lesson in the nature of elite sports.
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It shows how quickly a narrative can turn
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and how a legacy can be defined not by years of brilliance but by a single moment of humiliation.
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For six years he was one of the most creative players on the planet,
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a master who helped redefine his position in England.
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But too often his story has shrunk down to those 18 minutes in Paris.
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The image of his number on that board,
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the lonely walk to the bench,
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the look of devastation on his face.
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It was the moment the music stopped.
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The humiliation didn't just end his Arsenal career,
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in many ways it unfairly overshadowed it.
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It cast a long dark shadow over a career that deserves to be remembered in the brightest of lights.
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He was a true artist of the game,
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an invincible, and a legend whose contributions should be celebrated, not forgotten.
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Now I want to know what are your thoughts and memories of Robert Pires?
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Was he a truly underrated genius?
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Or was his peak just a product of the incredible team around him?
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Let me know in the comments below.
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背景与上下文
在这段视频中,我们探讨了罗伯特·皮雷斯(Robert Pires)的传奇足球生涯。他是一位世界杯冠军,有着令人惊叹的优雅风格,在阿森纳(Arsenal)队中,他不仅是不可替代的边锋,更是球队的灵魂。这个视频让我们反思为什么这样一位辉煌的球员,在阿森纳传奇名单中,有时只被视为一个脚注,而非头条。
日常交流的五个重要短语
- “我想要自由”(I want freedom) - 这是皮雷斯在阿森纳取得成功的重要因素,他获得了可以发挥自身才华的机会。
- “找回自我”(Find yourself) - 皮雷斯提到主教练温格对他的支持,让他能够做真实的自己。
- “打破常规”(Break the norm) - 皮雷斯从传统边锋的角色跳脱,成为了反向边锋的开创者。
- “创造空间”(Create space) - 通过内切,他打开了对手防线,并为队友创造机会。
- “艺术灵魂”(Artistic soul) - 这是对皮雷斯的精妙形容,他被称为球队的艺术家。
逐步跟读指南
如果你希望通过这段视频来提高英语口语并加强发音,建议采用以下“影子跟读”(shadowing)技巧,这是一个有效的英语口语练习方法:
- 观看并理解内容:首先,仔细观看视频,注意皮雷斯的语气和语调,以及他所表达的情感。
- 分段练习:将视频内容分成多个小段落,专注于每个段落的发音和表达。反复播放这些段落,以帮助你提高英语发音。
- 模仿与重复:听完后,尝试模仿皮雷斯的发音,可以在暂停后重复他所说的句子。注意语速与停顿。
- 记录与对比:录下自己的发音,并与原视频进行对比,找出需要改进的地方。
- 定期练习:将这个影子跟读练习融入你的学习计划中,帮助你提升英语口语的流利度和自信心。
通过这样的方式,你可以从罗伯特·皮雷斯的精彩故事中受益,不仅提升了你的英语口语能力,还能够更深入地理解足球文化与人物。尽量在日常生活中使用上述短语,同时访问影子跟读网站,找到更多关于提高英语发音的资源,以持续进步。
什么是跟读法?
跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。
