Other than perhaps law, nowhere does the concept of possession hold more weight than it does in sport. In fact, the debate would be abooout near a cul-de-sac; athletics involving both a "ball" and two "teams" basically have their double helices woven by this exercising of influence over said "ball", a bond so heavy not a jack on earth could lift it. The beauty then lies in the differences employed -- in baseball, the defense doesn't want but is essentially always in possession; basketball as a procedure is the most dependent on it. Peyton Manning recently just exposed his football's lie teal-and-orange-handed; he won an hour-long affair in which he was on the field seven seconds shy of Andy declarin' him famous.

Now, we could go on 'til infinity about the role possession of the pelota plays on the pitch (alliterations -- for your health!), especially in 2009's game. The teams most currently blinging have bet their vineyards on possession, the players most currently adored equip games predicated on it. Common thought now holds that the planet's select finest have emigrated to possession football's stronghold; Ronaldo, Kaka, and Ibra joined Messi on Spanish soil and their psychology shouldn't be foreign to any. They're players that find their frames in bitchin' poses tailor-made for FIFA covers, players feigning Jerry to helpless defenders' Tom, players who'd fancy nothing better than a right old mano-a-mano jaunt at an anonymous, backtracking fullback. In other's words -- specifically Sammy's -- La Liga's gonna be berry, berry good to them.
And every morning, David Villa arises from sleep, thinks about all of the previous, looks at the ceiling, shrugs, and sighs, why the fuck not me? His look is as premeditated as Ronaldo's, he's just as Spanish as Torres or Xavi or even Rooney's beloved Iniesta -- so then why is David Villa stuck in, as Steve Zissou once offered Klause Daimler, his role as soccer's "B" squad leader? Why not the "A" squad, the elite of the elite of the elite? So goes the saga of the incumbent Finest (Offensive) Player Without The Ball -- indeed, The Kid (of no relation to this). Oh, he's good with the rock too, but that part's no secret (not that the other is). He's among the few gifted enough to enter any box with the knowledge and ability to score from any and all situations thrown before him, be it by air or land or the damn Mediterranean, by head or hip or backheel. He's also alarmingly vampiric, but more Count Chocula than True Blood (Skrtel's got Nosferatu covered), none of which is helped by the team he's on, or the kits they're wearing this season. But the goals are what we're fed, not necessarily what everyone's craving, and some would better see his displays find the palates craving hors d'oeuvre of 1,001 diagonal runs.

Look no further than his Wikipedia page for some answers: "I can barely remember a single training session when my dad wasn't there. I have never been alone on a football pitch." He can't help but play off of others, which is why during the course of a Valencia or Spain affair you'll find him leaving no blade of grass unmaimed, runs of rhombi in angles atypical at velocities always kept onside. As such, in that same match you'll find him too ruing a handful of wasted chances, perhaps more than one would accept or expect. But if his escapades didn't provide him gilt-edged opportunities in such high volume, the law of averages wouldn't prosecute his shooting touch so frequently, si o no?
This summer his psyche had had enough of going through the exact same motions I just did; he saw the skyscrapers erecting right on his block and found he was finally in a climbing mood. With his club broke, there could be no more "B" squad, no more sidecar to the less-prolific Torres, and he wouldn't leave Spain to do it. But then there was Benzema, and then Ibra, and then Valencia's juice apparently ceased its running, and as soon as the dust had cleared the wind riled it back up again. But somewhere about his silence David Villa had to have pondered if the issue perhaps wasn't with the club but was instead with him, his technique and his blueprints. Such was his plight; kids aren't flooding YouTube with videos of Rip Hamilton and mask weaving through picks and hitting elbow jumpers for the same reason. So instead, the Pichichi quenches at the watering hole's shore, oblivious to the predator wearing the #7 lurking behind (and currently leading), a point to prove to the esteemed now beside him too lying in wait.







