China Naming Network - Auspicious day query - What events are similar to the "butterfly effect" in world football? What influence did they have later?

What events are similar to the "butterfly effect" in world football? What influence did they have later?

0 1 Manchester United Barcelona Real Madrid Triangle: the story of Beckham, Ronaldinho and Cristiano Ronaldo! In the summer of 2003, Barcelona and Real Madrid in La Liga desperately strengthened their lineup.

The former is to get rid of the low recording period, and the latter is to further develop the degree of commercialization.

At this time, because of "flying boots" and other events, England's "heartthrob" Beckham has fallen out with Manchester United coach Ferguson.

However, Beckham finally chose Real Madrid, and Barcelona could only buy Brazilian star Ronaldinho from Paris in Ligue 1, thus creating an era.

After losing Beckham, Manchester United's first choice was to buy Ronaldinho, but Barcelona beat them to it.

So Manchester United took a fancy to Cristiano Ronaldo, who is still playing in Lisbon, Portugal, and is only 18 years old.

After that, Manchester United's new No.7 also changed the football pattern.

This series of chain reactions laid the foundation for the football status and achievements of Barcelona, Real Madrid and Manchester United in the following years.

Barcelona is recovering, and Ronaldinho once became the first person in football.

Real Madrid was forced to let Makelele go because of over-exploitation of business, resulting in limited salary space, and the first phase of Galaxy Battleship declined.

Although Manchester United did not become stronger immediately, in the 2007-2009 season, Manchester United won the Premier League championship three times in a row and reached the Champions League final for two years in a row. Cristiano Ronaldo has also become a Golden Globe winner!

Ending the "Little World Cup Era": Zidane and napkins? In the summer of 200 1, the football bubble economy has not been punctured, so the rich and powerful upstarts are actively burning money.

Florentino left a secret message on a napkin, and Zidane got the news. He ran from Juventus in Serie A to Real Madrid in La Liga, setting the highest transfer fee in football at that time.

After selling Zidane and Inzaghi, Juventus didn't want to take money to pay interest. Instead, they used this huge transfer fund to buy Czech iron man Nedved and Chilean striker Salas from Lazio, and also bought French iron guard Thuram and local goalkeeper Buffon from Parma, thus reorganizing the team into a "division of iron blood".

Ferguson's Manchester United bought Lazio's Argentine "wizard" Veron because of its "Latinized" transformation.

Lazio, which lost Veron and Nedved, were not idle, and bought La Liga Valencia captain mendieta and Udinese Italian international Fei Aolei at a sky-high price-after Spanish football superstar mendieta led Valencia to the Champions League final for two consecutive years, it was in full swing.

AC Milan, who failed to qualify for the Champions League, bought Italian "opportunist" Inzaghi from Juventus and Portuguese classical midfielder Rui Costa from Florence. Together with the former Ukrainian "nuclear warhead" Shevchenko, they formed the "new three musketeers" in the same period-AC Milan, and also "dug" the local star Pirlo from Inter Milan.

But in those two years, Serie A lost superstars like Zidane and Cristiano Ronaldo, and bought mendieta and others as parallel imports. Since then, Serie A no longer has the scenery of "Little World Cup era", and the football pattern has been changed.

Apart from the transfer period of 200 1 and the summer of 2003, what other events similar to the butterfly effect have you seen in football? Lazio in the picture above, how many other stars can you recognize? Welcome everyone to discuss together.

I don't think the incident you mentioned, that is, when Ferguson entered Manchester United, was a typical "butterfly effect". Butterfly effect means that in a dynamic system, small changes in initial conditions can drive a long-term huge chain reaction of the whole system. It is a chaotic phenomenon, which shows that the development of everything has fixed numbers and variables, and the development process of things has rules to follow, but there are also unpredictable "variables", which are often counterproductive.

Indeed, the butterfly effect means that a small change can affect the development of things, and its performance is more of a small change, which leads to the change of things, and this change is more of a "reverse" influence, so as to highlight the so-called butterfly effect.

When Ferguson entered Manchester United, it was impossible to predict that Manchester United would rule the entire Premier League in the 1990s. However, in the 1980s, Liverpool's heyday suppressed Manchester United. After Ferguson entered Manchester United, the situation in Manchester United developed in a relatively healthy direction bit by bit, so Ferguson's entry into Manchester United was a benign influence, not a typical butterfly effect.

The "Bosman Act" is the first event that really has a so-called "butterfly effect" on European football in the past 30 years. Maybe young fans and friends don't know much about the Bosman Act, or have never heard of it. In short, the case of Bosman Act itself is an ordinary case in which an ordinary player asks for a transfer, but in the process of the real implementation of this case, the EU has made great changes to the relevant player transfer system. After the introduction of this penalty, many clubs that used to train young stars for resale directly lost their money, especially several clubs in the Netherlands, such as Ajax. Because many young players from Africa and South America came to Europe at the first stop in the Netherlands, then took the Dutch club as a springboard, entered the scouts' sight of other league giants through some European wars, and finally entered football clubs in developed countries such as England, Spain, Germany and France through transfer.

This is the original survival chain of many Dutch clubs, but with the introduction of the Bosman Act, the EU finally ruled that football players with EU nationality have the right to play in any other EU country after the contract with the club expires, without paying any transfer fee. Secondly, when athletes with EU citizenship play football anywhere in the EU, the regulation of "restricting foreign athletes" should be abolished. With the introduction of this bill, players in the EU began to move faster, effectively protecting the vital interests of players.

It does protect the interests of players, but many small clubs have lost their original survival foundation, which is the so-called giant football club. Now, players who sign and transfer must resell or renew their contracts in advance before the player's last year. Otherwise, the player's contract expires, he is a free transfer and the club will lose a lot of money.

So now we see that many clubs usually sign players for three years. In fact, after two or two and a half years, it is necessary to consider the renewal of a player's contract or try to accept quotations from other teams and quickly understand the player's future arrangements, otherwise nothing will be accepted when the contract expires. For example, when Ballack's contract expires, he can transfer freely and go to Chelsea for free. Bayern didn't get any transfer income. Of course, Bayern didn't look for Ballack, but Ballack took the initiative to avoid negotiations with Bayern. He was bent on going to Chelsea because Bayern was weak at that time and was often eliminated in the Champions League 16-8.