German (In)discipline: The Bundesliga’s Most Booked

by Mark on June 6, 2008 · 0 comments

Foot­ball is not always a beau­ti­ful game; some­times book­ings are nec­es­sary. This sea­son was no dif­fer­ent in Ger­many, even if sta­tis­ti­cally player dis­ci­pline was com­par­a­tively bet­ter than in the past sev­eral sea­sons. While goal scor­ers have the Tor­jägerkanone (awarded by the mag­a­zine kicker) to shoot for, no com­pa­ra­ble tro­phy exists for the Bundesliga’s best/worst trou­ble­mak­ers. That is a need Bun­desli­gaTalk can fill. We can think of no one bet­ter than Ste­fan “111 Yel­low Cards in only 370 Bun­desliga Games” Effen­berg after whom to name the tro­phy. His­tory will remem­ber Effen­berg as so many things: the archi­tect of Bayern’s Cham­pi­ons League-winning mid­field in 2001, not-so-celebrated author, and now an annual trophy’s name­sake as well.

Stefan Effenberg

So who is this year’s wor­thy winner?

3. Grafite (Edi­naldo Batista Líbano) - VfL Wolfs­burg, Striker (9 Yel­lows, 1 Red)
GrafiteGrafite begins this count­down, barely edg­ing out Tomasz Zdebel for third place (who had com­pa­ra­ble num­bers, but in more games and with a less inter­est­ing name). His 9 yel­lows and 1 red were earned in just 22 starts for Wolfs­burg this sea­son. This was a sig­nif­i­cant increase from his num­bers the pre­vi­ous year with Le Mans in the French Ligue 1. Across the board he improved in goals, assists, and yel­low cards per game. It appears as though he’s adapted to the Bun­desliga quite well. Look for him to make a strong push for the top spot next sea­son (and on the scor­ing charts as well).

2. Mark Van Bom­mel — Bay­ern München, Mid­fielder (7 Yel­lows, 2 Reds)
Mark Van BommelNo one does it with less class on a con­sis­tent basis than Mark Van Bom­mel. An entire arti­cle full of youtube clips could be ded­i­cated to his antics. In the 26 Bun­desliga games he started this sea­son (undoubt­edly it would have been more had it not been for the con­stant sus­pen­sions) he made quite an impres­sion and online read­ers of the Ger­man tabloid Bild duly voted him this year’s “Stinkstiefel” (“stink­ing boot”). Sta­tis­tics aside, he’d likely win the Euro­vi­sion vote-in equiv­a­lent for least like­able player.

1. Mihai Tararache — MSV Duis­burg, Mid­fielder (13 Yel­lows, 1 Red)
Mihai TararacheWhile a bit of sub­jec­tiv­ity marked the deci­sion to put Van Bom­mel and Grafite on the list Tararache is with­out doubt the only choice to win. It would be a bit harsh to sug­gest that Tararache’s antics alone doomed Duis­burg to drop, but his 13 yel­lows and 1 red cer­tainly didn’t help. It would not be unfair to men­tion that his on the field per­for­mances sealed Duisburg’s spot at the bot­tom of the Bundesliga’s fair­play rank­ings. So while he will likely not be around next sea­son to defend his tro­phy, how does he com­pare to the worst offend­ers of some of the other major Euro­pean leagues? Not well, honestly:

Spain — The league may be lauded for its play­ers’ tech­ni­cal skill but they’re also either very tena­cious or very sloppy in going after the ball. Mihai Tararache, the Bundesliga’s poor dis­ci­pline stan­dard bearer would do no bet­ter than sixth behind Daniel Alves, Fer­nando Amore­bi­eta, Ser­gio Ramos, Roberto Ayala, and Aitor Ocio. Inter­est­ingly enough both Fer­nando Amore­bi­eta and Aitor Ocio play for Ath­letic Bil­bao, per­haps the Bun­desliga could learn some­thing from the Basques?

Italy — While not quite as out­ra­geous a dis­ci­pli­nary sit­u­a­tion as in Spain, it seems as though every­one in Serie A is required to end the sea­son with at least half a dozen yel­lows. Tararache would place third behind Manuele Blasi and Mor­ris Car­rozzieri (while a strong argu­ment can be made for Napoli’s Mau­r­izio Dom­izzi above Tararache as well).

Eng­land — Reli­able old Eng­land. Finally some­thing the Ger­mans can proudly say we do bet­ter than the Eng­lish (not includ­ing World Cups, Euro­pean Cham­pi­onships, Health care, etc.): player indis­ci­pline. Mihai Tararache would com­fort­ably place first (hav­ing played in a league with fewer games to boot) ahead of Nicky Butt, Nigel Reo-Coker, and Christo­pher Samba.

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