Start off in high-school or college or even both and play some games there. I posted this in another forum but I'm goin to put it here again my personal wishlist for road to the show I don't understand why you try to fix things that don't need fixing rather than just improving. Thinking about skipping 22 even, if things keep trending the way they are. I hate to bash this game you guys are going from one of my favorite sports game to just becoming the next copy and paste from last year to the next like Madden and it's so sad to see. Good job on improving the mechanics of the game and on the fielding improvements. I refunded the game yesterday and it sucks. Training feels meaningless in RTTS and now you're "FORCING" people to play the double role now? I wanted to be a catcher but I guess I have to pitch, from a role playing point of view can I please say how terrible that feels? RTTS just feels wrong, I hate it. A universal player? Really? Who came up with this idea man? It feels lame. No one asked DD to be linked with RTTS but you did it anyway, and it feels bad. Even with the goals of Bounedjah, Santi Cazorla has been the best attacker in the country and the Brazilian defensive midfielder Guilherme the linchpin, holding it all together.I hate to be that guy but I am passionate about this game, I've bought every single one since 2011. The crucial signings came in the summer of 2020 however and took Al Sadd to the next level. The Algerian striker is the focal point of the attack but there are goals from elsewhere such as André Ayew, who arrived from Swansea in July.
The long-serving South Korea internationals Nam Tae-hee (now at Al Duhail) and Jung Woo-young are underrated, though Baghdad Bounedjah, who has averaged more than a goal a game since arriving in 2015, obviously is not. Encouragingly for Barcelona, these players have noticeably improved under Xavi.
A fair amount of the Qatar team that won the Asian Cup in 2019 is there, stalwarts such as that year’s Asian Player of the Year, Akram Afif, Hassan al-Haydos, Ró-Ró, Abdelkarim Hassan and Tarek Salman. It is impressive but then Al Sadd have most of the stars in the Qatar Stars League. Xavi watches on during Al Sadd’s game against Al Ahli last month. It also took the unbeaten league run to 36 games, stretching back to March 2020.
The first eight games were won and their 3-3 draw with their biggest rivals Al Duhail at the beginning of November, watched by representatives from Barcelona, marked the first points dropped. The football was good, especially after the first year or so, with a commitment to playing out from the back and attacking at every opportunity – last season’s goal difference of +63 is testament to that. There were a number of cups lifted (the plethora of knockout competitions is partly down to a short 22-game season) and the 2020-21 league won by 13 points. Since then the 41-year-old has won everything there is to win in Qatar but then that is expected at a club with close to 60 trophies in the cabinet. In Xavi’s case, media and fans have been largely happy with his presence as a player from 2015, when he helped lift Al Sadd’s attendances towards five figures at times, and then, from May 2019, as coach.