It would add quality to the premiership definately!
The fact that Brazilian plays their wonderful football with trick-ster style doesn't match well with the English league's really fast pace, that leaves such a little room for tricks.
So maybe the reason is not money, it's attractive vs effective.
2007-03-10 20:46:18
·
answer #1
·
answered by Steph☺ 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Generally speaking, the English cling more strongly to their national identity than the Spanish do. More English people want to see English players and to see those English players become great. England has had a strong national unity for nearly a millenium, the the United Kingdom for two centuries. Spain, meanwhile, is made up of individualistic regions and have a more "local" allegiance. In other words, the fans of Madrid are Castilian, the fans of Valencia are Aragonese, and the fans of Barcelona are Catalonian, etc. You cannot easily fill a team with local players if you want to be competitive. In addition to this, they have a more historical connection to Latin American than Britain does, so it is easier for them to accept a number of Brazilians or Argentines on their team without feeling like their national identity is being hurt. They simply want their team to be the best, without such a strong loyalty to the "purity" of their team.
That is my theory, based solely on a historical perspective. I'm not calling it a fact, but I'd bet on it.
p.s. Brazilians don't speak the language in Spain, either. They speak Portuguese. So the language barrier seems unlikely as a reason.
2007-03-09 04:28:22
·
answer #2
·
answered by Mr. Taco 7
·
1⤊
1⤋
well, i dont know!!! :-/ may b they dont like the technique of brazilian football very much. instead they more like the europian football with pace, speed & strength. thats the type of game played by england too u know. hehe........ its a silly idea of mine :D, i know. but......................
if u want 2 talk about any brazilian, whom the english teams should try 2 buy, then its kaka, not robinho, i think. u c kaka has the combination of europian & brazilan football. he has brazilian techinque & europian strength, speed & power! in total he's an excellent player & i think he can suit with the english game very well. however i dont think he wants 2 leave his team milan. u c he has got italian citizenship recently. bsides chelsea (& real aslo) offered a lot of money 4 him 2 milan. but it was of no use. milan doesnt want 2 sell him & kaka also doesnt wanna leave. he likes playing there & the milanfans love him. so no use .............. ;-)
2007-03-09 06:05:45
·
answer #3
·
answered by Sarah_kaka-princess 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Work permit problems. Non-EU players need a work permit to play in Britain (England & Scotland). And the permit is only granted if the player is an established international or has the potential to be a regular international player.
Many clubs find this a hassle, so they don't bother.
2007-03-09 08:35:33
·
answer #4
·
answered by BeN 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yes, English clubs can do it. But Brazilians can not do in the Premier. Could u see Ronaldinho against Liverpool??? I couldnt!!!
2007-03-09 04:25:21
·
answer #5
·
answered by HOTTürk 4
·
0⤊
1⤋
maybe somebody from such a beautiful sunny country dosent wanna live in dreary depressing england and play on a mud pitch and get kicked 20 times a game. and eat shitty food
2007-03-09 06:22:43
·
answer #6
·
answered by amelia a 3
·
1⤊
1⤋
CAUSE THE ENGLISH PREIMER LEAGUE IS NOT THERE STYLE OF FOOTBALL THE LA LIGA IS THE RIGHT LEAGUE FOR THEM
2007-03-09 06:00:35
·
answer #7
·
answered by Anonymous
·
2⤊
0⤋
...maybe "they" don't speak the language...? ummm?
2007-03-09 04:24:17
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋