Inter Miami Season Ticket Members are in for a treat! Those who came out to see Inter Miami’s practice tonight saw Messi hand out little footballs
Even though I played with Zidane, Ronaldinho, and Messi, none of them were as good as my one teammate
Thierry Henry, a beloved football commentator and current football great, played in four of Europe’s top five divisions and shared the field with some of the best players of his generation.
Henry, who was born in the Paris suburbs, broke through professionally in 1994 with AS Monaco. He became an integral part of the club’s success in the 1996–97 first division season, alongside players like Fabien Barthez, David Trezeguet, and Emmanuel Petit, who would going on to play for Arsenal.
Henry had already earned full international status for France by the time he was 20 years old. He went on to score more goals than anybody else for Les Bleus in their 1998 FIFA World Cup run.
аfter а disаppоinting seven mоnths with Juventus, Henry linked up with аrsenаl аnd аrsene Wenger, his fоrmer mаnаger аt Mоnаcо. The rest, аs they sаy, is histоry; the legendаry number fоurteen went оn tо scоre 228 gоаls fоr the club аnd be nаmed Their Greаtest Ever.Henry asserts that he had the greatest teammate of his career when playing for the Gunners. This is remarkable a boast, coming from someone who, at Barcelona, had an attacking trio with Ronaldinho and Lionel Messi.
While he was doing a live Facebook Q&A for SkySports in 2015, the question was presented to the Frenchman. Some people were taken aback by his response, which named Dennis Bergkamp, a legendary player for the Netherlands and Arsenal, as his favorite and greatest on-field colleague:
Reason being: Dennis Bergkamp has been around for a long time, and I trained with him every day for seven years. Why? Because he was completely obedient to the game at all times.Henry arrived in north London to find Bergkamp well established as one of the world’s greatest after four years at Arsenal.
When he was at the top of his game in the early to mid-1990s, the guy whose phobia of flying earned him the humorous moniker “non-flying Dutchman” placed third in the 1992 Ballon d’Or and second the following year. After a breakout year with the Gunners in 1997—during which he was voted FWA Footballer of the Year, PFA Player of the Year, and FIFA World Player of the Year—Berkamp continued to collect accolades.
Their complementary skill sets made Henry and Bergkamp an unbeatable duo, and they elevated Arsenal to new heights with their on- and off-field antics. With the help of an ever-impressive supporting cast, Henry and Bergkamp guided Arsenal to an unprecedented ‘invincible’ season in 2003–04, two Premier League crowns, a Champions League final, and one FA Cup.