To choose the five greatest footballers I have watched live is not merely an exercise in ranking talent; it is an attempt to map memory itself. Football, after all, is deeply personal. The players who define us are often those whose magic arrived at the right moment in our lives - when a television screen became a window into another world, when a stadium roar travelled across continents, and when the game still felt capable of poetry.
Among all the footballers I have watched live, the greatest remains Diego Maradona.
Had I not witnessed Romário’s brilliance during the 1988 Seoul Olympics, I might very well have become an Argentina supporter. It was Romário who made me fall in love with Brazil. Yet even as a Brazilian admirer, I always held Maradona in the highest reverence. Those who watched him during the golden age of Serie A - through BTV highlights and World Cups - will understand what made him different. The ball obeyed Maradona. It moved as if tied to his imagination, just as it once obeyed Pelé and Garrincha. There are players who control matches, and then there are players who seem to control football itself. Maradona belonged to the latter category.
Jointly occupying the second position are two Brazilian phenomena: Romário and Ronaldo Nazário - Ronaldo El Fenómeno.
Brazil has produced countless stars and will continue to do so, but whether modern football will ever again witness two forwards of such extraordinary individuality remains doubtful.
Romário was not simply a striker; he was both finisher and creator, a rare hybrid capable of orchestrating attacks while simultaneously ending them with ruthless precision. Small in stature but immense in quality, he resembled a pocket-sized footballing dynamo. His right foot was a work of art. The toe-pokes, sudden changes of direction, tight-space dribbling, and effortless finishing made him hypnotic to watch. What elevated him further was his intelligence - his ability to drop into midfield, dictate tempo, and create chances with the instincts of a playmaker.
Ronaldo, on the other hand, felt almost supernatural.
Before injuries altered the course of his career, he was perhaps the most devastating attacking force football had ever seen. His acceleration merged seamlessly with dribbling at full speed, allowing him to glide past defenders as though gravity itself favored him. Then came the impossible finishes - difficult angles transformed into goals through pure instinct and genius. Ronaldo attacked space with a terrifying elegance. Watching him was witnessing football stripped to its rawest, most explosive form.
When coach Mário Zagallo paired Romário and Ronaldo together in 1997, football gained one of its most feared attacking duos: the legendary “Ro-Ro” partnership. Fate, however, deprived the world of its full World Cup expression in 1998 due to Romário’s injury. It remains one of football’s great unfinished stories.
Third on my list is Zinedine Zidane.
To me, Zidane is the greatest midfielder in football history. He was not merely elegant - elegance alone is aesthetic. Zidane possessed authority. He controlled rhythm, emotion, and space with an almost aristocratic calmness. Watching him play often resembled watching a master dancer perform on a stage where everyone else seemed hurried and mechanical.
If Michel Platini represented intelligence and Ruud Gullit represented power and versatility, Zidane appeared to be the perfect fusion of both. He played football like a composer arranging music in real time.
At number four comes Lothar Matthäus - one of the most complete footballers the sport has ever produced.
Matthäus was football condensed into a single player. He could dominate as a defensive midfielder, command as a centre-back, operate as a libero, dictate play as a deep-lying creator, and still arrive dangerously in attacking positions. His tactical intelligence and physical endurance allowed him to evolve across eras and systems without losing relevance. Few players in history embodied versatility with such authority.
And finally, Paolo Maldini.
While Roberto Baggio captured headlines and imaginations, Maldini always fascinated me more. There was something majestic about the way he defended - never reckless, never theatrical, always perfectly measured. Alongside Franco Baresi, he formed one of football’s most iconic defensive partnerships.
Maldini was far more than a defender. Whether at left-back or centre-back, he understood the geometry of football. He anticipated rather than reacted. He could begin attacks with calm distribution, organize defensive structures, and neutralize world-class forwards without appearing strained. He represented defensive football elevated into art.
If I were asked to select the five greatest footballers of all time - combining both those I watched live and those I know through history my list would be slightly different:
1. Pelé
2. Diego Maradona
3. Garrincha
4. Ronaldo El Fenomeno
5. Zinedine Zidane
Since 1988, I have had the privilege of watching generations of legends: Ruud Gullit, Marco van Basten, Alessandro Vialli, Giuseppe Berghomi, Alessandro Nesta, Franco Baresi, Hugo Sánchez, Roberto Donadoni, Jürgen Klinsmann, Rudi Völler, Gheorghe Hagi, Michael Laudrup, Dennis Bergkamp, Marc Overmars, Patrick Kluivert, Jaap Stam, Frank de Boer, Ronald Koeman, Claudio Caniggia, Gabriel Batistuta, Emilio Butragueño, Enzo Francescoli, Enzo Scifo, Paul Gascoigne, Gary Lineker, John Barnes, Roger Milla, Davor Šuker, Zvonimir Boban, Dragan Stojković, Hristo Stoichkov, Tomas Brolin, Fernando Hierro, David Beckham, Luís Figo, Rivaldo, Ronaldinho, Cafu, Roberto Carlos, Kaká, Andriy Shevchenko, Pavel Nedvěd, and many others from both past and present generations.
Each belonged to his era. Each played the game in a unique language.
That is perhaps the greatest blessing for a football lover - not simply supporting a club or a country, but living through eras rich enough to witness genius in many different forms.
For nearly four decades, I have watched football evolve, transform, commercialize, and globalize. Yet despite all the tactical revolutions and athletic advancements, the essence of greatness remains unchanged: the rare ability to make millions pause in disbelief.
And for me, the names mentioned above achieved exactly that.
Thank You
Faisal Caesar

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