Hit LIKE and SUBSCRIBE Thank you for watching! If you enjoyed, please Subscribe us; bit.ly/Wrzzer Title: Top 10 Knuckleball Goals ♬: JJD - Adventure [NCS Release] • JJD - Adventure | Glit... By Wrzzer
I bet Honda had this flashback about his childhood memories like 15years ago, like a very emotional memories about his training and all before he made that brilliant free kick.
Having faced Jabulani knuckleballs as a replacement goalkeeper (when I usually play mid) once during a regular weekend game, have to say, it's one of the scariest shots to face. Can't predict when and how much it will turn, at one point its flying in one direction, and suddenly its towards your face. And worse, it makes goalkeepers look like complete noobs. Striking those Jabulanis were fun. But facing them were a totally different feeling. Big advantage to the strikers.
The Honda shot at 2:02 really seems like the craziest one to me. I have no clue how the ball moved like that. The keeper had no chance when it so clearly looked like it was going to get tucked in the right corner.
Juninho was the best, he scored countless goals that way. That's why in the commentary they called him tge freekick machine. I always loved how pure his free kicks were. No spin at all, and often hitting the bar in the process, so precise yet many goalkeepers couldn't just guess where the ball was going
What I actually observed was that most clips had either jabulani or the brazooka ball being used. These balls are actually crazy and they were made such a way that their trajectory was always unbelievable. Even if knuckleball technique needs a lot of skill and hard work, we can just see how these 2 balls have made these goals so beautiful
@@aryannegi9414 well hagi is known as one of The best long shhoter all time and his known for one of The most powerful shots. Juninho is the father of The knucleballs Recoba is an incerdible free kick taker who had a very good hit of The ball which ment his shots were Kind of unpredictable. Hagi is a 10 who played in the 1990's . He played for real madrid and Barcelona he is also well known for the galatasaray period where he won the european cup. Hagi also was in top 30 all time FIFA also they named the maradona of The carphatians. Hagi is known as one of The best number 10 (cam) all time . To make an idea He scored 272 goals and gaved over 119 assists as a 10 and a comparison is zidane who only scored around 114 goals and gaved 97 assists. Hagi was one of The most creative players and score long shots from the halfway line and also scored bangers from free kicks and 40 meters goals. Juninho known as being the father of all the knucleballs and also he played for lyon nearly his entire carer. He is not as good as Hagi because he was a lazy player in general and he did not implicate in the defensive chores. Recoba played for inter milan most of his time also known for the period at boca juniors in Argentina. Alvaro recoba had an incredible dip in the shoot ,he was also a very strong and quite tall player. He had some behaviour issues which draged him down a bit but not alot. But as juninho hi was not the most energetic player. The best from this list in my opinion is Hagi because of The work rate and also the tehnique and also the dribling. Hagi is one of The few players that played for Barcelona and real madrid and also be a legend for both also in the national team achievments. Hagi was romanian which is not the best nationality football wise. But romania had a golden generation at the time also romania best players (I am bulgarian not romanian) Chivu -inter milan Radu-lazio (still active) Popescu- Barcelona Petrescu-chelsea Contra-AC Milan Raducioiu-AC Milan Craioveanu- villareal Adrian ilie- valencia Ducan-espanyol Patraschi-PSG Raducanu-dortmund Dumitrescu-spurs Mutu-chelsea Basarabean-barcelona Belodedic-PSV Hagi -Real Madrid Raț-west ham
Thank you. For 50 years I've had nightmares about a goal I let in when the ball was kicked from 30 m out. I've always blamed myself for just being a useless keeper but now I can see I'm in good company.
i have watched that keisuke honda's shot probably 100 times. still insane. even the keeper went the wrong way. knuckleshot needs a lot of luck because it'll just go wherever it want. but honda's shot is the prime example when everything gone right.
@@Dynamo69420 That's how Didi used to do it in the 50s, when the balls were heavier. It's certainly possible, just doesn't work often with modern balls.
Some of those balls behaved exactly as they should (curving in the opposite direction in the second half of the flight), but some were pure fuckery. And those were Jabulanis and Brazucas (2010 and 2014).
Roberto Carlos put tons of spin on most of his free kicks especially the famous 1997 goal against France pretty much the exact opposite of a knuckleball.
That's not exactly correct. Knuckle balls in any sport occur because of the ball initially being in a laminar flow (low Reynolds #) regime. As the ball accelerates it hits a transition phase and if it continues to accelerate will become fully turbulent. The transition phase in particular is very unstable and gives you these bizarre movements. While wind may play a role in the trajectory, the sporadic pathing of knuckle balls is due specifically to this flow transition.
Uh yeah...sure. It's a pretty cool phenomena I advise you check it since you clearly don't know what I'm talking about, or anyone else that's interested. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laminar_flow
Ball is done accelerating by the time its left the kicker's foot. As a matter of fact, it is mainly decelerating for its entire path. So it seems neither of you are entirely correct. Yes, ball does not need a "wind current" as from the frame of reference of the ball the wind is at a high velocity. It simply needs to be struck hard enough with no spin to create turbulent flow across its side. Turbulent phase is unstable too. Don't talk more than you know.
The #1 didn't show very well, but the ball changed direction 3 times in the air, it's the most impressive one if you don't know how to shot you can't realise it, honda one only changed direction once, but it was a big change, so it's more spectacular, but it's actually easier to do.
The ball doesnt move like that due to the shot force you noob. It moves around that much because of the air around and the fact that the ball doesnt have any spin and can be pushed around literally anywhere
It was absolutely insane. I also thought that #4 definitely had the greatest degree of non-rotational movement (aka “knuckling”). Almost felt bad for the keeper… almost lol