That's not really the way we determine who's a good football player 
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Not really, as it's a skill very rarely used in the game itself. Depends on position played, but better measures are awareness of space, accuracy of pass, one touch passing, taking other players on one on one, holding an offside line, tracking back.
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En réponse à @SR_Chep @ChrisWarcraft
And freestyle footballers (the "keepie-uppie" kings and queens) are very rarely professional players. That skill is so specific that I don't even consider it a core skill, although Gazza vs Scotland & Ginola vs Fenercvaros (both '96!) are 2 examples, but it's a rare thing to see.
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Which I think proves my point. All professionals can do it but the very best at it are never professional players, because other skills are so much more important. As someone who watches 3 or 4 games every week, for 35+ years, I have never even considered it a crucial skill.
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Right, I can see the issue here. You're talking about ball control, not juggling. Juggling (the rest of the world calls it keepie-uppie) is a very specific skill of keeping the ball in the air using feet, shoulders & head. Yes, ball control is important, for some positions.
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I can break 100 without trying very hard, I think my max is somewhere around 500? Basically after 200 or so it becomes more a matter of enduring the boredom than control. My field awareness, passing, and defense are also quite good, though I was never fast enough to go pro.
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(That’s why I played goalie primarily)
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