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Game changer

FIFA 18: EA’s beautiful game is having a huge influence on the way footballers play in real life

The lines between the virtual and reality are becoming more blurred

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Andrea Pirlo famously admitted to spending the afternoon playing video games before winning the 2006 World Cup in Berlin.

“After the wheel, the PlayStation is the greatest invention of all time,” he proclaimed in his autobiography.

Fast forward ten years and football games have evolved – driven by an obsession with accuracy and realism.

EA has said that if any players pull of the El Tornado they’ll be rewarded with it in the game

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EA has said that if any players pull of the El Tornado they’ll be rewarded with it in the game

But games such as FIFA are no longer just mirroring real life – they’re actually starting to influence the way professional footballers play the game.

FIFA 18 developer EA SPORTS has for a long time employed thousands of data collectors who painstakingly analyse and create databases teeming with intricate player statistics.

“We record and study how the players move on the pitch, the precision of their passing, how they take a penalty, their headers, and even the physics of the ball,” EA SPORTS producer Gilliard Lopes Dos Santos told FIFA.com.

FIFA 17 boasted lifelike graphics but it’s so much more than just entertainment

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FIFA 17 boasted lifelike graphics but it’s so much more than just entertainment

But now something interesting is happening when it comes to the relationship between the video game and the sport.

We’re living in an age when the real and virtual influence each other,” said Lopes Dos Santos.

“Bizarrely, we often see that footballers learn things from video games. It’s a permanent two-way process.”

Case in point – the El Tornado. A new skill move for FIFA 18 which sees a player drag the ball back, spin around and volley it.

Cristiano Ronaldo. Antoine Griezmann, Dele Alli, Roberto Carlos and, recently Yannick Bolasie, are the only players who can pull it off.

However, EA Sports has said that if a player pulls it off in real life, they’ll be rewarded with the skill in the game.

Talk about an incentive.

Mind the (virtual) gap 

As Germany defender Mats Hummels explained to FIFA.com: “Obviously, a professional footballer can use his own experience to manage certain situations in the game. Conversely, some people maybe use what they learn in FIFA when they find themselves on a pitch.”

This certainly came in handy for Parma goalkeeper Marco Amelia, who in 2008, saved a penalty from Ronaldinho before proclaiming: “It was just like playing against him on PlayStation. He had the same run-up. It was very strange.”

It’s not the first time in-game player behaviour has inspired action in real life.

Cristiano Ronaldo was heavily motion captured for FIFA 18

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Cristiano Ronaldo was heavily motion captured for FIFA 18

Arsenal youngster Alex Iwobi revealed to the New York Times that FIFA helped him improve parts of his game.

The winger was particularly fond of Aiden McGeady, who despite being far from a world-class player in real life, was a formidable force on FIFA.

“He had one turn that I would go out into the garden and practice,” Iwobi said.

Lionel Messi – the first PlayStation footballer 

After Arsenal’s Champions League loss to Barcelona in 2010, Arsene Wenger said of Messi: “He’s like a PlayStation. I think he can take advantage of every mistake you make.”

The comparison is hardly surprising, Messi has always had a close relationship with football video games.

Arguably his style of play set the tone for the dominance of PES’s gameplay in the early 2000s, given that he was used for majority of their motion capture process.

And he’s obsessed with gaming. His team-mates report the Argentine would spend up to three hours a day after training playing football video games.

He even takes the Barcelona tactics from the training ground on the TV screen, using possession to frustrate his opponents.

FIFA 17 used the Frostbite engine – allowing for even greater player likeness but FIFA 18 took realism to the next level

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FIFA 17 used the Frostbite engine – allowing for even greater player likeness but FIFA 18 took realism to the next level

“I love playing PlayStation online with people who don’t know who I am,” Messi told The Sun.

“When the match is complicated I keep the ball in defence.

“I play from one centre-half to the other and the opponent gets angry. I do it to kill time on the clock.”

How ratings affect player behaviour

As the gap between the real and the virtual closes, bonds between players and their digital representations become tighter.

Stats are no longer just random numbers, but are now calculated with an almost scientific-like methodology.

In-game avatars now provide an accurate and objective view on how players compare across all attributes – from speed and strength, to free-kick accuracy, passing and dribbling ability.

Consequently, professional footballers care more now about their FIFA rating than ever before.

So much so that The New York Times reports some agents have even called up EA to beg for upgrades for their players’ ratings.

Ronaldo celebrates in the FIFA 18 – which has come under fire from fans since its launch in September

EA SPORTS
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Ronaldo celebrates in the FIFA 18 – which has come under fire from fans since its launch in September

Retired French midfielder Edouard Cisse revealed on FIFA.com: “I even know of players who’ve changed their own stats in the game, but if a team-mate finds out… it’s pretty embarrassing!”

When FIFA 17 arrived last year, Chelsea’s Michy Batshuayi publicly expressed his disappointment to EA after receiving what he thought was an uncharitable passing rating. He tweeted: “59 passing… so weak”.

Some players went one stage further.

Everton’s Romelu Lukaku, for example, used a ratings snub as fuel to continue improving in real life.

More recently, Bolasie bombarded EA Sports via Twitter, claiming he should be able to able to do the El Tornado in game as it’s eerily similar to his trademark ‘Bolasie Flick’.

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What next?

As every aspect of players’ games are put under the microscope, FIFA scores have clearly become a real motivator to drive and improve performance on the pitch.

Given the focus on hard data and statistics, and the seriousness with which EA’s numbers are treated, it’s surely only a matter of time before a player is signed on the back of their FIFA rating.

After all, a few years ago, Sports Interactive – the team behind Football Manager, reached an agreement with Prozone Sports to provide data to leading clubs to help identify talent.

Image result for pes 2017

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PES 2017 sold 40 times fewer copies than FIFA 17 – something needs to change

What is abundantly clear is just how synonymous FIFA has become with the real game – from the EASPORTS-branded match statistics to the Sky Sports-style FUT pack walkouts, the boundaries between the two worlds of gaming and professional football are becoming ever more blurred.

We’ve always thought of managers, agents and now footballers themselves as the main powerbrokers in football – are gaming developers about to become major players too?

WATCH THE EL TORNADO ADVERT BELOW.