Unfortunately I think the height issue does enter into a lot of coaches thinking. You can argue that it shouldn’t, but I’m sure it does.
One other thing to consider is that while Nisbet might only be an inch or two shorter than Maradona, in the 30-40 years since Maradona played I suspect the average height of a professional footballer has increased by 3 inches. So Nisbet’s height versus his contemporaries compared to Maradona’s height versus his contemporaries, means Nisbet appears 4-5 inches shorter than Maradona in relation to other players at the time.
Also, to state the obvious, while Nisbet is a serviceable player he is obviously nowhere close to Maradona.
Years ago in the old FFA coaching system pre Guus, Kelly Cross, held a seminar on:
1.Man marking trend in World Youth Tournaments.
2. Height of players from nations playing in them.
The average height of South American teams was really short - something like 1.74 metres, compared to many UEFA teams being 1.83 - 1.86 metres average.
I think Argentina won the comp, but it showed height wasn't a decisive factor in results. Apart from the much shorter Spanish teams when they won the WC and Euro Champs in about 2008 - 2012 and the Portuguese national team, I think a fault of many European teams is too much height.
Maradona and Messi are incredibly nimble - and - are shorter players. Nisbet and these two greats tend to have quicker turning and better mobility than taller payers.
Xavi Hernandez and Iniesta were shorties too.
In Aus Jordi Valadon and Rhys Youlley, classy young midfielders, both superb technicians on the ball are shorties too.
In the TWG or 442 a poster posted an article in circa 2007 about the American obsession , and Australia's, of producing football athletes over football players. In the early days of the A League, SBS had weekly match of the weeks from Argentina. Their players were small and puny compared to the relatively huge Aussie AL players on average!
The new NC and changed methodology in Aus has had state TDs ram down the criteria used for selecting young underage rep players, is technical proficiency - not the big strong athletic prowess of paramount importance pre 2006.
It is only top teams like Argentina, Brazil, Portugal and the Spain of 10 years ago ( have not seen them much since), who have the quality to expose the overly big cumbersome UEFA teams.
Even watching the Italian teams in their Cup, there are too many big, tall players in most teams I've seen.
I feel bad about denigrating Scotland's lack of football technique and tactics, because it is one of my favourite countries to visit, but to their credit they have a few shorties in their teams. However, they are usually very strongly built.
I think it is a good attribute in Aus that shorter technical players like Nisbet, Valadon, Youlley, Segecic ( not that tall), can flourish in a new, different era in football.
Getting back to Kelly Cross's presentation, he claimed the South American coaches said they just didn't have lots of tall players in those countries. They often had a tall keeper, two tall CBs and sometimes one tall target striker in a team and that was about it!