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ANCELOTTI HAS FAILED HIS TEAM

On Thursday night, it was a familiar tale for Los Blancos against Atletico, Atleti were compact, defended deep and with robust physicality, took their chances and got the job done against their arch rivals. Madrid fans will point to key mistakes at important times during the game.

THE DEFENSIVE MIDFEILDER:AN ARTIST

In recent times, it is often said that the art of defending is dying in the modern game, that the obsession with free-flowing attacking football by so many managers in the game today has made defending become secondary and people forget the fact that you might score three or more goals and not win

WHATS HAPPENING AT ARSENAL: MY TAKE ON THINGS

Its been a pretty grim couple of weeks for Arsenal starting from the absolute capitulation against Anderlecht to losing our 15-month unbeaten home record to a severely weakened Manchester United team.

FINDING MARCO'S PLACE

It is no secret that Marco Reus’s contract at Dortmund is nearing it’s end. It is also no secret that a release clause in his contract will be activated in 2015. As expected the top teams in Europe will already be scrambling for his signature as he is arguably one of the best and most promising talents in the football universe at the moment.

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Monday 12 September 2016

SUMMARY OF MAJOR DEALS BY TOP CLUBS IN EUROPE

The transfer window came to an end a while ago, and no matter the team you support, you cannot help but admit that it has been a very eventful one. A lot of players were linked to a lot of teams, and while some of these links materialised, to the disappointment of some fans, they did not. The most expensive so far was Manchester United’s re-signing of their youth product Paul Pogba for a fee of £86 million in a deal bound to rise to an excess of about one hundred million pounds. Outrageous to some, Paul Pogba’s transfer was greeted with happiness by the United faithful, as he was an addition to the already star studded list of transfers they had already made which included names like Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Henrikh Mkhitaryan and relative unknown Eric Bailly would feel like it was a profitable window this summer for United. Their “noisy neighbours” across town have also made some seemingly positive reinforcements this window. Manchester City made quite a number of significant signings this summer, bringing in players like Nolito, Ilkay Gundogan, Claudio Bravo, Leroy Sane, John Stones and the talented Gabril Jesus. Chelsea made a number of signings including the capture of Olympique De Marseille’s Michy Batshuayi, but the most notable remains their recapture of David Luiz from Paris St. Germain. Liverpool have not been quiet either, signing Loris Karius , Georginio Wijnaldum, Ragnar Klavan, Joel Matip and Sadio Mane. Much to the surprise of Many, Arsenal fans also seemed quite content with their team’s transfer dealings despite some nervy moments between the period they signed Granit Xhaka and when Lucas Perez and Shkodran Mustafi were added to the team.
Meanwhile across Europe, Barcelona snapped up a couple of key players including Lucas Digne, Paco Alcacer, Andre Gomes and Samuel Umtiti. Atletico Madrid added to their ranks Kevin Gamiero, Nico Gaitan. Real Madrid recaptured Alvaro Morata, making him one of the latest players to return to his former team in a transfer window where that has already happened a couple of times already. From Madrid to Paris, as PSG spent the summer getting the likes of Hatem Ben Arfa, Jese Rordiguez, Grzegorz Krychowiak and Thomas Meunier. In Germany, Bayern Munich got the teenage senation Renato Sanches and also recaptured Mats Hummels from Borussia Dortmund whilst Borussia Dortmund recaptured Mario Gotze from Bayern Munich and got hold of Moussa Dembele, Emre Mor, Mario Goetze, Marc Batra, Sebastian Rode, Raphael Guerreiro, Dzenis Burnic, Andre Schurrle. The round up concludes with a look at Juventus who completed arguably the most controversial of the summer with the purchase of Gonalzo Higuain for £76. 50m. They also completed another controversial acquisition of Miralem Pjanic from AS Roma. Moraccan International Mehdi Benatia came in from Bayern Munich. Dani Alvez, Marko Pjaca, Mario Lemina, Juan Cuadrado were also brought into the club.
It has been a busy transfer window for most clubs in Europe. All the transfers made make football fans and pundits alike ask the question “Who did the best business?”. In all truthfulness, this question can only be answered by time. We watch and season how it all pans out, for now, enjoy the season



By Dopamu Jojololaoluwa W.s

Monday 5 September 2016

WHAT IS A DEFENSIVE MIDFIELDER? EXAMINING WHAT IT IS TO PLAY THE POSITION AND WHY MOST TOP TEAMS PREFER A MEDIOCENTRO

Ask most what a DM in football is and they most will reply you "defensive midfielder". This is true on the surface of it, but what most mean when they say defensive midfielder is a destroyer. Football is like a science. It evolves. From a tactical stand point, things change from time to time and can also be recycled from years gone into use in the present. Now the "destroyer" or "Makelele role" as some would say is from an era gone. We are in the era of a DM not necessarily being a bruiser who intercepts, tackles, hassle and does the work in the defensive phase or defensive transition, we are now in an era of a deep lying player maker or a mediocentro or regista (as they are known in Spain and Italy respectively).

It is for a fact that most top clubs in Europe (class A and B) employ a player of this profile. Barcelona (Sergio Busquets), Bayern Munich (Xabi Alonso), PSG (Thiago Motta), Juventus (before his ACL injury Marchisio). Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid and Manchester City are the only other clubs not mentioned here. Pep Guardiola will surely implement that with Fernandinho/Ilkay Gündogan. Atleti have a "special" way of playing so they are exempted from this. This leaves the current European champions, Real Madrid. It is a strange case. The club adopted the idea of having a mediocentro with Xabi Alonso contrary to popular opinion that the club hasn't had a "dm" since Makelele. Then after the Spaniard left, Toni Kroos was drafted into the role. The German is a cerebral player and he took to that role slowly and steadily. He played the role for a year under Carlo Ancelotti, played there a few times under Rafa Benitez. The other times he didn't play there under the Spaniard, Casemiro, a destroyer in every sense of the word, was drafted in. Under Zidane, Kroos returned to the dm role again, but after the Madrid derby defeat in late February, Casemiro became a starter for the club whenever he was available. At the time it was seen as Zidane trying to give the team shield while he worked on other aspects. The off season has come and gone, Real Madrid made no real efforts to sign a box to box or another mediocentro. Zidane was interested in Paul Pogba, but Florentino Perez wasn't willing to pay the asking price and that was that. It now seems that Zidane has planned for this season with the Casemiro has the holder. Most would agree that it is okay considering the club won the champions league with him as holder. This is true, but it is also true the club had a rather easy route through to the final. You could argue that, there's no 3rd midfielder in the current squad, but James Rodriguez performed that role well under Carlo Ancelotti. Isco started playing the role under the aforementioned Ancelotti and still plays there well enough. Mateo Kovacic although he doesn't play there often those have the attributes of one who will excel there. The issue now is, what type of DM Real Madrid should play with. A destroyer (Casemiro) or a mediocentro (Kroos). A club of Real Madrid's nature, it is essential, a mediocentro is occupying the deeper midfield role. Now I'll describe the basic responsibilities it takes to play the role.

* Build up: The player in the role must take charge of this phase and know when, to whom and at what pace to pass the ball to a teammate in order to advance the play in an organised manner. Merely passing it or hitting diagonals is not enough. Each pass must carry a meaning and an idea.
* Offensively: The player must offer/create a consistent passing lane to his teammates in order to add ball circulation at various points of the build-up 

* Defensively: The player must be able to do what a typical destroyer would, intercept, tackle (when needed), hassle and also form part of the defence when it becomes necessary to do so.

From the above description, most destroyers carry out only the defensive phase and do very little when it comes to the build-up & attack phase. This reason on the surface explains why most teams who play with a mediocentro play better aesthetically pleasing football, because they have one more player to facilitate and essentially be the brain of the 1st phase of the build-up.

Using the two players used as case study, we apply their attributes to the role.

* Casemiro: Getting this out of the way, the Brazilian exhibits most the traits you expect of a player of his profile. The player most times is over zealous and goes in for the ball aggressively which will tend to recover balls for his team as much as giving away free kicks. The Brazilian lacks the positional awareness to anticipate where the ball will likely be played and how best to place his body in order to win possession without going to ground. In the attacking phase and build up phase, lies the major problem with Casemiro and this position. Basic understanding of how to start or indeed facilitate the build-up in the first phase and at any other phase do not exist. Ability to also use the ball with or without pressure is also minimal for the player. You can see it in his game, that he avoids having the ball as much as possible. Although when forced to, he can pass it but there lies a sense of nervousness with the ball.

The graphic here shows Kroos deeper, after passing it to Casemiro, the Brazilian immediately knocks it backwards towards the centre backs

The graphic here shows Kroos deeper, after passing it to Casemiro, the Brazilian immediately knocks it backwards towards the centre backs

* Kroos: Toni in one word. Cerebral. He understands every phase of the pitch through years of playing as a number 10, a normal central midfielder and the times he played deepest. Match this to his incredible ability to give a pass from any area of the pitch to another to precise accuracy. Always trying to involve team mates as much as possible. From side to side, vertically, into the final 3rd. Left or right. Defensively is where the problem comes with the German. There exist a myth that when pressed, he loses possession easily. This isn't necessarily true, he has an excellent body shield on him which results in him winning fouls most times or finding an angle to pass off the ball whilst protecting the ball from the opponent. The defensive good traits of Kroos, is his pressing and interceptions (this is severely underrated). The German will barely go in for a slide tackle and his pressing comes off as passive at times. He also isn't fast nor is he aggressive and for this reason can easily be beaten in a 1v1 which could leave his back line exposed.


 At Real Madrid currently, there is a myth that Casemiro brings balance and frees up Luka Modric & Toni Kroos. This is true in the defensive phase only, but outside that, the Brazilian offers next to nothing in the build-up phase and offensive phase. It is clear at this point that in the face the does not offer the balance and freedom to his midfield partner but rather handicaps them as they drop often to perform duties meant for the Brazilian.   
The image shows how the two interiors (Kroos and Modric are deeper than the actual “dm”)


This problem seems clear to team as a whole, as the defenders now see to ignore the Brazilian in the build-up phase and try finding other team mates
Notice Kroos trying to help Sergio Ramos dictate by pointing to Casemiro, but he is ignored with the defender preferring the longer ball forward which is lost as shown below


The graphics used to describe these two issues may have been from one game, but this has been a reoccurring occurrence in the game play of Real Madrid. A lack of confidence from the team and the player himself to gain possession is a problem as much as having him in the team is "solution". 


An argument could be made it is better to play Casemiro as the safety measure as his flaws in the role are less harmful to the team as is Kroos' flaw in the position. This argument is not necessarily true because, in time, teams will notice this issue and try to offset it by applying a press in the their attacking and midfield zone which as shown by Real Sociedad & Celta vigo in the first two games, will need to be seen through by either dribbling or passing through, both of which instantly nullifies Casemeiro and makes Real Madrid handicap, with ones less player in such tight situations. Real Madrid won those 2 games, but neither would be called a vintage Real performance. Clearly the quality of players at the club mean games will be won regardless of this tactical handicap but there also will be days when the quality will have off days or the quality of players on the opposing side will be on par whilst having similar knowledge of how to stop this Real Madrid team. Those are the days when the club could suffer most by dropping points on off days or failing to beat teams that could harm them with quality too (in CL for instance)

To conclude this piece, the demands of the roles have been explained. Also, defending is not exclusive to the defenders and the DM. Football is a team sport should be done as a team. Not one position or more is limited to specific duties. Defending should be done as a team, as unit, with each player knowing doing their part for the collective good. Therefore, it is in my opinion that in this era, where the elite clubs want to play aesthetically pleasing football as well as win games,S having a mediocentro over a destroyer as your "DM" is absolutely paramount.


Monday 29 February 2016

REACTION TO ARSENAL FROM MANCHESTER UNITED VS ARSENAL (3-2)



  In what could turn out to be the biggest bottlejob Arsenal have produced in the Premier league under Arsene Wenger, Arsenal were effectively rolled over by a Manchester United team missing a number of key men, one that had no natural central defender and a number of inexperienced players in the XI. You look at the teams on paper and it was almost a no brainer to go for an Arsenal win but for those of us that have been following this club for long enough, we all know of the x-factor of this club which is the ability to produce bottlejobs literally from thin air.

  Starting with the lineup yesterday, we were supposed to be lined up as a 4-2-3-1 and I guess defend in a 4-4-2 as we have been doing for a while now but however, due to the personnel involved yesterday, we effectively had a 4-2-4 and left the 2 in the midfield pivot with a sea of space to cover which left us basically crying out to be counter-attacked and that turned out to be the case with the 3 goals conceded coming from effective and quick transitions by United and fairplay to them for how well they ended up playing but I feel we really did basically play into their hands. There was an interview recently where Olivier Giroud said we are our own worst enemies and its hard to disagree based on this evidence.

  It is very easy to point at players and say "You know that Aaron Ramsey guy is shit you know, Barca robbed us for Alexis, Walcott is a pub player etc". The fact is looking back today after removing myself from the flood of emotions that came after the match, I realised that our squad is full of what I call niche players. These are players that thrive either only with a certain type of player next to them or within a particular gameplan/system basically. I'm a big Aaron Ramsey fan (and yes I know he was terrible yesterday even lucky not to be sent off) but its clear he is one of these niche players. Think of Aaron at the peak of his powers, you see him receive the ball in the second phase of play, make a clever pass to advance the move, arrive later from midfield to finish the move. Notice I said second phase, as its quite obvious Aaron is not suited to being in charge of the first phase of play as he is not what you would describe as a controller thus meaning he has to be partnered with someone ready and able to do that job as we saw was the case when he was partnered with Mikel Arteta. Francis Coquelin and Mathieu Flamini are nowhere near this ilk thus its no suprise Ramsey struggles beside any of them. They (like Ramsey) long to have a distributor beside who is happy to receive the ball from the defence and effectively play passes in between the opposition's lines to the likes of Mesut Ozil and Alexis Sanchez to allow them attack the opposition's defence and thus create chances/take shots. Speaking about that defensive midfield position, I wrote about the importance of the position a while back on this site Here. I personally feel that in order to move forward though, we need a defensive midfielder in that deep lying playmaker ilk to take charge of the first phase of play because in a team like Arsenal we are going to have more of the ball than our opponents in at least 70% of the games we are involved with which makes the first phase of play very very important. Quite frankly it is mind boggling that we do not have such a player in the squad and that has to be another string to the "Wenger Out" movement's bow. The jury is still out for Mohammed El Nenny as from what we've seen, he is seen at the same level as Mathieu Flamini which is worrying. Although, El Nenny's cameo yesterday was a bright spot in the whole disaster.

  Now, Theo Walcott, my goodness, his performance yesterday would be the outcome of an experiment to create a diabolical performance in a lab. He had just 17 touches, lost the ball 10 times and made only 6 passes, also didn't take any shots. However, is there anything that was suprising in all honesty? Theo is limited and is the definition of a niche player. What he is good at, he is quite good at but offers nothing much more. Theo is good at attacking space and latching on to through passes and slotting home but he doesn't offer more. The fact he is our top earner is quite shocking but again surely this has to be on the manager because we all know his limits. In the 12/13 season, The team was built to service his strengths and he delivered 21 goals in that season. However, I feel there is no way him or in fact Giroud should be first choice at this club if we are to reach where we want to be.
  
  Now, there's a feeling from a large number of Arsenal fans that if Cazorla was fit, everything would be alright based on our 2015 form. I really disagree because I feel that front 6 of Coquelin-Cazorla Ramsey-Ozil-Alexis Walcott was flawed because the midfield pivot could not function without a central midfielder out wide (anyone who disagrees should watch and compare our 2 matches against Bayern Munchen) which then forces us to need our left winger and centre forward to be outlets and from close inspection, Alexis doesn't seem to instinctually want to be an outlet and then Walcott, my previous paragraph is enough for his case. It was just a system that just didn't seem sustainable at all as it just could not cope with injury or loss of form to any of those players as without Cazorla, we could not build, without Coquelin we could not defend, without Ramsey, the pivot was exposed. To be fair that team sort of has the feel of a patch job. Ultimately again, you have to feel that we need more investment for where we are trying to reach in European Football.
  
  Now, this season, Honestly, I feel like the dream of winning the Premier League in this season that has done everything to spoonfeed us the title is gone and ultimately I do not feel that there is any case to defend Wenger's position because it is literally the definition of insanity. I would love nothing more than to eat the words I just typed and drown myself in alcohol and joy in May but ultimately I feel we should at least review the situation in the summer even if we do win the league. I think questions have to asked about where we are trying to reach in the game and what steps we are taking to reach that point. However, we have a board with hardly anyone who is a footballing man that can try to hold Wenger accountable and try to shepherd the club to where we want. Ultimately, I feel that Arsene is someone right now who would rather not do anything than risk making a mistake. Look at our transfer business and team construction over the past few years and you see that Wenger has essentially stumbled upon things by accident, the current squad agrees with that, the likes of Coquelin and Bellerin support that notion in the sense that they have done well but let's be honest, no one would have counted on them when planning for the season and rightly so. It becomes a case that maybe the wrong signings like Santos, Gervinho, Park, Squillacci, Podolski and Arshavin have scarred him and this is a job where any ounce of cowardice should not be entertained. We are actually trapped in a vicious cycle of do well, hope for the investment to push us, Wenger lets us down, we bottle in a key period and around and around we go. It’s quite sad. However, it should be noted that with the kind of board we have, Wenger leaving could leave us off worse as he virtually does everything in the club. Maybe we should consider bringing in a Director of football but I guess my point is things should be looked at at least at the end of the season because at the end of the day, it’s the fans that are left to suffer.


Tuesday 2 February 2016

WHAT IS GOING ON AT CHELSEA FOOTBALL CLUB?



Over the past 5 months this question has been asked repeatedly, punctuated by shocking performances from the champions of England. The giants of South-West London had fallen, suddenly and abruptly, seemingly without warning. This article does not aim to give a clear answer to the problems at Chelsea Football Club as that would take more insight and time than I currently possess.

The 2015/2016 season for Chelsea fans has been in many ways a lucid, immensely saddening nightmare. In isolation its been a horrendous season for England’s most successful club over the last decade, but add that to the fact that they are reigning champions and you get an even bleaker picture. Practically everything that could go wrong this season has done so (bar a league double over Arsenal, yay small victories). Those two victories over an opponent that hasn’t seriously threatened us in a league match since the dark days of AVB stand our only consolation.

A shocking preseason showing (Losses to Fiorentina, NY Red Bulls etc.) coupled with a largely underwhelming transfer window (Papy Freaking Djilobodji and the John Stone debacle) prior to the season that should have ushered in a new Chelsea dynasty should have sent alarm bells ringing but they didn’t. The manager at the time sent veiled shots at the board for not buying to strengthen the team significantly, as other rivals had done, City being at the foremost of this. Instead we started the season with no marquee signings and a squad of first team players who had without needed competition for places had grown complacent. What we then saw at Chelsea over the next couple of months was hard to quantify.

The rot seemed to pervade every area of the first team; the defense that won the league the year before capitulated spectacularly, conceding 5 goals in the first two games. Whilst Ivanovic and co. showed us the true meaning of a horror show, Fabregas and Matic (two immense performers last season) proceeded to play at levels so low rumors of dressing room spats and mutiny became commonplace.  Diego Costa (unreal loss of form and concentration), Falcao (mostly injured, baffling signing) and Loic Remy (bit of injury and poor form) all played their part in the early season debacles, some more obviously than others but culpable nonetheless. Pedro showed early flashes after being signed but ended up fizzling out spectacularly. Willian (a player I have admittedly bashed online for being a waste of space) has been the only consistently above average player at the club this season, some posit that seeing the signing of fellow right-winger Pedro boosted him to give match winning performances.
The next player to be assessed gets his own little paragraph and you can already guess whom. Eden “No Show This Season” Hazard, the mercurial, supremely talented Belgian who won all there was to win domestically last season. A player so lauded that his manager thought it fit to infamously compare his season with that of a certain Cristiano Ronaldo. As I write this blog post Cristiano Ronaldo has scored 30 goals this season, pretty amazing numbers from the prolific Portuguese, especially when compared to the solitary goal for Chelsea’s Belgian wunderkind (Penalty versus MK Dons). A full dive into what exactly Eden Hazard has done wrong this season would require numerous pages but for brevity’s sake I’ll be succinct. HE HAS BEEN UTTER POO. Poo enough to let the club and fans down as the champions fell into the most unlikely of relegation battles.
The board of the West London club had to react to this immense slide didn’t they? They surely did and in pure Chelsea fashion too; Jose Mourinho was sacked. This being a decision that characterizes the quick-fix mentality that has enraged fans and critics alike for years. To fix symptoms and largely ignore the larger issues while enraging fans is what Chelsea’s board seems to do best. It is well known that Chelsea is not a particularly well-run establishment, a club with no clear plan for the talented youngsters in the academy or those out on loan. The emergence of young stars like Dele Alli, Eric Dier and Hector Bellerin at Chelsea’s London rivals this season make the club’s failure to truly utilize the verve of youth all the more disappointing for fans.
 Constant changing of managers has also meant no real lasting strategy in acquiring stars for the first team as well. For Chelsea to move forward a total rethink of the club’s power structure is absolutely necessary. I highly doubt we will be able to attract top managers who will be ok with being hamstrung in the transfer window as Jose was in his last season. I wonder what would persuade a top manager to sign on to a project that is notorious for taking the players’ side when things go south. Things really aren’t looking up for the boys from SW6.
The article was to end on a high note, as Chelsea is unbeaten under interim manager Guus Hiddink and recently trounced MK Dons 5-1 in the FA Cup. Alas the often-despicable Chelsea board have struck again, John Terry is being allowed to leave the club. Now there are not enough swear words available to fully describe how the majority of the fan base (myself included) feel about this abysmal decision. As with legends before him the club captain will be disgracefully ushered out of the team when he still has so much to give. Granted Terry is 35 and nowhere near his peak but his ability to lead and influence others around him can’t be understated. Chelsea fans are deflated, the season continues to disappoint and daunting matches (PSG, City and United) are on the horizon. I hope to write again at the end of this season, to determine the exact level of disaster this season has turned out to be. Till then COME ON YOU BLUES.


*Header image sourced from http://www.swlondoner.co.uk/24539-2/