It’s a special team that can win a treble of trophies. Sir Alex Ferguson knows what it takes to stay the course on three fronts, and last night Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona demonstrated, in winning the Champions League Final, why they are currently the most special team on the planet (and Andres Iniesta possibly the best player, even at less than 100% fitness).
It has to be said that the United team that was put out last night was soundly beaten, both physically and tactically. Too many players looked out of sorts and floated on the periphery of the game. Ferdinand and Vidic flailed around as if they’d never played together. Anderson looked nervous and never seemed to recover his composure after his awful early air-shot. Wayne Rooney barely had a kick in the Barca half, he spent so much time galloping back after Carles Puyol (surely this should have been roles reversed). Even the seemingly indefatigable Ji-Sung Park seemed off the pace. The game just passed Ryan Giggs by completely.
After his tactical masterclass against Arsenal, Ferguson looked to get the same high tempo start that would rip into his opponents. For 10 minutes it looked like it might work. Then Barca settled into their rhythm and started to pick their way through the United midfield at will.
Guardiola’s tactics were spot on, he knew his team would be better going forward, and also realised what United’s fairly predictable personnel, formation and tactics were going to be, so adopted a simple ruse to use their strength against them.
During the first half, Barca keeper Victor Valdes often had the ball as United attacks floundered on a final poor pass. But instead of a long throw out or a kick, he rolled it out to a defender standing inside his own area. Guardiola had obviously realised that with Rooney, Ronaldo, Park, Anderson and Giggs being encouraged to press the ball at a high tempo, they would immediately push up, leaving a gap occupied solely by Michael Carrick. It was into this gap that Iniesta and Xavi constantly drifted, completely unmarked, and free to angle pass after pass into the heart of the United defence. The much vaunted contest between Messi and Evra never materialised, purely because Messi and Henry just came inside to thrive on the huge amount of possession that the two midfielders had.
It seems strange that having seen Chelsea play almost the perfect game against Barca at Stamford Bridge, where they had one shot on target in 95 minutes, Ferguson didn’t realise he needed to fill his midfield with the types of players who would deny Iniesta, Messi and Xavi time and space on the ball. Ryan Giggs, Anderson and Michael Carrick are certainly not the personnel for this task, and instead they gave Barca the freedom of the Stadio Olimpico.
The head to head between the dynamic forwards never materialised, Barca’s triumvirate of Henry, Messi and Eto’o added their 98th and 99th goals of the season, whilst United’s Fab Four barely managed a shot on target after the first ten minutes. Certainly Victor Valdes would have anticipated a much busier evening.
A victory for the Barcelona is a victory for the style in which they play. Sticking to their attacking principles and relying on the fact that they will always score (apart from against Chelsea in the Camp Nou) is a fine philosophy, and is now backed up by a fairly solid defence (even missing 3 first choice players).
Allowed to play their own game, the difference between the sides was the midfield dominance of Iniesta and Xavi. If ever Ferguson has been taught a lesson, it is that the finest teams in Europe need forward thinking creative midfielders who can pick a pass. Paul Scholes was pretty much the epitome of this role, but it’s now obvious (even to him from recent interviews) that his time has passed. Carrick is not this type of player, Giggs is also too old, and Anderson lacks finesse (strangely for a Brazilian). I would imagine Ferguson will go shopping for a new midfielder or two in the summer (Franck Ribery would cheer up most United fans). He will also be acutely aware he never replaced Roy Keane's battling prowess or leadership - not one United player seemed capable of rousing them from the trance Barca had them in. A fit Owen Hargreaves would be a massive benefit (as good as a new signing) if he can turn up on time.
Ferguson was magnanimous in defeat last night, and conceded that the best team had won. It must be seen as a victory for Guardiola, who has rebuilt the Catalan side, stripping out the superstars who had fell into a comfort zone (Deco and Ronaldinho), and relying on an influential spine of players who have come up through the famous Barcelona youth system. Namely Valdes, Puyol, Pique, Busquets, Iniesta, Xavi, and Messi. Of the starting 11 last night, Barca had paid fees for only Henry, Eto’o Sylvinho and Toure (and Pique when he returned from United). Sir Alex would have been similarly proud in 1999 with his “kids”.
Thursday, 28 May 2009
Friday, 8 May 2009
Hatton vs Pacquiao: The Fallout
This is a response to a really good blog written by Sky Sports Adam Smith regarding Hatton's preparation for the fight. http://www.skysports.com/opinion/story/0,25212,13841_5298489,00.html
A few of us were saying the way the fight started that Hatton didin't look comfortable with the Southpaw style, something which we've not seen too often. As soon as that first right hook went in and it seemed a total shock to Ricky, we were starting to get worried, and within the next few seconds we were proved right. here's a right hook. And another. Fancy another? Ok, and goodnight.
I can't believe that nobody in the Hatton camp decided enough was enough with Mayweather and his "training"; having watched a fair bit of 24/7 the guy's his own biggest fan. And not the sharpest tool in the shed if some of the stuff he came out with is anything to go by. The bit about not using southpaw pads is shameful - and if Lee Beard stood by and let this happen there's no way he'll be coaching Hatton if he carries on.
In contrast Freddie Roach was ultra professional and obviously a student of the fight game - the hours he spent watching Hatton on film are summed up by the comment he made about him cocking his hand when he's about to throw. Read him like a book. Congratulations to Pacquiao and Roach, tactically superb.
I'd like to see Ricky have one last fight at the MEN, if the medics reckon he's up to it. He had no movement and was there to be hit all night with his hands down. We've seen what happens to fighters who let themselves get hit. Freddie Roach being one. I think a British title fight might be an idea, or maybe an up and coming Brit like Kell Brook. Although it'll never happen, he'll end up with some journeyman he can tear to bits then call it a day.
A few of us were saying the way the fight started that Hatton didin't look comfortable with the Southpaw style, something which we've not seen too often. As soon as that first right hook went in and it seemed a total shock to Ricky, we were starting to get worried, and within the next few seconds we were proved right. here's a right hook. And another. Fancy another? Ok, and goodnight.
I can't believe that nobody in the Hatton camp decided enough was enough with Mayweather and his "training"; having watched a fair bit of 24/7 the guy's his own biggest fan. And not the sharpest tool in the shed if some of the stuff he came out with is anything to go by. The bit about not using southpaw pads is shameful - and if Lee Beard stood by and let this happen there's no way he'll be coaching Hatton if he carries on.
In contrast Freddie Roach was ultra professional and obviously a student of the fight game - the hours he spent watching Hatton on film are summed up by the comment he made about him cocking his hand when he's about to throw. Read him like a book. Congratulations to Pacquiao and Roach, tactically superb.
I'd like to see Ricky have one last fight at the MEN, if the medics reckon he's up to it. He had no movement and was there to be hit all night with his hands down. We've seen what happens to fighters who let themselves get hit. Freddie Roach being one. I think a British title fight might be an idea, or maybe an up and coming Brit like Kell Brook. Although it'll never happen, he'll end up with some journeyman he can tear to bits then call it a day.
Wednesday, 6 May 2009
Never give up, never go out
On the back of two fascinating Champions League semi-finals, I feel it's certainly worth taking a look at the tactics of the coaches in order to compare the worth of the two victorious teams.
United vs Arsenal was reasonably well poised from the first leg, mainly due to Manuel Almunia's heroics at Old Trafford. There was always a possibility that Arsenal's young guns could appear in the mood to play that fantastic free-flowing football which from time to time we've seen this year.
Tellingly for the rest of the European game, and especially Barca and Chelsea, Sir Alex Ferguson completely read the way in which Arsenal would line up and deployed the phenomenon that is Cristiano Ronaldo straight down the middle to terrorise Kolo Toure and Johan Djorou, allowing Wayne Rooney to roam and thread the through balls. Immediately setting about the home team with powerful and pacy thrusts, United put Arsenal's youngsters on the back foot before they'd even begun to get even the remotest attacking idea. Two goals in the space of 3 minutes knocked the stuffing out of Arsenal, with even Wenger's face being resigned to defeat as he held his head in his hands.
11 minutes in and game, set, match Ferguson. Garry Kasparov would have been proud. Sizing up your opponents strengths and turning them into weaknesses is a mark of a tactical master, something Ferguson has never been appreciated for, as was alluded to in commentary last night. Realising the youthful exuberance of Arsenal was also a weakness was simple, working out the tactics to exploit it more of a masterstroke. As he approaches retirement, is there a chance that he's getting even better?
I'm sure Guus Hiddink would certainly have applauded Ferguson's tactics, particularly in light of Chelsea's suffocation of Barcelona at the Camp Nou. The Chelsea boss realised that allowing Barcelona's one touch maestros to "wall pass" their way through the middle of the park would have resulted in carnage - with Iniesta, Henry, Messi and Eto'o getting through at the (fairly)ponderous Chelsea centre halves. Instead Hiddink played an athletic and powerful formation through the centre, which forced Barca to go wide and play crosses in to the aerial strength of Essien, Ballack, Terry and Alex.
Tonight's second leg was 2 minutes away from being ultimate confirmation of Hiddink's managerial nous, with Chelsea restricting the best footballing side in Europe (apologies United) to pot shots and not one test of Petr Cech in 92 minutes. With a far more positive outlook in the home leg, Chelsea can feel particularly hard done to, as they could have been awarded 3 or 4 penalties, and seen Barca out of sight in the rear-view mirror if Drogba had his finishing boots on.
The same team, this time deployed to negate the threat of Alves and Messi worked entirely. Hiddink has even managed to make Florent Malouda look like a hardworking midfielder, rather than the winger-lite he had become under the last 2 managers. Essien looks like he's one of the best players on the planet, Drogba bullied the centre halves like the player of old, and Terry and Alex looked totally comfortable in such a way that Carvalho didn't appear to be missed.
It's a real shame that Hiddink and Ferguson won't come face to face in the final, although Pep Guardiola will really have learned a lesson from Hiddink - being able to adapt your team's tactics to the opposition is a talent that sometimes even Arsene Wenger struggles with. Having more than plan A is a neccessity, and Ferguson will have realised that Barca currently don't appear to have plan B. Their first shot on target flew past Cech, breaking Chelsea hearts in a game they will feel should have been theirs.
The Champions League final should be an technically impressive game, particularly if Barca allow United time to construct from deep. And a large pitch in Rome should suit both teams, so a fairly open game could be on the cards. The decisive factors may be the fact that Barca will be missing 2 speedy fullbacks through suspension, and that Rooney managed to avoid the same. United's power and pace around the Barca defensive third should prove too much. Prediction time, which in this blog is an inconsistent art, I say 2-1 United.
Labels:
Arsenal,
Barcelona,
Champions League,
Chelsea,
Man United
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