Sunday 24 November 2013

Five Things We Learnt From Watching Football This Weekend - Week Twelve

1. Merseyside Madness
The Merseyside derby has been lacking a bit in recent years. Not so much in passion or full heartedness, but certainly in terms of quality and genuine entertainment. All that changed this weekend with a match that wasn’t just the best derby in recent times, but the best the top flight had offered for several years. Liverpool fans may well point to the incorrect decision to award Kevin Mirallas a yellow rather than a red for a recklessly high tackle on Suarez, but such an act would have ruined what then evolved into a farcical end to end battle of attacking intent. The managers deserve full credit. Gone was the pragmatism of previous derbies, replaced instead by passing, pressing football and a desire to score goals. Rodgers brought on two extra attackers in the last 20 minutes when his team were merely drawing. Everything you could want from a football match was here, from wonderful goals and moments of sublime skill (anything involving Countinho) all the way through to hopeless defending, misplaced passes and blood curdling tackles. A draw, ultimately, was the fair result. Everton’s superior number of chances offset by that Mirallas decision and a ridiculous open goal miss from Joe Allen. I watched the match in a large pub filled with probably around 200 fans made up of both sets of supporters, enthralled neutrals and tragic fantasy football followers. There was huff, bluster and a lot of heckling throughout. But come the final whistle almost everybody in the entire pub stood up and applauded, an action I have never witnessed in a non-international match. This was football as it was meant to be. Pure and simple, theatre.

2. Where have England’s wingers gone?
Not so long ago you looked to the national team and saw several viable options to play on the flanks. The midfield conundrum remained and England have never really found a number 9 since Michael Owen, but out wide you had Joe Cole, Aaron Lennon, Ashleigh Young, Theo Walcott and Adam Johnson all in form and impressing. Now only Theo Walcott remains of that group to have a chance of going to the World Cup, and he wants to play as a striker. Injuries and confidence eroded the form of Cole some time ago, whilst Lennon never looked as comfortable in the white of England as he did at Spurs. But few players have faced such career nose dives as Young and Johnson. Two years ago the former was England’s best player in qualifying for the European Championships. He’d just moved to United and had started his career in fine style; creating chances, winning penalties without the aid of absurd swan dives and scoring goals. Since that opening season he hasn’t scored at all, a barren run now stretching over 30 matches. He has become the poster child for cheating and his career looks, if not over, in huge need of a change of direction. Johnson has fared arguably even worse. Not because he’s been playing badly per se, but because people seem to have genuinely forgot that he exists. Playing in a team who have won less than 10% of their matches since his arrival has not helped, but Johnson still has ability in his locker and, at 25, remains somebody who could yet turn his career around. So now England’s options, besides Walcott, seemingly consist of Andros Townsend and Adam Lallana, both fine prospects, but two people who have only been capped in the last few weeks. Oxlaide Chamberlain is a talent, but an injury prone one. And then there is James Milner. Which is so depressing a thought I’m just going to end this here…

3. If referees should be consistent, why can’t managers?
If there’s a cliché that gets thrown around more than “referees need to be consistent” I’m yet to hear it. Referees will continue to get things wrong because they are human and are expected to make decisions in less than a second. Plus it’s hard to be consistent, week in week out, with nine other people all taking charge of different matches each with their own set of unique circumstances. No, what I’d like to see more of is much easier and attainable… and that’s manager consistency. It’s part and parcel of the game that there will be times when you get a decision that goes for you and times that you don’t. But do managers really have to be so, so obvious with their post-match analysis? There have been some absolute howlers from referees these last few weeks, yet no manager has had the courage to come out and lambast a referee for making the wrong call in their favour. Jose Mourinho may have been correct regarding his apology rant, but he certainly wasn’t correct by claiming that Ramires deserved a penalty for falling over as the opposition player got within a yard of him. Would it really have hurt Roberto Martinez this weekend, after just witnessing his team be involved in the game of the season, to put his hands up and say he was very lucky that Mirallas didn’t get sent off? No, instead the usually affable Spaniard claimed he “didn’t think it was a red.” Really Roberto? I’d hate to see what you do consider a red card if a wild, knee high lunge isn’t worthy of one. But if I’m going to single out anyone it has to be Mark Hughes. Fresh from getting a point at Swansea with the most invisible penalty decision in the history of the game (“I can see why the ref gave it,” mused Mark – no… no you can’t) – Hughes followed that up this week by claiming Wes Brown deserved to be sent off for a challenge that took precisely none of the man and all of the ball. It was “reckless” claimed Mark. When it wasn’t, it was merely fast. It was a “poor challenge,” he added. It wasn’t, it was a great challenge. “It took the shine off our performance, we played really well today.” No they didn’t. Sunderland dominated the game early and were undone by a decision that will be overturned within 3 seconds of an appeal. I understand football is all about mind games and managers defending their players… but for fucks sake guys, there is surely no harm in admitting you got a lucky break once in a while. It will make next week’s rant when you do get a howler far more credible for starters.

4. Man City are now barely credible
City’s record doesn’t tell the whole story, but it still paints a decent picture so it’s worth mentioning it straight up. At home it reads played 6, won 6, scored 26 (26!) and conceded 2. Away from home it’s played 6, won 1, drawn 1, lost 4; scoring 8 and conceding 10. That’s a big difference whichever way you look it and you’d be hard pushed to find two back to back games that highlight the difference more than the two City have just played. Anaemic and gutless at Sunderland, City once again tore into a team on their own patch from the moment the whistle was blown. AVB is a meticulous tactician so he must have known City were going to come at his team from the off? Was this really the game to throw Erik Lamela into? City, and Aguero, Nasri and Toure in particular are as ruthless at home as they are toothless away. Which begs the question… why? This is a team which now has a goal difference the same as their points tally. A team which boasts, in Aguero, the only current candidate for player of the year with Aaron Ramsey. City have Swansea next before three away fixtures and Arsenal. You feel that Pellegrini has to get 10 points from that run if his team are going to be considered a genuine title threat. At the moment, they remain a curious and wonderfully entertaining enigma. I hope for Michael Laudrup’s sake he has done his research going into next Sunday. Here’s a clue. For the first ten minutes. Just. Keep. The. Ball.

5. Who is the worst striker in the league?
This season has been dominated by strikers so far with Sturridge, Suarez, Aguero, Remy, Van Persie, Rooney, Lukaku and Giroud all banging in the goals. Only Aaaron Ramsey is averaging a goal every other game as a midfielder, a far cry from last year when the likes of Mata, Hazard, Walcott, Santi and Bale were helping themselves to goals a plenty. But at the other end of the spectrum some are struggling worse than ever. Berbatov has scored once in over 15 hours. Cisse hasn’t scored at all in 11. But when comparing the worst of the lot three in particular stand out, all from clubs propping up the foot of the table. The first is Modibo Maiga, who has not scored for West Ham this season and has played so badly that his manager would rather play no striker at all, at home, then put him in the starting line-up. His confidence probably not helped further by missing an open goal on Saturday. Marouane Chamakh is well used to be slated in blogs up and down the country, mainly because he is a truly terrible footballer. But, crucially because he has scored two premier league goals in three years. And then, finally, there is Jozy Altidore. Who is yet to score for Sunderland since joining them for a barely credible £7.5m. The American had previously flopped at Hull a few years back and has so far scored a single Premier League goal in… wait for it… 35 hours. Just to break that down. That’s the equivalent of watching the entire extended version of the Lord of the Rings trilogy, three times over. With the Hobbit chucked in for good measure. But seriously if you want to go home and recreate Altidore’s feat, consider one thing. Don’t watch the Hobbit. It was shit.

Sunday 10 November 2013

Five Things We Learnt From Watching Football This Weekend - Week Eleven

1. The title race is back on... for everyone.
Just 6 points separate 8 teams following Man Utd’s “hard fought” (Citation: painfully ground out) victory over Arsenal. Sky once again suffered a “Super Sunday” meltdown as three games featured successive 1 nil wins; whilst over at the Britannia the fans were treated to a 3-3 thriller featuring late drama, wonderful football and well, crucially, lots of goals. City’s away blues returned whilst it was another collective failure in front of goal for AVB’s men. Granted, Tim Krul had one of those games which keeper’s dream of, but Spurs have scored one goal in five hours of league football. And that was a penalty. It’s not entirely clear what Jermaine Defoe has to do to get a start in the league, presumably wear a Soldado mask or teleport into the misfiring Spaniard's body? All of which brought us to Old Trafford where we were all treated to the worst match of the season to date. Yep, even ones involving West Ham. Utd scored with just about the only chance of the game and that was through a set piece. Arsenal were horribly jaded and badly need some players back to rest the likes of Ozil, Ramsey and Giroud. Utd meanwhile, as they always seem to do against Arsenal, did enough to get the points and no more. Rooney was his usual self, RVP scored with his single touch of the ball all match, but other than that only Phil Jones can claim he played well of the 20 plus players who graced the pitch. Keeping Jones fit and playing every week is vital to Utd finishing in the top 4 each season. Not because he’s that good a player, but because he has the spirit of Fergie flowing through his veins. He never gives up or gives less than 100% every minute of every match. How Utd wish they could channel that sort of effort, commitment and focus from a collection of midfielders now so inept that I’m pretty sure Rooney is playing all of their positions for them. As we lunge into an international break (translation: reading week) with all the enthusiasm of Shinji Kagawa in a 50/50, let us consider for a moment that when we return Arsenal host Southampton. And if they lose that match... Saints will be top of the league. Rule Britannia.

2. Anfield is a fortress once more

5 wins from 6 and with 13 goals for to 3 against, Anfield is finally looking the home ground it was of yesteryear again. Since Rafa left, the problems with Liverpool have been countless, but few more so than the crumbling ruins that had become their home record. Rodgers finally looks to have arrested that slide; and only Southampton have come away with any points this season. Indeed, that result is looking for from an embarrassment given their current league placing. Liverpool were back in the groove on Saturday, dismantling a Fulham team which, in all honesty, my 6-a-side club could have beaten. Jol’s time looks up; his team are full of flair but lack honesty and fatal individual mistakes are creeping in at will. There are few strikers in the world, certainly this side of Ronaldo and Messi, who are capable of taking advantage of such flaws as Luis Suarez. I remain unconvinced by Suarez in the bigger fixtures, and some Champions League football would certainly do him no harm, but against anyone who is struggling he is ruthless. He is the home test, flat pitch Indian batting line up of footballers. If the conditions are right, there is no stopping him. Suarez took himself to the top of the Premier League goalscoring charts this weekend. Which is ridiculous given he missed the first five games through suspension. It was also nice to see the club keep a clean sheet again with Daniel Agger restored to the starting line up. Proof, once again, that the big bosses read the best blogs...

3. Cardiff need goals

Discussions over Cardiff city and relegation seem to have mostly passed like ships in the night thus far this season. The Welsh club have always managed to win a match when it looks like they might get in trouble, plus the failings of some of the teams below them have been more obvious or... well, interesting. The general consensus has been that as long as their owner doesn’t do anything stupid, Cardiff have enough organisation and defensive nous about them to stay up. That may or may not prove to be the case. Over 38 games, it remains goals that tend to keep you in a division rather than clean sheets, and right now Cardiff do not look like scoring very many. 9 in 11 games isn’t disastrous, but given 3 of those came in one absurd match... 6 in 10 really doesn’t look good at all. No striker has scored since that Man City game and their top scorer is currently a centre back. There is much to admire about Cardiff. They have a strong work ethic and seem to have a genuine relationship with their fans which several top flight clubs lack. But, crucially, they are fucking boring. And if there’s one thing this blog hates... it’s boring.

4. Man City really can’t win at Sunderland.

4 games... 4 one nil defeats. Man City cannot score at Sunderland let alone beat them. The big wolves from Manchester huffed and puffed on Sunday afternoon but once again were repelled by stoic defending, wonderful goalkeeping and some very bad luck. Sunderland, and the superb Wes Brown in particular, stood firm. This remains an impossible to predict season, a fact epitomised by Newcastle turning around their form with back to back clean sheet victories against Chelsea & Spurs. City must have thought they’d put their away form to bed with that thumping win at West Ham, but this was very much a return to their frustrating worst. Aguero aside, the creativity was nil and Ya Ya Toure once again went completely missing away from the safe confines of the Etihad. Vincent Kompany remains a big miss in these sort of fixtures, especially when the manager picks his other defenders by random generator. City are still in the hunt for the title, as if everyone down to 8th such is the tightness of the league and Arsenal’s history of implosion. But they cannot afford too many more of these performances if they are to still be in with a chance come May.


5. Jose still has the luck, if nothing else
A stuttering Chelsea salvaged a draw and preserved Jose’s implausible unbeaten home record in the process this weekend. The late penalty however, an absurdly generous decision which almost redefined the term “a homer,” could not mask the failings of the special one’s team for the second successive game. Chelsea did not, to all extensive purposes, improve their squad in the summer. They didn’t buy anyone of note up front, in central midfield or defence and instead littered their team with more inverted winger/number 10’s. This was a Chelsea team who did not challenge for the title in any way last year remember. A Chelsea team who’s best player, Juan Mata, can no longer get in the starting line up. Frank Lampard hasn’t scored since the opening day, a barren spell of 10 games for a player who historically averages a strike just over every 2. And now, finally, the defence is starting to concede again. John Terry’s “form” at the start of the season looked more like an anomaly of statistics than the farcical calls to get him back into the England team would have you believe. He has been terrible the last two games, showing his age and unable to prevent his team conceding 4 goals to Newcastle and West Brom. Many people, myself included, thought this was a great Chelsea squad that was underperforming. That the mere presence of Jose back in the dugout would be enough to see them claim another Premier League title in a wide open race. Of course, the latter statement still being true, they are far from out of it. But this is not a convincing second spell so far. Chelsea have not noticeably improved in any way from last season; and indeed look blunter going forward than they ever have. Whisper it... but Rafa Benitez was doing a better job.

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Sunday 3 November 2013

Five Things We Learnt From Watching Football This Weekend - Week Ten

the concise, sleep deprived with sickly child edition

1. The fallen one trumped the special one.

Jose Mourinho has never won at Newcastle, and this weekend he was once again outdone in the grim, post-apocalyptic wasteland that is the North East. Alan Pardew is many things, questionably human being the first that springs to mind, but he remains a fine manager and this was a good a tactical performance as this season has yet offered. Pardew dropped his most creative player and instead played with highly disciplined wingers that tracked back and offered continuous cover to the defence. He matched up with Chelsea in midfield, dropping one of his strikers deep to pick up Lampard or Ramires and gave constant, fine tuning instructions to his troops throughout the match. Chelsea started well but appeared to give up after the break, as if lacking the mental nous to break down such stubborn resistance. Jose was lost as to why, but he shouldn’t have been. This was very much the Chelsea team who have finished 15-20 odd points off the pace for the past two years. This was Newcastle’s day and they, and their manager, deserve full credit for the win.

2. What are Crystal Palace doing?

Rock bottom and with little to no chance of survival anyway, you’d have thought Crystal Palace would have sped up their search for a manager a little by now? Since sounding out Tony Pulis they have turned their attention to Alex Mcleish (for no reason) and Chris Coleman (for literally no reason). Pulis is a hugely unlikeable manager, both in terms of persona and playing style. But at least he’s decent at his job and is a miles better option than those two? They also spoke to Martin O’Neill. A call which probably lasted about three seconds. Perhaps they’ll just give it to Millen for the hell of it. Palace’s squad is just about the worst I’ve ever seen in a Premiership and if they stay up this year it will be the footballing equivalent of the Titanic emerging from the sea 100 years later with everyone on board alive and well. I mean... Marouane Chamakh. Why Palace? Why?

3. Why can’t Daniel Agger get a game?

Liverpool started the season with a centre back duo of Agger & Toure and kept three, successive clean sheets. Following an injury Agger then missed the next game and only played part of the one after. Since then though, he has been fit as a fiddle and benched for five games on the spin. Two further things have also happened in the 7 games since his injury. Firstly, Liverpool have changed to playing 3 centre backs rather than 2. Secondly, they have not once kept a clean sheet. Is Rodgers suggesting that Agger cannot play in a back 3/5 and only in a 4? Or has he genuinely forgotten the Dane is comfortably the best defender at the club? Given how flat footed Liverpool’s defence was on Saturday, it is fast becoming an inexplicable omission that almost nobody seems to be mentioning.

4. Aston Villa lack creativity of any description.

West Ham being involved in a 0-0 draw with anyone isn’t news (4 out of 10 matches so far... expansive) - but whilst Villa have taken big strides to shore up last seasons leaky defence, they seem to have done it at the expense of going forward. They created next to nothing on Saturday and have now scored in just one of their last six games. Indeed, they haven’t scored at all in over 6 hours. Paul Lambert needs bodies back and fast. And he needs to make someone to supply the goals to Benteke the absolute priority in January. Villa’s new found resilience will probably be enough to keep them up, but the big Belgian won’t be around again come the summer if he is starved of service to this level.

5. The stats never lie.

I’m so tired I’m now barely capable of speech, so instead of a final point here is the Opta/Premier League Stats team of the season so far. Based on algebraic formulas that nobody understands... and goals. Mostly just scoring goals.



Boruc

Walker Lovren Fonte Vertonghen

Ramsey Ya Ya Toure Lallana

Aguero Rooney Sturridge



https://twitter.com/HinduMonkey