Archive for May 31st, 2011

Adidas: Own The Game Event – Video

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

adidas lately hosted an exclusive event to promote the launch of their new adiPower Predator boot, inviting football bloggers and selected fans to join the adidas crew and adidas sponsored footballers in testing out the new Predator, as well as hosting a football match between football bloggers (Soccerlens’ scored 2 goals and won the man of the match, heh!).

Props to adidas for hosting an awesome event and for inviting Soccerlens. Here’s a video montage of the event:




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United In Character: The Good And Bad Of Ferguson’s Manchester Reign

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

As Manchester United parade their 19th league title, the rain-soaked celebrations are an proper metaphor for the 2010/2011 season.

On one hand, they’ve won their 19th league title (12th under Ferguson), a title United fans wanted far more than the Champions League for the last two years, and a title they’ve richly deserved. To put this title win into perspective, Chelsea won the league title last season with just 1 point – 1 goal conceded or one chance gone begging that that turned a win into a draw and pushed United to second place. In stark contrast, United won this year by 9 points – a clear margin of three wins much more than any other team.

On the other hand, Saturday’s loss to Barcelona a rude slap, a bucket of cold water thrown over this season’s celebrations, and a performance that left United fans (and players) feeling hollow and numb. The discomfort of United’s second defeat in three years to the exact same team, in the identical manner, was only alleviated by the brilliance of the three goals produced by Barcelona. Soon after all, if you let them play, they will tear you apart. Once again.

But that is in the past. Barcelona have their 4th Champions League trophy (their second under Guardiola), their third consecutive league title and Manchester United have their much-sought-right after 19th league title. All eyes ought to focus on the future, on the next two months as United brace themselves for a squad revamp, a summer tour to the US (where they play…Barcelona) and one more season with Ferguson at the helm.

I’ll leave it to ROM and Zonal Marking to analyse the final, let’s look at United’s future. In a two-component feature, you’ll read about how how Sir Alex Ferguson influences the club (below), and later on, what United need to do in this year’s summer transfer window.

Ferguson’s Manchester United

It’s always been the club over any single player, and by that extension, the manager over any single player as nicely. You don’t argue with a man who has lasted 25 years at one of the finest football clubs in the world and won an astounding 12 league titles in the process. He has much more trophies than many ‘legendary’ managers combined. If you ask me who’s knocked Liverpool off their perch, it is Sir Alex Ferguson. He has moulded the club in his own personality over the last two decades and the consistency, by no means-say-die attitude and a relentless desire to win has been evident in the club all through the years (see a prior post on Ferguson’s impact on Manchester United’s playing style).

But you also need to have to acknowledge the very good with the poor. And as considerably you herald Ferguson’s man-management skills and his brilliant football brain, you also have to question some of his policies and tactics.

Team v People

An obsession with control over his team’s fortunes means that Ferguson will always prioritise the team over a single individual. This has manifested itself in numerous ‘conflicts’ with star players at the club (the most recent being his decision to marginalise Berbatov), but possibly a lot more importantly it is his focus on creating players for the team as opposed to helping them fulfill their natural talents.

In the last 10 years Ferguson has built his teams around three people, forcing everybody else to adapt to the method to such an extent that arguably quite talented footballers who would have been good for United given more playing time at a young age have been somewhat frittered away.

When Ferguson built his team around Ruud van Nistelrooy, it was Diego Forlan, given a bit-component role where he necessary consistency, endure a torrid time at Old Trafford. When Ferguson built his team around Cristiano Ronaldo, not only was Ruud jettisoned but the likes of Nani and Anderson, brought the season following United won their very first league title in four years, got precious little playing time on the pitch as Ferguson time and time again returned to experience moulded to his team’s values instead of allowing youth the time to develop. It was as if you could only succeed at United if you sacrificed yourself for the team – character has often been ahead of footballing capability for Ferguson.

And now, as he builds (and rebuilds) his side around Wayne Rooney, there’s an additional crop of players young and old who will be marginalised. We’ve spoken of Dimitar Berbatov above, but you can put Michael Carrick in the identical category. Carrick, a player who can not play alongside Scholes (simply because Scholes is then the director and Carrick’s principal strength – his dual capacity to pass and intercept passes – is wasted) and yet is typically asked to play second fiddle to the fading master. Carrick, a player who won United their 1st of four league titles in five years, just like Berbatov has been essential for this year’s title.

And then there is the case of Fabio and Rafael, partially delayed by injury, and then by the likes of O’Shea and Patrice Evra ahead of them, and now while they are sufficiently talented to play for United, they haven’t gained the expertise they really should have in their years at the club, and will take one more year or so to develop into secure initial-team options.

The most damaging outcome of Ferguson’s selection process has been the stunted progress of Anderson, and to some extent, Nani as nicely. Even though Nani has developed well he, like Berbatov, continues to be marginalised by players who are supposedly much better at playing ‘for the team’. It’s a valid argument but it also begs the question – why sign Nani if he’s not going to be a standard starter at the club? Why not give the player sufficient experience – wherever that perhaps – to develop to his possible if you’ve spent funds on signing him?

Anderson though is a diverse story – many years at the club and his lack of positional sense – 1st exposed in a Champions League away game against Roma – meant that he rarely got a chance ahead of other players, and then injuries played their component as nicely. He’s now shown that he can score objectives too, but the kid is frustratingly talented and however not given the requisite match time at the correct age and stage of his development to increase his mental aspect of the game.

Now this isn’t a whinge against Ferguson – United have, soon after all, just won their 4th league title in 5 years (after winning it twice in the preceding five years), played in 3 Champions League finals in 4 years and are inarguably the greatest English club of the last two decades. And this success has been built on attacking, aggressive football, focusing on clinically dismantling the opposition.

But there is a human price of this success too, and it manifests itself in the unfulfilled possible of numerous of the players that passed via United in the last decade as Ferguson increasingly turned to expertise and mental strength over prospective talent and capability.

Understanding From Tactical Errors

Calling Ferguson a non-tactical manager is a deeply flawed claim. It ignores the fact that this manager has, over the last decade, lost to and then adapted to beat his closest rivals – this includes Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and even Manchester City. But there is also the undeniable fact that Manchester United lost twice to Barcelona employing the identical tactics – tactics that United are not built to execute to perfection, tactics that, if a single mistake is produced, can be ruthlessly exploited by an opposition as skilled as Barcelona.

Where United necessary to press, they stood off. Where United needed to stifle Barcelona’s central spine of Valdes, Pique, Busquets and Messi, they gave them space to play their game. Where United required to take their limited chances, they fluffed them.

Effectively, United lost the battle not in Rome or London but in Manchester, when they trained to play in a way not suited to toppling the opposition. This was a case where United did not adapt, as they have been so great at performing over the last two decades. And it brings home a glaring statistic – where United have been majestic in the league (12 league titles in much less than 20 years), they have been strangely unequipped to compete in Europe.

Soon after 2006, Ferguson created a concerted alter to United’s tactical approach and that has brought the club consistent success and progress to the final stages, and yes, United have been unlucky to face the greatest team in world football twice, but you still feel that this team would have learned from Jose Mourinho and Arsene Wenger, and their own performances of 07/08 and 08/09, and tackled Barcelona differently. Specifically considering that they had been more of a ‘team’ this season than in recent years.

But they didn’t, and it just might be that Ferguson, even though supremely capable of masterminding sustained domination of league competitions and two-legged knock out ties, still wants support when it comes to 1-off tactical battles where the team requirements to be able to change gears and approaches rapidly. He is the king of consistency and soaking up pressure over many seasons, pressure that has seriously affected the well being of a young manager like Guardiola. Nevertheless, in a 90 minutes tactical battle with little prior exposure and no second chances, Ferguson can be bested (and has been numerous times over his career).

Really a few fans have spoken about bringing in somebody like Carlos Queiroz, but whoever comes in ought to be able to work with the players on tactics long before they get to the Champions League final. It wants to be a person new, somebody with fresh tips and a modern day, fanatical, obsessive approach to winning matches. Possibly the next Villas Boas or the next Guardiola.

Whoever it is, he will be as essential to the team as the players United need to sign this summer to challenge Barcelona once again next season. And as Sir Alex Ferguson plots yet another title winning season, he knows far more than anyone else that he need to adapt once again to keep Manchester United at the top of the footballing ladder.

Part Two: What Manchester United Must Do To Knock Barcelona Off Their Perch




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What Manchester United Must Do To Knock Barcelona Off Their Perch

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

The obituaries becoming written about Manchester United’s OAPs for the last five years are now finally relevant. Gary Neville and Edwin van der Sar have retired, Paul Scholes may have by the time you read this post and Ryan Giggs is holding back the development of younger players with more long-term value to the club.

Add that to the expected departures of Tomasz Kuszczak, Owen Hargreaves and Michael Owen (and / or Dimitar Berbatov) plus the require to push out younger players with no future at the club, and you have an expected 9-10 exits from the club this summer. These players will require to be replaced, from the youth team as well as via new signings.

In spite of the heart-breaking numbers of Manchester United’s debt and interest payments, the new owners have also brought a windfall in commercial revenue and Ferguson will have significant transfer funds accessible to him if he deems it needed to purchase talent.

The initial thing Ferguson requirements to do is to sit down with his staff (or in a room by himself and a bottle of wine) and select the United side for next year’s Champions League final. Merely put, if United had been to face Barcelona again in the 2011/2012 Champions League final, which of the existing United players would Ferguson pick for the beginning XI (and the bench)?

Players not fit to fight for the Champions League final next year, or players lacking the possible to develop into future stars – these require to leave this summer. The only caveat is that squad players that are essential for winning the domestic league can stay, supplied that they are delivering far more value to the team than the money they are becoming paid.

If Barcelona have become the benchmark against which each team is measured, United, a team unsatisfied with becoming second-finest, need to locate the tactics and personnel to beat them. It is time for United to knock Barcelona off their perch, and that starts with rebuilding the existing squad.

If you look at the current Manchester United squad in this light, specially the beginning XI from Saturday’s final, only Rooney, Carrick, Ferdinand and Vidic would be sure starters. United will require a new keeper regardless, although Fabio has much to do to prove his worth as a beginning option (although he has sufficient value to the club as a lengthy-term option), and Evra, while still an important player, wants a successor who is much more positionally conscious and defensively sound than the French left-back.

Valencia, Park and Hernandez would make the bench at finest in an ideal United side for next season, but each delivers plenty of value to the squad (similar to Evra), while Giggs in my books, value or not, really should not be near the 18 players producing up the matchday squad for the next final.

That is a remarkable challenge that Ferguson and the United players face. Ferguson now has yet another year to develop his existing players to the levels needed to beat Barcelona, and also to bring in new players that can play at those levels and fit in with his philosophy (hopefully with far better tactics).

Ferguson has spoken about the want for United and other leading teams in Europe to catch up to Barcelona. He’s appropriate about football teams moving in cycles – Manchester United’s had been themselves overtaken by Arsenal, who had been then overtaken by Chelsea, before United fought back and has, to the dismay of a lot of observers, stood firm in the face of strong challenges from Liverpool (one more cycle), Chelsea and Arsenal in the last five years.

But if we’re talking about cycles, Ferguson knows as a lot as anyone else the value of knowing what to aim for. The days of asking players to give their absolute greatest at half-time are lengthy gone, Manchester United are effective enough in the Premier League and the initial stages of the Champions League by being brutally consistent, but to overtake (or catch up to) Barcelona they will either need to have to retool the team or develop an efficient program B that wins them games not just against Barcelona but at times, the likes of Arsenal and Liverpool.

This new cycle for United need to begin now. United have learned to bypass their midfield completely in the last five years but that can not continue forever. This summer they will play a friendly against Barcelona in the US, a nonsense game that will nevertheless show what United have learned tactically (if anything, they ought to learn to press far more and play as a far more compact unit). This summer they will also embark on a substantial revamp of the playing squad, both in personnel and in expectations as young players are pushed to take on much more responsibility.

Fairly a couple of possible transfer targets have been mooted – but idle speculation does us no good. David De Gea and Raphael Varane are the only two players who are in advanced discussions and close to signing, whilst United only have Liverpool as competition for Ashley Young. Whoever else Ferguson signs will be based on the players leaving the club, and it might be that a central midfielder like Modric or Rodwell or even Nasri, and a striker (no clues but if Berbatov goes there will be a signing needed) will also be coming in alongside these 2/three players.

New signings will need to have to fit the team’s tactical outlook for the next five years, and have to be balanced alongside the promotion of youth / reserve players such as Cleverly and the sending out on loan of players in need of match expertise. Ferguson need to determine on the lengthy-term future of Nani and Evans. Both are talented, both are also exceedingly frustrating. United’s experiments with Evans and Smalling in the left and right fullback positions had been promising sufficient to suggest that Evans may be a lot more at property on the left as a backup for Evra.

With Nani, Ferguson need to either give him a lot more responsibility (ahead of the likes of Giggs, Park, Valencia and Hernandez), or think about cashing in on him in an year where his stock is at it’s highest since his arrival at Old Trafford. Fergie typically sells late, so Nani is unlikely to go until he’s turn out to be entirely expendable.

Manchester United will survive this ‘hiding’ from Barcelona, but they need to work challenging to make certain this doesn’t take place a third time, and equally crucial, they need to have to start preparing the team for the next Champions League final, just as Ferguson prepares his team for winning the league title each season. The challenge for Ferguson is to pick the correct tactics and the right players, and he has an year, not a couple of weeks, to program for it.

Part 1: United In Character: The Great And Poor Of Ferguson’s Manchester Reign




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