tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-89464796843032433852024-02-08T09:46:05.186-08:00dioforce.insight on the European game from an American who's been to England once.ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.comBlogger120125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-82519215613898841822011-03-13T17:20:00.000-07:002011-03-13T17:20:45.040-07:00Rooney justifies midfield ambitions in balanced display against Arsenal<em>Employing Rooney in Scholes' role instead of continuing to shoehorn him as an out-and-out striker he is not is the only scenario I can envision really unshackling Rooney's remaining and decreasing potential.</em><br />
<br />
<em></em>Well it's about bloody time.<br />
<br />
Sir Alex Ferguson emerged from his carefully-carved thinking box and finally employed <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/wayne-rooney">Wayne Rooney</a> in the center of midfield for <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a>.<br />
<br />
Granted, it was only a bit-part performance: Against <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/arsenal">Arsenal</a> on Saturday, Rooney was still, at most times, the second-most man forward.<br />
<br />
But, particularly in the first half, he played like he was part of the midfield instead of someone without any defensive duties.<br />
<br />
His head was on a swivel. He was involved, almost happy, pointing and directing traffic on defense and grabbing the ball deep to alternatively create triangles and slowly press upfield or ping it himself over the top through to Hernandez, occupying Rooney's old position. It was almost beautiful.<br />
<br />
He even intimated that Ferguson did it on purpose, which is both refreshing and surprising.<br />
<br />
"The work effort from the two lads on the wing, and we had me and Gibbo just in front of O'Shea, and I think it worked out well," the Englishman said. <br />
<br />
"We worked hard. We stopped them getting through-balls to the forwards and we knew we could catch them on the break which we have done over the last few years against Arsenal.<br />
<br />
"It was a gritty performance from us."<br />
<br />
Hernandez was the target man as Rafael and Fabio also flew forward giving Rooney the foundation to really ply his inherent traits.<br />
<strong><br />
Why did we have to wait 65 million years for this?</strong><br />
<br />
And his traits are well-documented, just as this paradigm shift from his manager—if it's even that—is long overdue.<br />
<br />
I wrote in 2008, advocating Rooney behind Berbatov and Tevez when the English striker was characteristically off-form and their rotation up top became counter-productive:<br />
<br />
<em>While they are healthy, the situation could easily be manipulated to the side's advantage, but it requires a break from dogma for the Scottish manager.</em><br />
<br />
<em> Ferguson's parochial approach to playing Rooney at the expense of Tevez must be shifted to slotting Rooney behind both [the Argentine] and Berbatov in an attacking midfield role.</em><br />
<br />
<em>Rooney is a workhorse. His penchant for tracking back is actually maligned when he is playing striker; slot him into a supporting role, and it would be glorified.</em><br />
<br />
<em> In addition to his work-rate, Rooney is a brilliant creative passer and a team leader. He is quicker and stronger than Carrick, and might even be better in the air. </em><em> </em><br />
<em> </em><br />
<div class="article-image"><em>The energy he harbors playing forward, which, as said, is often expressed rashly and impudently, could easily be displaced throughout the midfield. </em></div><br />
<em> There he can win balls and orchestrate forward movements: passing, firing long-range shots, and making late runs trademarked by the ginger-haired master.</em><br />
<br />
Not a lot has changed. United still have two other strikers in more consistent form. Carrick is still shite. Why not get Rooney on the field in a position he can really express himself?<br />
<br />
He could play the defensive in role in midfield better than the lanky Englishman while passing better, being faster, stronger and with better cardio and vision.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, Wayne would absolutely revel in being able to constantly pick up the ball off the backline, eliminating the inevitably of them aimlessly booting it downfield to him.<br />
<br />
He'd also love tracking other playmakers because players with huge egos love tracking other players with huge egos. Trust me.<br />
<br />
He could start from deep, work triangles through the park, ping Hollywood balls from corner to corner, flying tackle people, throw elbows willy-nilly, spit to his heart's content, be closer to the referee to yell "FACK OFF", <em>and</em> get sent off more.<br />
<br />
Where's the downside?<br />
<br />
Rooney has always been a better footballer than a striker.<br />
<br />
<strong>Different formations an' that</strong><br />
<br />
It doesn't really matter what tactics the gaffer wants to use, our Scouser would fit finely.<br />
<br />
Even a center pairing of Rooney and Scholes is more combative than the Ginger Prince and "The Friendly Ghost" proved against <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/chelsea">Chelsea</a> two weeks ago. There United's center midfield were overrun in the second half, Fletcher marooned out wide.<em> </em><br />
<br />
Then Ferguson again started Carrick and Scholes in the middle against <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/liverpool">Liverpool</a> in front of a depleted backline. This time Rooney was the one marooned incorrectly in left field and thereby abysmal. United conceded more space and looked more amateurish than they had at any other time this season.<em></em><br />
<br />
To be sure, in a 4-4-2, Fletcher should be the first midfielder on the teamsheet. Pairing him with Rooney is an equally creative—but substantially more bottled—alternative to Scholes and especially Giggs.<br />
<br />
In a four-man midfield, if the ginger one isn't up to task—injured or otherwise, employing Valencia, Nani, Fletcher, and Rooney is much more appealing on paper than any other possible attacking array.<br />
<br />
Ferguson's infamous 4-5-1 with Hernandez or Berbatov up top with Rooney, Scholes, and Fletcher supporting makes an otherwise ineffective and undesirable formation seem absolutely dreamy.<br />
<br />
<strong>Sir Alex experiments elsewhere too</strong><br />
<br />
Basically, when it comes to five-man midfields, if it doesn't involve Carrick or Gibson, and has Wayne somewhere in the middle, then it's green pastures.<br />
<br />
Especially since Ferguson also revealed against Arsenal his hitherto unknown or nonexistent willingness to try a da Silva twin on the wing.<br />
<br />
The Brazilians are perfect like-for-like replacements to fulfill a Ji-Sung Park role, except they are much faster and far superior going forward.<br />
<br />
They have fantastic engines and each get well stuck-in—with a grain of naivete, of course, and not that it's always bad.<br />
<br />
They provide rambunctious, more defensive-minded wingplay if ever an overabundance of creativity in the middle had to be compensated for.<br />
<br />
The da Silva twins do so with more attacking panache and ability along the wing than Park, Fletcher, Rooney, or any other player Ferguson would shoehorn in for a more defensive approach.<br />
<br />
<strong>Russian doll phenomenon</strong><br />
<br />
Perhaps most importantly, slotting Wayne Rooney into center middle means Javier Hernandez gets to play more.<br />
<br />
Chicharito gives a completely different look than any other United striker. It's become obvious even to pundits. His forward runs are absolutely electric, opening space throughout the whole park and enabling a<br />
<br />
United counterattack that is otherwise stale without him.<br />
<br />
Hernandez is more natural to the position and more effective in it than Rooney. Already. After half a season.<br />
<br />
Ponch has vast, undeveloped inherent talent, as opposed to Rooney who had talent but plateaued as he became complacent believing was a premier world striker.<br />
<br />
He's the better forward, better alone up top, and a better partner for Berbatov.<br />
<br />
Frankly, the idea of Rooney creating play for the two up top is absolutely spellbinding in theory.<br />
<br />
Whether it plays out in real time is unlikely to be ascertained until next season—a consistent, major postitional shift for Ferguson's most popular player wouldn't take place proper during the culmination of a three-front trophy assault. <a href="http://www.epltalk.com/wayne-rooney-signing-seems-a-little-fishy-25872">Rooney may not even be here then.</a><br />
<br />
But if he is, and if it does, then United and its fans might have finally been rewarded with the replacement for Paul Scholes we've been desperately seeking already for several years.<br />
<br />
It's a move that benefits the team and the player, giving United a younger, energetic version of—and replacement for—their best player of the last 15 years, allowing Rooney the space and role to do everything a relatively complete footballer should be able to do throughout the course of a match.<br />
<br />
<em><a href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">Follow me on twitter ya'll</a>.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-13015559250017544182011-03-07T13:09:00.000-08:002011-03-07T18:26:16.505-08:00The absurdity of Manchester United's midfield and Sir Alex's selectionFor being a legendary manager, Sir Alex sure makes a lot of bad fundamental decisions.<br />
<br />
Especially coming off a hopefully learning loss at Chelsea midweek.<br />
<br />
But Ferguson showed no signs of insight or clarity when he sat Darren Fletcher and played a flimsy 4-4-2 away to his arch-rivals Sunday.<br />
<br />
<b>Selection askew again</b><br />
<br />
Midweek at Stamford Bridge, Sir Alex got about as tricky as he can by playing 4-4-2 away to Chelsea.<br />
<br />
<a _mce_href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/626104-manchester-united-stumble-into-anfield-after-london-bruising" href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/626104-manchester-united-stumble-into-anfield-after-london-bruising">But there he marooned Fletcher on the right wing</a> so Paul Scholes and Michael Carrick could eventually give up control in the second half.<br />
<br />
He should have learned from that display that any 4-4-2 needs to contain the Scotsman or a similar end-to-end player who can both get stuck in correctly and make occasional more runs into the 18-yard-box.<br />
<br />
After all, I wrote about it after the match. Why didn't Ferguson read it? He should really <a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">follow me on twitter</a>.<br />
<br />
But at least he played Fletcher against Chelsea.<br />
<br />
Sir Alex appallingly seated his Scottish nucleus on the bench at Anfield, setting the foundation for an abhorrent losing display.<br />
<br />
<b>Let's not get physical (physical)</b><br />
<br />
The game was always going to be cagey and demanding. So why did Ferguson start his lightest midfield possible?<br />
<br />
Especially when a five-man midfield in games like these had regrettably become his hallmark.<br />
<br />
Giggs and Nani are poor tacklers. The latter particularly lacks defensive sense as well.<br />
<br />
Honestly if you need some steal on either wing and Park isn't available, put another da Silva out there and let him run wild. Hell, the twins could probably interchange along the touchline with some really good football.<br />
<br />
An approach like that against Liverpool (with Fletcher centrally) would have been very helpful.<br />
<br />
But United's longest-tenured manager shows no signs of adapting his thinking or doing it outside of a carefully constructed box. <br />
<br />
United could have gotten away with it, though, if their center midfield had any sort of bottle at all.<br />
<br />
<b>Carrick the friendly ghost</b><br />
<b><br />
</b><br />
Scholes and Carrick are a horrible pairing and it's not the former's fault.<br />
<br />
At least he has credible attributes that contribute to the team in a meaningful way.<br />
<br />
Selecting Scholes is justifiable; his creativity in the middle is tantamount going forward.<br />
<br />
But the Englishman isn't getting forward himself much these days, content, as everyone knows to spray passes from deep with artistry and precision.<br />
<br />
But he needs the right partner. Someone who will go from box to box and really harry opposing playmakers and enforcers.<br />
<br />
Carrick doesn't fit that description. He, ironically, is also content to attempt to do exactly what Scholes does but significantly worse, without equal guile, technique, or vision.<br />
<br />
He tries to get by being being a ninja but he plays like a ghost. He is anonymous, hoping if he avoids detection he can keep being paid egregious amounts of money to have little or no impact on a football match.<br />
<br />
But if you actually watch him individually over the course of a game, wow, he sure is rubbish.<br />
<br />
The waferthin Englishman spent most of United's match against Liverpool standing 10 feet away from his maestro. Scholes was shimmying around constantly trying to get the ball as Carrick watched with mouth agape.<br />
<br />
Meanwhile whenever United got the ball up to their forwards or wingers, there was no one to come knifing into the box late.<br />
<br />
On the other side of the ball, as Scholes threw himself about, the former Spurs midfielder basically played a zone defense and only rarely pressured physically.<br />
<br />
He doesn't assert himself or throw his weight around at all as evidenced throughout United's last two losses and recorded in these margins.<br />
<br />
How has he ever been considered up to an English standard or meeting the grade in Manchester has always been purely beyond me and is archived in all my writings.<br />
<br />
<b>Rooney creates more problems than he solves</b><br />
<br />
Wayne Rooney should be the player to replace Scholes as the club's prime central-midfielder.<br />
<br />
He tracks back, gets stuck-in, and has a very wide passing range.<br />
<br />
Ferguson is considered a genius but this simple idea, written time and again, remains just a pipe dream to those of us outside his rigid paradigm.<br />
<br />
Instead he positions Rooney on the left wing and it is utterly mind-numbing.<br />
<br />
Wayne never touches the ball with his left foot to turn or dribble and it makes his dribbling slower and his turns less effective.<br />
<br />
He could dribble faster if he was are able to use either foot; therefore able to take a decisive touch with every step of a running gait.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, if he can touch the ball and turn and dribble with both feet then not only is the ball protected between his legs, but it will be under his center mass, providing better natural balance and a quicker ability to change direction at any whim.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, he could dribble faster if he was are able to use either foot; therefore able to take a decisive touch with every step of a running gait.<br />
<br />
His array of attacking moves would be diverse and reactive instead of plodding, forecast, and obvious. He might actually get around someone with the ball instead of only rarely getting past them only to be off-balance.<br />
<br />
But Rooney is so one-dimensional. He doesn't stretch play at all on the wing and his dumbfire intention of hoofing in an aimless cross is completely and laughably forecast.<br />
<br />
Is this the United hallmark for football? A left-footer on the right wing and a right-footer on the left wing checking inside to hoof in hopeful crosses?<br />
<br />
I guess so, especially without a central-midfielder getting forward to create play in the final third.<br />
<br />
<b>Evidence</b><br />
<br />
<i>Watch United's possession at 34:27 of the first half</i> against Liverpool. Watch Rooney's inability, then track Carrick all the way until Liverpool get their clear-cut chance.<br />
<br />
It embodies everything I've said and felt for the last few seasons.<br />
<br />
We can still win the league, but it'd help if Ferguson is challenged by someone at his staff to change his parochial, stubborn, failing approach to selection and tactics.<br />
<br />
We've been riding our luck thus far, something that has been consistently mused upon before being confirmed over the course of two regrettable matches.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-9339980553568342352011-03-04T14:50:00.000-08:002011-03-07T14:52:36.280-08:00Ferguson's selection, Chelsea dominance send United packing off to AnfieldWith a trip to Merseyside against Liverpool looming on Sunday, Manchester United have little time to ruminate over the frustrating loss to Chelsea on Tuesday.<br />
<br />
Luckily, I have way more free time than any respectable person and I've decided to spend some of it sitting here typing this bollocks.<br />
<br />
<strong>Errors on the teamsheet</strong><br />
<br />
The Red Devil's loss to Chelsea on Tuesday was pretty brutal. To begin, Alex Ferguson's starting lineup was a little confusing.<br />
<br />
At this point, we're all completely desensitized to him opting for a 4-5-1 in any major away fixtures. He even flirted with it recently away to Wolves and Wigan and went with it at home to Villa.<br />
<br />
Opting instead for 4-4-2 in a situation like this could have been refreshing. However, marooning Darren Fletcher out wide while Michael Carrick supported Paul Scholes against Michel Essien was never going to be enough.<br />
<br />
Carrick has a tragic tendency to get near opposing midfielders without making a tackle. It's crucial to, at the very least, upset another player's balance and timing by putting a body on him. Carrick doesn't tackle often enough or well enough to guard Scholes in the middle.<br />
<br />
I thought this stuff was obvious. I thought Fergie had only been playing him as a stopgap over the last couple months. I was wrong and Ferguson was wrong on Tuesday.<br />
<br />
Scholes is necessary going forward, but he's gotta be protected. He alone has trouble anyways against more physical midfielders. In starting Lampard and Essien, Anceolotti put out a more balanced center midfield than Ferguson. Essien is the best player out of the four and our best midfielder was required in the core.<br />
<br />
Blew it. Right formation, perhaps; wrong teamsheet.<br />
<br />
I would have played Giggs out left, Fletcher protecting Scholes in the middle, and Nani on the right. That's our best four-man midfield, right? Without Valencia, at least. But, whatever.<br />
<br />
<strong>Hernandez enables, Rooney delivers</strong><br />
<br />
Javier Hernandez and Wayne Rooney up front looked good on paper and performed in actual spacetime.<br />
Hernandez was and is the great enabler: He stretches defenses leaving room for any strike partner and both Berbatov and Rooney prefer to drop in that space to pickup the ball, turn, and create play.<br />
<br />
This played out at Stamford Bridge and Rooney benefited. He was flowing forward and using the Mexican smartly, showing fitness and marginally better touch.<br />
<br />
Hernandez was a perfect foil for the Englishman to touch onto whenever he chose to drop in the slot.<br />
Other times Rooney made forward runs and got in behind the defense in an impressive first half.<br />
<br />
Chelsea's defence inexplicably let him carry the ball onto his right foot outside-left of their 18-yard box and Rooney fired a harrowing driven strike low into Petr Cech's bottom-right corner on the 28th minute.<br />
<br />
The shot embodied perfect connection and execution. These long-range driven shots used to be Rooney's motus operanda; shall they become again not even I could deny we'd have a dangerous striker.<br />
<br />
After five goals in five matches, and actually playing well in the outfield, showing engine, and driving forward, the Englishman may actually be entering a run of good form. <a _mce_href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/348199-rooney-must-conquer-inconsistency-complacency-before-evolving" href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/348199-rooney-must-conquer-inconsistency-complacency-before-evolving">His consistency has always been his achille's heel</a>.<br />
<br />
If the Scouser can perform in the northwest derby on Sunday, it'd be a good omen for United in the run out of a congested season's end.<br />
<br />
<strong>Second-half tortures</strong><br />
<br />
The game itself contained some great football. Both clubs played as elite sides in the first half. In the second, things began to unravel for United.<br />
<br />
David Luiz equalized for Chelsea after a scramble in the box that saw Patrice Evra drift inwards intuitively, allowing the centerback space to drive perfectly from six yards inside van der Sar's near post.<br />
<br />
Later Chris Smalling yielded a soft yet not wholly unjust penalty which Lampard converted perfectly.<br />
<br />
In the end, three great strikes created a 2-1 scoreline for the Blues. Nemanja Vidic was sent off late after two bookable offenses.<br />
<br />
Credit belongs to the United goalkeeper for some ridiculous stops in the first half. Hernandez, Rooney, and Nani did well from open play as Scholes still managed to play the right passes inside the midfield despite having poor cover.<br />
<br />
United's manager publicly bemoaned the refereeing performance, but seeming unjustices like this are investments for the future—surely it's been paid forward at this point. Expect some beneficial penalty calls, as ever, in the near future.<br />
<br />
Every now and then we have a great game between two great sides where it's hard to find a player on either team that played poorly. This was that game and I ain't mad.<br />
<br />
<strong>War wagon goes west</strong><br />
<br />
Man United now face the daunting prospect of facing Liverpool away without Vidic.<br />
<br />
How Ferguson will line up his side is anyone's guess at this point. Hernandez has proven to everyone the effect his style has on our attack, importantly opening up play for either strike partner. Antonio Valencia probably won't feature, but is nearing fitness.<br />
<br />
Perhaps Ryan Giggs could start in Scholes' stead, but at the very least the Red Devils will need Fletcher in the middle of the park where he can really assert himself.<br />
<br />
Without him United have no bottle in the center of the pitch and would be certain to concede without their most important player this season in Vidic.<br />
<br />
Ideally Rooney would start in center midfield next to Fletcher, something that should have been experimented with years ago—if not this year when Scholes was injured. Sadly this remains just a pipe dream.<br />
<br />
However things play out, the title race is refreshingly closer and we should be looking at goals for either side come Sunday.<br />
<br />
<em>Note: Anytime I say "Fletcher" I also imply "Hargreaves if he was healthy."</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-64185040814424160682011-02-28T14:48:00.000-08:002011-03-07T14:50:26.613-08:00Hernandez at the helm as Devils travel to Stamford BridgeCertain recurring narratives were reinforced when Manchester United beat Wigan 4-0 away on Saturday.<br />
<br />
Whether or not their import will be heeded by their manager going forward remains to be seen.<br />
<br />
United gaffer Alex Ferguson started Javier Hernandez up top with Wayne Rooney for the first time this season away at the JJB.<br />
<br />
To be fair, Rooney dropped too deep too often so the formation often seemed a 4-5-1. His willingness to do so can be either that or desperation, the latter being more persuasive after he muay-thai elbowed James McCarthy for no reason in the first half.<br />
<br />
Referee Mark Clattenburg wanted too much to be one of the guys and let Rooney off with only a manhug.<br />
Hernandez meanwhile was busy doing the things that'll see him replace Rooney some day sooner than anyone would have expected.<br />
<br />
At the very least the Mexican tailors his natural attributes to his game, using his speed to embody a dumbfire missile heading straight at the opposing goal whenever a midfielder with the ball looks up at him.<br />
<br />
Being caught offside isn't nearly as lamentable for the Mexican as it is for another United striker, Dimitar Berbatov, who has zero pace but gets caught offsides more than virtually any other player in the Premier League.<br />
<br />
Anyways, gotta keep this brief. United play against Chelsea in two days so this'll get buried under a bunch of other crap.<br />
<br />
Therefore I'll skip how influential Scholes was, that Patrice Evra had his best game in awhile, or how underrated Vidic still is. Use your imagination I guess.<br />
<br />
Hernandez opened the scoring for the Red Devils by again making the run both Berbatov and Rooney would be uninclined to. It's really simple and has been written within these margins before: run forward fast. The other two are much slower and tend to suspend runs into the box to pull off and get a cut-back.<br />
<br />
Chicharito doesn't eff around, then he smiles about it. He finished Nani's cross to put United ahead. As the half winded down—after some outstanding saves by van der Sar that, in hindsight, obviously inspired Ben Foster—the Mexican pilfered again.<br />
<br />
The second strike was one of the ilk United fans are quickly getting used to. The Poncharello lookalike nodded down his goalie's punt to Rooney who one-timed the reciprocal. The former Guadalajara striker sprinted through, took a touch, and finished ever-cooly. Then he smiled. Another thing Rooney doesn't do, although he does spit more.<br />
<br />
United led 2-0. The game was over. The final score read 4-0. It didn't matter.<br />
<br />
I would have sex with Javier Hernandez if only to brag to women about it and then bed them consequently. I truly believe he will replace Rooney as United's talisman once the grumpy scouser is inevitably sold for an exorbitant sum to a club that still buys his hype.<br />
<br />
Rooney himself hasn't had two good games on the trot, and I've been increasingly lenient with the definition of "good". Having scored and picked up two assists, despite playing poorly from open play elsewise, his streak once again stands at one.<br />
<br />
If he spent a little more time in training working on fundamentals still missing from his limited repertoire, instead of being grumpy, pugnacious, greedy, and lecherous, then I'd not have to use any of those words to describe him, at least. At most he'd become something of the footballer he was capable of.<br />
<br />
Employing him in Scholes' role instead of continuing to shoe-horn him as an out-and-out striker he is not is the only scenario I can envision really unshackling Rooney's remaining and decreasing potential.<br />
<br />
Anyways: United have a rather big game ahead of them at Stamford Bridge on Tuesday.<br />
<br />
It's too bad but Hernandez is unlikely to start in it, despite coming off early for Gibson at the DW Stadium. Ferguson is likely to start a lamentable 4-5-1 with a lamentable Rooney lamentably up top alone and lamenting.<br />
<br />
It might not be the wrong decision since he'll be playing for the draw, anyway. You can always tell when Fergie is playing for a draw because he doesn't start Scholes.<br />
<br />
But as United's long run-out to the season continues, Hernandez's name should appear on more and more teamsheets or, at least, near the end of match reports.<br />
<br />
His preclusion from the Marseille first leg was an egregious oversight from a passive manager. Ferguson should have been more audacious in nicking an away goal; Hernandez' specialty.<br />
<br />
Man Red will need all three of their strikers at different points throughout the season's final third.<br />
<br />
So far only two of them have produced consistently. Berbatov leads the top flight in scoring. Chicharito has nine goals in 18 appearances in his first season.<br />
<br />
Who'd I forget?<br />
<br />
<em><a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">I'm on twitter</a>, for what it's worth.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-11199562896493804792011-02-23T21:05:00.000-08:002011-02-25T21:07:10.718-08:00Marseille-United: Player ratings and scathing analysisThree-time European Cup winners <a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> travelled to the Stade Veladrome Wednesday in first-leg action from the UEFA Champions League knockout stage, squaring up against the successful French outfit Marseille.<br />
<br />
For no legitimate reason, Reds manager Alex Ferguson opted for Darron Gibson in midfield in lieu of Paul Scholes.<br />
<br />
Essentially, he was playing for a nil-nil from the onset; a blatant tactical mistake in two-legged ties that favor away goals.<br />
<br />
The first half started and ended in the same fashion: Neither side getting a sniff of a goal, with the majority of possession going sideways or backwards.<br />
<br />
Nani was the only dangerous player on the pitch. John O'Shea aimlessly hoofed long-balls forward—inevitably turnovers. Rooney predictably had no joy on the left of midfield. Carrick and Gibson neither hustled nor passed well in United's core. Berbatov did what he could up front (spoiler: not much).<br />
<br />
The second half began as the first one ended and finished just as it began: Shots were few and far-between, in addition to being often catapulted into near-Earth-orbit.<br />
<br />
Marseille had their best chance thus far on sixty minutes, but a few shanked shots eliminated any real possibility of scoring.<br />
<br />
The game was crying out for an impact substitute. Scholes, Hernandez or both were basically required on principle. Mercifully Ferguson introduced the Englishman 70 minutes late into the match, replacing the always-lamentable Gibson.<br />
<br />
Why the gaffer chose to start with a weaker midfield than he was afforded will likely be prevaricated upon in post-match interviews—looking forward to that.<br />
<br />
Immediately, Scholes began retrieving from the backline and building from the back. Then my stream skipped and it was a Marseille goal-kick.<br />
<br />
United controlled the remaining 15 minutes of the match during a period that contained their best attacking moves of the match.<br />
<br />
Too little, too late. The match ends 0-0, but at least all my under-bets hit.<br />
<br />
With a five-man midfield, there was no reason whatsoever to be <em>even more</em> pusillanimous by not putting Scholes in it.<br />
<br />
As close as this match was, you'd think Marseille only need to nick a single goal at Old Trafford to seize the biggest upset of the round.<br />
<br />
A few things are certain for the return fixture: Marseille will sit back and try to contain United in hopes of getting a lucky away-goal.<br />
<br />
United will stack five in the midfield again in hopes to suppress the away side tallying.<br />
<br />
The French club would be happy to take the tie into penalties at Old Trafford.<br />
<br />
In other words, don't expect a cracking return leg!<br />
<br />
<strong>Player Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;">Manchester United</span><br />
<br />
van der Sar: <strong>6</strong>: Little to do; did little.<br />
<br />
O'Shea: <strong>6</strong>: Should never make vertical passes over the top into nothingness; otherwise helped contain a tepid Marseille attack.<br />
<br />
Smalling: <strong>7</strong><b>.5</b>: Learning from Vidic as evidenced by his flying headers. Good, strong match again—second in a row! Rooney should be jealous.<br />
<br />
Vidic: <strong>8</strong>: Completely untroubled.<br />
<br />
Evra: <strong>6.5</strong>: Big game for the Frenchman who is reviled in France because of his antics during the World Cup. The fact that any scorn is reserved for people other than Raymond Domenech is very bemusing. Regardless, Patty was up for the match.<br />
<br />
Fletcher: <strong>6.5</strong>: Required, but not especially effective.<br />
<br />
Carrick: <strong>6</strong>: Also required, if only because United don't have a better player in their squad for the role. Unambitious. Should be sold in the summer if there's any justice in the world.<br />
<br />
Gibson: <strong>5</strong>: Had one or two good ideas. Unfortunately, that's not enough in 70 minutes of the most meaningful football you'll play. Slow. Unimaginative. Second-rate.<br />
<br />
Nani: <strong>6</strong>: Lively in the first half. Always seems to wait too long to pass. Decision-making askew, but everyone knows that by now.<br />
<br />
Rooney: <strong>5</strong>: Did bugger-all. Ineffective on the left side, duh. Just pass the ball with your left foot once; just once. Should be weened into a central-attacking midfielder really, but now is not the time.<br />
<br />
Berbatov: <strong>5.5</strong>: Better in the first half. Lost focus in the second. Held onto the ball importantly, at times, but never really got his swagger. Won some defensive headers.<br />
<br />
<em>I apologize to Marseille fans. I was watching a foreign feed and couldn't get a grasp on who was who in blue. It's amatuerish to post only player ratings for one team. Feel free to flame me.</em><br />
<br />
<em>Post-match pundits said it was a good result for United. I think they're on crack. Ferguson admits disappointment in post-match interview. Intimates wishing they'd scored one. Maybe next time he'll start his only creative center-midfielder if he wants to get a goal. He also should have introduced Hernandez late.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-41409510121065065692011-02-19T21:04:00.000-08:002011-02-25T21:05:41.145-08:00Vacant United survice creepy Crawley as Marseille awaitsOddly, the losing fans probably had more fun at Old Trafford than <a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a>'s multi-national supporters.<br />
<br />
Crawley Town gave an audacious account for themselves, losing 1-0 but leaving the Theater of Dreams with their pride, a million quid, and a distinct moral advantage over the Premier League giants intact.<br />
<br />
United's starting eleven consisted largely of names usually reserved for the substitutes bench.<br />
<br />
Their best player was the goalkeeper. Anders Lindegaard punted and distributed very well in maintaining his first clean sheet under Sir Alex Ferguson.<br />
<br />
Each da Silva twin marauded up and down the wing, both bungling and brilliantly executing tackles and passes in equal measure. Each suffered what seemed minor injuries and were eventually substituted. Both are improving, both are useful.<br />
<br />
John O'Shea and Wes Brown comprised a nostalgic centerbackline and at least did more for their respective reputations than any midfielder or attacker.<br />
<br />
Darron Gibson refreshingly showed some incisive through balls—the same type Michael Carrick used to play whenever he was worth a damn. Otherwise he was slow, passed over-simply, and disappeared in the second half. They each did.<br />
<br />
As inferred, Carrick laid back and played one-time passes backwards while Anderson was virtually anonymous until leaving at halftime.<br />
<br />
Gabriel Obertan and Bebe both displayed speed and dribbling panache at times, but unfortunately each also showcased a regrettable unfamiliarity with passing, in larger quantities and to greater impact.<br />
<br />
Ultimately United were attacking Crawley Town like they attack most Premiership sides, at least when Scholes is off the pitch: from the outside-in, with wingers hoofing in hopeful crosses. Bloody hell, we're not <a _mce_href="/liverpool" href="http://bleacherreport.com/liverpool">Liverpool</a>.<br />
<br />
It was good enough, though, for a single goal, Gibson rising above an inherent not-belonging to cross nicely onto Brown's head after a half-hour or so.<br />
<br />
A direct approach would have seemed more intuitive but credit to the minnows for deterring any attractive football through the middle, even if it was more from the detriment of the attending United players.<br />
<br />
Javier Hernandez again implied that's he's more useful off the bench, and why not when his righteous speed is that more surprising to defenders already tired. His through runs strive on service which was scarcely provided by his teammates poor passing. Hernadez's inherent attributes still need to be complemented by improving skills which are sure to come based on his eager displays this term.<br />
<br />
Wayne Rooney was given a 45-minute run-out at halftime. He quickly proceeded to prove that he was indeed not "back" in form—shocking, isn't it? About as shocking as the last ten times the echo chamber hoped him so.<br />
<br />
He lacked confidence with several poor passing decisions and had an increasingly-present heavy touch. A few driven long-balls added requisite gloss to an otherwise mediocre 45 minutes. Also required was an inevitable tantrum and rash tackle after giving the ball away three times in thirty seconds against non-leaguers as the tie ebbed out.<br />
<br />
According to all the adverts, the FA Cup has an inherent magic to it, and if it does, it's reserved to the smaller sides like Crawley Town for doing their small supporter base proud, enriching their club's finances<br />
significantly.and proudly displaying their badge to television audiences around the world despite losing.<br />
<br />
They weren't fortunate most of the players in red shirts played poorly because their own good play certainly contributed at least in part to United's midfield malaise.<br />
<br />
It shouldn't really matter how well Crawley played, at least not to United; any millionaire eleven they trot out—at home—should crush a non-league side.<br />
<br />
But the ends justify their means. The Reds will travel to Marseilles midweek in the inaugural knockout leg of their 2011 Champions League campaign rested and focused.<br />
<br />
Nemanja Vidic, Rio Ferdinand, Dimitar Berbatov, Paul Scholes, Nani, Ryan Giggs, and Patrice Evra should all start and start sprightly on French soil next Wednesday.<br />
<br />
As such, Manchester United won't be bothered by any romance lost domestically.<br />
<br />
An in-form Marseilles await their arrival in a much more lucrative and prestigious competition—one with even more manufactured romance and far more real consequence for the billion-dollar superclub.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-15191584001767358552011-02-13T21:02:00.000-08:002011-02-25T21:04:38.454-08:00Manchester derby: Player ratings and recapOn Saturday morning at Old Trafford, <a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> held off their local rivals 2-1 thanks to a cracking overhead finish from an otherwise off-form Wayne Rooney.<br />
<br />
City enjoyed possession and were successful going forward throughout, but the Red side had enough luck with Rooney's unlikely finish to nick all three points.<br />
<br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Manchester United</strong></span><br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong> </strong></span><br />
<strong>Van der Sar: </strong><strong>6.5</strong>. City were the better offensive side but of their 14 shots, only three were on target.<br />
<br />
<strong>O'Shea: </strong><strong>6.5</strong>. Big John has a penchant for hoofing vertical balls over the top that inevitably become turnovers, but today he was defensively stout.<br />
<br />
<strong>Smalling: </strong><strong>7.5</strong>. Too much was expected of him, but he delivered. Very mature next to Vidic.<br />
<br />
<strong>Vidic</strong>: <strong>8.5</strong>. Gobbled up balls everywhere. Imperious in the air, brute and intuitive with interceptions.<br />
<br />
<strong>Evra: </strong><strong>6.5</strong>. Competed well against the stronger Richards, but didn't do much going forward. Inevitably skinned by Wright-Phillips a few times; bailed out by Vidic throughout.<br />
<br />
<strong>Nani: </strong><strong>7</strong>. His maturation has been required this season since Antonio Valencia went out with a long-term leg-break. Today the MJ-lookalike had a great first touch going over-the-top for the goal and finished it smartly enough. Otherwise, he frustratingly careened many shots over the goal after (to his credit) creating enough space to attempt them. A proclivity for poor passing still mars his game, but his emergence into an elite winger this season can't be undervalued.<br />
<br />
<strong>Fletcher: </strong><strong>7.5</strong>. Despite being a slight lad, the Scotsman takes a physical approach to the game and throws his weight around. Anyone playing next to Scholes has to do as much. Who would have thought five years ago that Fletcher could end up being more useful to United over his career than Roy Keane? The former has assumed the same role, to be sure, and may just prove as important. Ironically the tirade which led to Keane leaving the club included rants about Fletcher (and others) but to be fair to both, the Scotsman was a much worse player then.<br />
<br />
<strong>Scholes: </strong><strong>7</strong>. Turned the ball over three times under no pressure, but otherwise his creativity was and is absolutely necessary for United going forward. The little Salford playmaker sprayed balls around willy-nilly today and ticked his side going forward with experience and moxie. No one else on the team can pass and create play like Scholes. His legs have one more season in them, but his heart may not.<br />
<br />
<strong>Anderson: </strong><strong>6</strong>. His speed and athleticism are real virtues. Sadly, his actual footballing ability pales in comparison to those other two attributes so far in his young career.<br />
<br />
<strong>Giggs:</strong> <strong>7</strong>. Definitely had some bemusing passes gone wrong today. Also was sometimes cast aside like a child by far more physically robust players in blue. The Welshman though is the best option on the left side until Valencia returns. Whether that's a credit to him or an indictment of United's depth is a fair debate. Giggs' experience helped as the game wore down Saturday.<br />
<br />
<strong>Rooney: </strong><strong>7.5</strong>. Failed to do much from open play. Always eager to put the ball on his right foot whenever he shoots, and therefore doesn't get many clean strikes off. He was definitely up for the game, though, and showed good engine throughout. You see lesser players score similar highlight-reel goals every week, but Rooney's cracking overhead finish not only won the derby but also likely ended their most-storied rivals' hopes of the league altogether. Context is important. Rooney hasn't had two good games on the trot all season—we'll have to wait for the Red's next match to see if that trend continues.<br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a _mce_href="/manchester-city" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-city">Manchester City</a></strong></span><br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><br />
</strong></span><br />
<strong>Hart: </strong><strong>6</strong>. Could have conceivably saved Nani's first effort, alas. Rooney's goal was unstoppable. United had only three other shots on target and they were tame.<br />
<br />
<strong>Zabaleta: </strong><strong>5.5</strong>. Destined to be sold and replaced.<br />
<br />
<strong>Lescott: </strong><strong>7</strong>. Strong and athletic.<br />
<br />
<strong>Kompany: </strong><strong>7.5</strong>. Stronger, more athletic. The nucleus of City's backline and a good footballer.<br />
<br />
<strong>Richards: </strong><strong>7.5</strong>. Even stronger, even more athletic. Caused a lot of problems for United's left side.<br />
<br />
<strong>Barry:</strong> <strong>7</strong>. Very involved throughout as City generally outpassed their rivals in the center of the pitch. His disinclination to attempt anything outlandish can be a blessing or a curse.<br />
<br />
<strong>Milner: </strong><strong>6.5</strong>. Slightly muted display, but direct, quick and strong enough to still show up in spurts.<br />
<br />
<strong>Toure:</strong> <strong>8</strong>. Uses his body very well to shield the ball. Uses both feet to dribble and pass. Puts emphasis and care on the shape of his passes. Plays simple one-timers with ease to create triangles around his opponents. Classy.<br />
<br />
<strong>Silva: </strong><strong>7.5</strong>. Nicknamed "Quicksilva", supposedly, but I don't think he's that quick. He's got a great left foot, dribbles well, and was sure to be influential throughout the first sixty minutes. Later it looked like he tired out somewhat. He didn't know much about the goal; claimed it though, and technically deserved it.<br />
<br />
<strong>Kolarov: </strong><strong>5</strong>: Largely ineffective.<br />
<br />
<strong>Tevez: </strong><strong>5.5</strong>: Ran around a lot but was rarely dangerous.<br />
<br />
<em>I'd have to say City were the better side, but United were the better finishers. Follow me on <a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">twitter</a> if you're really, really bored.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-57184197035113858082011-01-26T20:56:00.000-08:002011-02-25T21:01:57.801-08:00Ferguson blows it; Javier Hernandez restores it<a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a>'s seaside jaunt to face an attacking-styled <a _mce_href="/blackpool" href="http://bleacherreport.com/blackpool">Blackpool</a> promised to be an open affair, but United manager Alex Ferguson wasn't in on the plot. Instead he erred with a pusillanimous 4-5-1 to open the game, a questionable setup with questionable selections.<br />
<br />
Rooney was on the left, where he often is over the years when the season's final third, and United's forays into Europe, become the priority. Sadly he has looked physically disinterested and, perhaps therefore, completely ineffective in that role so far this season (and usually in those past.)<br />
<br />
Now, we all love to see him track back and make tackles. It's easy to hang your hat on that shit if your simpleton desire is to be an utter Rooney mark. But he's never going to make it to the byline or get outside and past the opposing right back when he's in that position. He can't dribble across his body and he's not particularly fast.<br />
<br />
Also, Darren Gibson was preferred in the middle with two players who actually belonged, Fletcher and Scholes, despite Gibson having a poor season without any two games of clear repute on the trot.<br />
<br />
It made no goddamn sense. Ferguson was afraid of Blackpool's attacks. And attack is all they did in the first half against United's unbalanced and unorganized hodgepodge of a formation.<br />
<br />
<strong>First Half Sad Face</strong><br />
<br />
As I sort of implied, Blackpool were far superior in the first half. Charlie Adam lived up to his hype in the frame, creating countless chances with piercing, curling, left-footed through balls. United were on the back foot and offered little going forward.<br />
<br />
The Seasiders scored twice from Adam corner kicks. The first tally arrived on 15 minutes with former United reserve Craig Cathcart assuredly heading home.<br />
<br />
United weren't ready to pull up their pants yet. Ferguson's nebulous formation continually failed to achieve anything going forward. They had no width, Rooney was abhorrent and Gibson sucked again.<br />
<br />
On 43 minutes, another Adam corner was flicked to and headed in by DJ Campbell. Blackpool heroically led 2-0 at the break.<br />
<br />
<strong>United Restored</strong><br />
<br />
At halftime Ferguson appeared to remember he's one of the greatest managers in English football and has a pair of huge, swinging bollocks. After cathartically yelling at his players, he finally took off Gibson for Giggs, reverting to a natural 4-4-2.<br />
<br />
Here Berbatov and Rooney were up top, Fletcher and Scholes patrolled the middle, while Nani and Giggs carried the team on their natural wings. Harmony; brilliance. But despite their improved football, there was still something missing.<br />
<br />
At the 70th minute, I thought, "We must get Hernandez into this game." But who would he replace? Berbatov? That leaves a pairing of Rooney and Hernandez, with no one to win headers or retain possession.<br />
"But Rooney scored 11 headers last season!" Yeah, and it was an aberration then, even though it didn't seem obvious until now. The Mexican would win more headers than Rooney in any case. Surely Ferguson didn't have the balls to take off Rooney.<br />
<br />
But he did. And he did so audaciously.<br />
<br />
Seventy-two minutes. Hernandez is shown entering the game, smiling and looking like Poncharello from <em>CHIPS</em>.<br />
<br />
The tipped-off cameraman closed in on Rooney looking blankly at the fourth official's board, the self-realization that he'd been absolute shit thus far betrayed by his beady eyes; the knowledge that he's vastly overpaid by his recently adjusted contract clear on his puggy mug.<br />
<br />
He watched his card get pulled. He jogged off stoically.<br />
<br />
<strong>Hernandez Leads from the Top</strong><br />
<br />
United's reaction, though was full of emotion.<br />
<br />
Immediately Hernandez started making the direct forward runs that have won several games already this season. United were plowing forward with waves of domineering attacks.<br />
<br />
Their first goal was physically inevitable. They passed triangles down the right before an outstanding Darren Fletcher made the forward run and crossed at the byline for Berbatov to nimbly tap home.<br />
<br />
United didn't stop. Hernandez was using his pace to draw defenders deep, and Ponch was rewarded just two minutes later. Giggs shipped him through and the Mexican continued to display his mature finishing by doing just so after just one measured touch.<br />
<br />
It was hard to envisage United coming back to win without Ruud van Nistelrooy. But Paul Scholes, looking fit and sharp on his first match in months, drove sickly over the top for Berbatov. The Bulgar faked going right, instead finishing with his left foot to drive it past Kingston's near post.<br />
<br />
United come from behind to secure a five-point lead atop the Premier League summit in one of the most riveting games in the league this season. Most importantly, in doing so, they played some of their best football of it during the final 20 minutes of the match.<br />
<br />
<strong>Chicharito for President</strong>, <strong>Berba for Chairman</strong><br />
<br />
How many times has a joyful Chicharito turned United frowns upside down this season?<br />
<br />
Javier Hernandez changes games. He does it simply. He's extremely athletic, has a monstrous leap, uncanny heading ability, makes runs in behind, uses both feet, has natural instincts and for good measure, tries hella hard without being all super emo about it.<br />
<br />
His ebullience is expressed in his style; his class is expressed in his execution.<br />
<br />
If Sir Alex Ferguson continues to have the balls to play him instead of Rooney, when the Scouser's form is off (oft), it'll benefit everyone—Hernandez, Rooney, Berbatov and club United alike.<br />
<br />
In fact, it's not unreasonable to wonder if Rooney has re-signed just to be sold in the summer—not a dissimilar arrangement from the Ronaldo romance between United and Madrid.<br />
<br />
It was only after Rooney mercifully departed against Blackpool that United started playing top-class football. Most strikingly, however, is the manner of United's last two goals. Hernandez's straight run over the top, with pace, and Berbatov faking right, going left decisively, and finishing with his left peg represent two things Rooney doesn't do.<br />
<br />
More evidence of that nature will be damning for Rooney who could be worth far more to United in dollars than in action.<br />
<br />
His reputation abroad still exceeds his form this season and throughout his United career—last year, now, being an obvious statistical outlier—and frankly United should sell him before the rest of Europe realizes it.<br />
<br />
It would make financial sense, to offload a complacent and perpetually over-hyped Wazza while his value is still bloated, a move to unshackle Hernandez as United's talisman for the coming generation.<br />
<br />
If that was the plan all along, we'd be the last to know, anyway.<br />
<br />
But we may now be some of the first to realize that Hernandez, and not Rooney, is the future at forward.<br />
<br />
<em><a _mce_href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/484719-five-reasons-why-javier-hernandez-is-more-valuable-than-wayne-rooney" href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/484719-five-reasons-why-javier-hernandez-is-more-valuable-than-wayne-rooney">Javier Hernandez is more valuable than Wayne Rooney</a> (Bleacher Report)</em><br />
<em><a _mce_href="http://www.epltalk.com/wayne-rooney-signing-seems-a-little-fishy-25872" href="http://www.epltalk.com/wayne-rooney-signing-seems-a-little-fishy-25872">Wayne Rooney signing seems a little fishy</a> (Epltalk)</em><br />
<em>and follow me on <a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">twitter</a> :D</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-74102477071081255792011-01-16T20:54:00.000-08:002011-02-25T20:56:26.562-08:00Spurs-United: Player ratings and recapMan United traveled into White Hart Lane against Tottenham with more at stake than at least Spurs were accustomed. For neutrals, unfortunately, the added pressure resulted in a less carefree affair.<br />
<br />
The game started openly, though, with some of the glorious back-and-forth attacks everyone expected.<br />
<br />
However, the tempo and atmosphere changed as neither side could manage a crucial opener. Only Rooney was on target for his team in the first half while Spurs were ultimately muted by, essentially, just Vidic whenever they feigned threatening United's box.<br />
<br />
The second half saw more technical and attractive midfield play from especially Modric and Giggs as they each ran the offense for their sides, but a final ball was always lacking. United began time-wasting around the 60th minute. Rafael then done got off for a second questionably bookable offense after 74 minutes had quickly passed.<br />
<br />
Predictably Spurs began relishing possession but were mostly stymied by United's then five-man midfield. Vidic again was a swirling black hole for all of Spurs' attacks into the penalty box. The London club went for the jugular with a gross attacking spread to see out the game but United were mature.<br />
<br />
And so the match ended anticlimactically at nils apiece. A lot of interesting football was ultimately unexciting since neither side could manage an opener.<br />
<br />
<strong>Player Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><a _mce_href="/tottenham-hotspur" href="http://bleacherreport.com/tottenham-hotspur">Tottenham Hotspur</a></span><br />
<br />
Gomez: <strong>7</strong>: Had to save nicely from Rooney on two occasions. Didn't gaffe greatly but punted askew at times.<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"></span><br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><br />
</span><br />
Assou-Ekotto: <strong>7</strong>: At worst, got beaten for a few corners. Didn't do anything special going forward nor anything especially bad on the back foot.<br />
<br />
Dawson: <strong>7</strong>: Got the better of Berbatov. Contained Rooney and kept him at range and on the wrong foot. . Defended corners needfully.<br />
<br />
Gallas: <strong>6</strong>: Quiet game, which isn't always bad for a defender. Contributed to Berbatov's poor game directly and matched up well against United's slow forwards.<br />
<br />
Hutton: <strong>7</strong>: Looked well up for this big match. Joy going forward opposite Giggs and did enough shackling the Welshman and Evra to feel confident after his display.<br />
<br />
Bale: <strong>5.5</strong>: Able to get behind Rafael on a couple occasions but having his reputation precede him today means his rating isn't as high as a lesser-known-player's would have been.<br />
<br />
Palacios: <strong>7.5</strong>: Combative like a De Jong or his opposite Fletcher. A couple wayward distance shots but credit for trying. Crucial to the midfield battle.<br />
<br />
Modric: <strong>8.5</strong>: Creative sparkplug. Classy over the ball. Turns were impeccable. Brilliant vision and technique. Outstanding pilot as his side cruised to complacence.<br />
<br />
<br />
Lennon: <strong>7</strong>: Has shown in matchups past he's able to get past Evra and even skin Vidic. Did less of the former today and none of the latter. Still got in crosses but ultimately you'd say he was muffed out by the two aforementioned defenders on the whole.<br />
<br />
van der Vaart: <strong>5.5</strong>: Looked slow and not at the races. Fitness issues perhaps for Spurs' new talisman.<br />
<br />
Crouch: <strong>5</strong>: Probably had as little success as he'll have all season winning headers and knocking down balls for all the brilliant attackers around him. Why? Vida. Crouch had a sitter early in the first half but inexplicably put it wide.<br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a></span><br />
<br />
van der Sar: <strong>6</strong>: Had less to do than his opposite number. His punts don't contribute much but the tenured Dutchman showed good feet at times and made a few above-standard saves.<br />
<br />
Rafael: <strong>5.5</strong>: Matched up well with Bale but when the young Brazilian was carded early he was always going off. Such is his plight. Luckily his silliness was not tragically detrimental to the result as it was against Bayern last March (it still stings). Rafael was United's best attacker on occasions.<br />
<br />
Ferdinand: <strong>6</strong>: Happy to be playing next to Vidic and tweeting bollocks.<br />
<br />
<strong>Vidic</strong>: <strong>9.5</strong>: Utterly imperious. Totally awesome. Sick-doggin' nadass. The best defender in the world. Bunkered down in his penalty box with real spit in his eye. Went horizontal on several occasions bending reality to his whim. Owned everyone. And I don't care if he tugs shirts, it's artful and good defense. If Vidic had scored he'd have a ten.<br />
<br />
Evra: <strong>6</strong>: Went forward craftily at times but still overly-reliant on his left foot. Lennon tears about lesser defenders, but the little Englishman still had some joy today against this Frenchman.<br />
<br />
Nani: <strong>6.5</strong>: Better technique and decision-making but didn't stamp any authority on the match.<br />
<br />
Carrick: <strong>5.5</strong>: Essentially his mandate was to stay back and don't mess anything up egregiously. He did that. He even contested for some 50/50 headers. But Carrick has never been United quality. He must have an outstanding game to even be on par with both his teammates and potential replacements, yet the bloke is ever-happy to remain anonymous on the field, hoping no one realizes he does not belong.<br />
<br />
Fletcher: <strong>7.5</strong>: Did a lot on each side of the ball. United's most active midfielder during the first half and much of the game. Covered more ground than any other player.<br />
<br />
Giggs: <strong>7</strong>: Pulled the strings in the second half after getting warmed up in the first. Sole creative source going forward for United through much of the game.<br />
<br />
Berbatov: <strong>5</strong>: Offsides lazily several times, a feature of his game. Everyone knows Berbatov has class, but everyone also knows he'd be better if he just tried harder. Hell he probably knows it. But having the potential to be awesome only goes so far when most time is spent unfulfilled. Too slow.<br />
<br />
Rooney: <strong>5</strong>: His limitations were again evident today. Not many people saying he's the best striker in the world anymore. Had a few open looks at goal but sent all his shots low. Shooting is the easy part, but getting the right angle and space is always troubling for him because everyone including Steven Hawking's football boots and Count Wankenstein know Rooney is going onto his bloody right foot. I don't care where his shots go, because they even out over time. Just wish he was an improving footballer. He looked completely disinterested once he was moved to right midfield, though I still fancy him as a central attacking midfielder in the future; if only Alex agreed.<br />
<br />
Subs: Hernandez (fast and awesome), Anderson (chip on shoulder).<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-28195046528244869742011-01-01T20:52:00.000-08:002011-02-25T20:54:42.278-08:00Baggies-United: Player ratings and recap<a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> made the small jaunt south to the Hawthornes to k ick off the new year in the English top flight. The undefeated visitors topped the league table. West Brom were near its bottom.<br />
<br />
Having not scored from open play since March, Rooney's first touch today brought the opening goal.<br />
<br />
Obertan did work down the left before laying back to Evra in support. The French back crossed and Rooney placed a standing header down and into the bottom corner: 1-0 United after two minutes.<br />
<br />
Albion didn't give anyone much time to celebrate. Less than 10 minutes later, after a forward hoof, Vidic could only clear down to Morrison. He volleyed first-time and the ball lazered into Kusczcak's far, top corner. All one's thanks to the Kodak finish.<br />
<br />
Gary Neville should have been sent off shortly thereafter for an egregiously poor, chasing tackle inside United's box, but the referee was thankfully gun-shy to rule anything.<br />
<br />
West Brom dominated possession for much of the half's remain. They were better than the league leaders on both sides of the ball, cutting out opposing attacks in midfield and passing triangles moving forward The Baggies penetrated United's right side again in added time, but Dorrans shanked his driven, close-range shot near-side when through on goal.<br />
<br />
The second half began 1-1. Andy Gray said United weren't quite "at it." Whether or not Man United were indeed not "at it" was never proved or disproved. However, the second frame began as the first one ended: West Brom passing and playing better than the former European champions.<br />
<br />
Alex Ferguson looked like he was playing for the draw after withdrawing his only winger for a fourth central midfielder, bringing on Gibson for Obertan. A smiling Hernandez replaced the frowning Berbatov. <br />
<br />
Immediately after, in the 61st minute, Ferdinand was duped by Thomas and conceded a penalty. Odinwinge stepped up for the resulting spot-kick and dribbled it wide left. 1-1 still.<br />
<br />
Shortly thereafter, Rooney had a lane through to goal, but he was hesitant to dribble to his left side and botched it. A minute later he made up for it by driving decisively past Cech to win a short free kick on 67 minutes. His own delivery from it was excellent but yielded nothing.<br />
<br />
This game had "late Hernandez winner" written all over it. I sat in expectation. On 71 minutes, Ferguson mercifully withdrew the Neviller for a da Silva twin. The match was still combative and fairly even. After 75 minutes through, though, there's my boy: Hernandez stood in front of the goalkeeper and nodded in Rooney's corner very simply. United led 2-1.<br />
<br />
Again Rooney drove strong through the middle of the pitch to unleash a counterattack. Fletcher crossed back for him but his header ballooned over.<br />
<br />
West Brom had a right go at the Mancunians to close out the final 15 minutes. Hernandez showed good engine and desire to assist in wholesale back-tracking. With two minutes remaining Rooney appeared to suffer another relatively serious left ankle sprain. Some magic spray later and he was back on as the fourth official raised five added minutes.<br />
<br />
United continued to man their hatches, albeit tenuously, to eventually secure the hard-fought and important, but perhaps ill-deserved, 2-1 victory away at West Brom on the first day of the new year.<br />
<strong><br />
Player Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><a _mce_href="/west-bromwich" href="http://bleacherreport.com/west-bromwich">West Bromwich Albion</a></span><br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><br />
</span><br />
Carson: <strong>5</strong>: Did not make any outrageous saves nor blunders of the same variety. Should have marshaled his defenders better on Hernandez' equalizer. Carson himself could have come out to contest the header and should have saved it standing between his sticks.<br />
<br />
Scharner: <strong>6</strong>: Looked good enough in a makeshift role to base confident Baggie football at the back.<br />
Ibanez: <strong>5</strong>: I tend to space out when West Brom have the ball. But I don't think this player did much.<br />
Cech: <strong>6</strong>: Did well enough for me not to notice him.<br />
<br />
Reid: <strong>6</strong>: Involved from the outside on both sides of the ball. Got stuck in n' that.<br />
<br />
Dorrans: <strong>6</strong>.<strong>5</strong>: Had a great chance in the first half but he blew it relentlessly. Otherwise more muted.<br />
<br />
Mulumbu: <strong>6.5</strong>: Athletic and explosive in the middle. But seriously.<br />
<br />
Brunt: <strong>7.5</strong>: Very useful. Strong but with touch. And a bang-up left foot. Ran over Carrick once like he didn't exist (spoiler: he doesn't).<br />
<br />
Thomas: <strong>7.5</strong>: Had success against Neville. Earned the penalty against Rio. Well done.<br />
<br />
Morrison: <strong>7.5</strong>: Scored a sweet volley early on the one-time to equalize. That equalizer set the stage for West Brom to play most of the better football throughout, in which he was consistently involved.<br />
<br />
Odemwingie: <strong>6</strong>: Combative against better center-backs but his penalty miss was excruciatingly poor. It's still a positive shift from him, but only just. It was a big miss that denied his team a just result.<br />
<br />
<strong>Manchester United</strong><br />
<br />
Kusczcak: <strong>6</strong>: Didn't have much to do but made a great save late-on. Goal was virtually unstoppable. Van der Sar wouldn't have saved it either.<br />
<br />
Neville: <strong>3.5</strong>: Why don't I just write "Still far from match fitness" out of respect for the tenured right-back.<br />
<br />
Ferdinand: <strong>5</strong>: Conceded a penalty and looked a little loose at times.<br />
<br />
Vidic: <strong>6.5</strong>: Played an unwitting part in Brom's first goal when his clearance was just poor enough for profit. Otherwise you could hardly say he had a bad game.<br />
<br />
Evra: <strong>6</strong>: Supplied Rooney's opener but didn't do much else remarkable besides manning his wide station diligently throughout the match.<br />
<br />
Obertan: <strong>6.5</strong>: His speed was an asset for the side. Gets the hockey assist on the first goal for keeping it simple. He was inventive if not still a little naive. Passing can be casual and wayward. As he beefs up and grows up he could and should stick around for years.<br />
<br />
Fletcher: <strong>7 </strong>Got stuck-in in midfield despite being employed unusually on the right side of it.<br />
<br />
Carrick: <strong>6</strong>: Did one or two things I liked and was overall economic enough despite being pedestrian.<br />
<br />
Anderson: <strong>5.5</strong>: Passing was poor. Seventh start in a row in all comps; perhaps it showed.<br />
<br />
Berbatov: <strong>5.5</strong>: Involved on offense but not at his best. Like most dribblers, he tends to wait too long before passing to options that were more ideal earlier. Lazily caught offsides on several occasions. His class exudes even on an off-day which today was for the Bulgarian.<br />
<br />
Rooney: <strong>7</strong> At times his strength was questionable, at other times it appeared improved. He endured a mediocre first half from open play after scoring. His goal though, was well-taken and necessary. In the second half he played with more abandon and refreshingly drove at defenders with decision. Slower than people realize.<br />
<br />
Subs: Fabio (better than Neville), Gibson (better than his last outing), Hernandez (sprightly and necessary).<br />
<br />
<em>Hail Javier Hernandez again. He is truly a sparkplug and plays with ebullience. Expect him to replace Rooney as United's talisman when the Englishman is inevitably sold.</em><br />
<br />
<em> Follow me on <a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">twitter</a>.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-68795221104302860242010-12-28T20:47:00.000-08:002011-02-25T20:52:39.998-08:00Birmingham-United: Ratings and recapBirmingham City hosted <a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> in the late kick-off Tuesday on the second matchday of the gloriously congested festive period.<br />
<br />
The home side had the fortune of having been postponed on Sunday due to inclement weather while most United starters put in full shifts that afternoon.<br />
<br />
Birmingham played within their means for much of the first half, doing little going forward but absorbing United's tepid attacks.<br />
<br />
The Red Devils characteristically succumbed to disinterest after the first quarter of the match. United's midfield was unbalanced; left-footer Ryan Giggs ran the right while the painstakingly right-footed Rooney cut in predictably on the left. Furthermore, their central trio consisted of Michael Carrick, the still malleable Anderson, and an average Darron Gibson.<br />
<br />
Birmingham shunted dull incoming attacks and managed spells of possession themselves until the interval mercifully arrived scoreless.<br />
<br />
The home side again appeared more fresh as the second half began. You knew things were boring when the play-by-play announcer said "Bowyer,... why not?" as the Englishman fired from range. Any crosses into the box were fortunate and hopeful for both teams.<br />
<br />
But, at the 58th minute, the most form attacker on the pitch continued his vein to break the deadlock. Dimitar Berbatov started United's attack through the middle and finished it right-footed after interplay with Gibson.<br />
The Bulgarian hit the post only a few minutes later when he shimmied around Liam Ridgewell atop of the box.<br />
<br />
United enjoyed being a goal up and passed the ball between and around their opposition for the next twenty minutes. The European super-giant has a tendency of giving up leads this season, but if ever a 1-0 was secure, it was tonight. The game was peetering out accordingly.<br />
<br />
That was, until the 90th minute. City's lanky striker Zigic rose to meet a deep cross and purposefully armed the ball down for an offside Bowyer to touch home a shoddy equalizer.<br />
<br />
The color commentator, Steve McManaman, referred to it as a "great equalizer." It was't. But it was an important one, especially for a City side flirting with relegation.<br />
<br />
Meanwhile, Manchester United drop two more points on the road again for their seventh away draw this year, but still, perhaps serendipitously, top the league tables entering 2011.<br />
<br />
<strong>Player Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;">Manchester United</span><br />
<br />
Van der Sar: <strong>6</strong>: Two easy matchdays in succession for the elder Dutchman. He fielded one shot on target today. The other went in and it wasn't his fault. His accuracy is wanting often when trying to release counterattacks on the punt.<br />
<br />
Rafael: <strong>5.5</strong>: City offered little going forward. Somewhat surprisingly, so did Rafael. But he didn't make any egregious errors, despite some silly fouls in dangerous positions. United's burgeoning right-back should benefit enough from another 90 minutes.<br />
<br />
Ferdinand: <strong>6.5</strong>: Another solid outing on the trot. Probably would have done more if more was required.<br />
<br />
Vidic: <strong>7.5</strong>: Same as his partner, but the Serb manages to get more involved in games even when there isn't great defending required. Powered a few headers on target for measure.<br />
<br />
Evra: <strong>6.5</strong>: Easy to overlook a consistent left-back. The Frenchman stayed tight in position, especially after United broke through, and was mindful of his modest duties this evening.<br />
<br />
Giggs: <strong>7</strong>: Displayed good fitness and engine. His creativity was required. His play on the left was refreshing though sparse.<br />
<br />
Carrick: <strong>5</strong>: Too concerned with managing impressions to take any hold on this game.<br />
<br />
Anderson: <strong>6</strong>: Harried and hustled around but looked a little knackered from Sunday's endeavors.<br />
<br />
Gibson: <strong>6.5</strong>: Wasn't outstanding throughout necessarily but made the right decision at the right time to assist Berbatov's opener.<br />
<br />
Rooney: <strong>5</strong>: Tracked back, which is fine, but offered little going forward besides the odd shot that was never going in. His one-footedness is highly lamentable, particularly when he is employed on the left side. When not in the best of form, he's a puzzle long` since solved by English defenses.<br />
<br />
<strong>Berbatov</strong>: <strong>8</strong>: Without being perfect, he flicked his way to creating several opportunities out of nothing. He was essentially the only creative player in the team and performed as such. He isn't playing especially better than he did in either of the last two seasons, but he's bagging the goals so he's no longer the arch-villain.<br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;">Birmingham City</span><br />
<br />
Foster: <strong>7</strong>:Had to make a few nice saves but otherwise enjoyed a pretty tame evening on a night that could have been much worse in theory.<br />
<br />
Dann: <strong>7</strong>: Picking up proven center-backs from the lower-divisions is paying dividends for City this season, supposedly. That narrative was reinforced today.<br />
<br />
Johnson: <strong>6.5</strong><br />
<br />
Ridgewell: <strong>5</strong>: Has looked better.<br />
<br />
Carr: <strong>6</strong>: Pretty easy task today: shackle a Rooney already hamstrung by his own inability to play to his either side.<br />
<br />
Bowyer: <strong>7</strong>: Scored the equalizer late. He was offsides then but it doesn't matter anymore. Tried to bring his side forward. You could tell he was as up for this game as his nose was.<br />
<br />
Ferguson: <strong>7</strong>: Experience showed today (as it often does when you're looking for it.) Fortunate enough not to face his compatriot Fletcher over the ninety minutes or it'd have been a rougher day for this Scotsman.<br />
<br />
Beausejour: <strong>6.5</strong>: Provided out wide going forward on seldom occasions and even got stuck-in a bit for good measure. Not bad for a player I'd otherwise never heard of.<br />
<br />
Larsson: <strong>5.5</strong>: Not afforded enough space for comfort. Couldn't get behind United's backline. Didn't trouble from set pieces.<br />
<br />
Jerome: <strong>5</strong>: Willing throughout but ragged come game's end after ninety minutes in the trenches of United's defense.<br />
<br />
Gardner: <strong>5</strong>: Birmingham had two shots on target today. The second one was in the 90th minute and was bundled home after an intentional handball. Not much glory to go around to this striker.<br />
<br />
<strong>Manager Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
Alex Ferguson: <strong>5</strong>: Nebulous formation was more homage to his friend on the opposite touchline than competitive. Why Fergie continues to rest Javier Hernandez is bewildering. Gabriel Obertan should have also been introduced into this match. Ferguson could and probably should have mixed up his personnel more than just starting Darron Gibson after ten of his eventual starters played just 48 hours prior.<br />
<br />
Alex McLeish: <strong>7</strong>: Produced the formation and tactics which best suit his squad. Lucky to get a point at the end, but even a 1-0 defeat shouldn't have been depressing. To his credit, he had enough audacity to introduce attacking players as the game flickered out and it paid dividends.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-40027221100445814352010-12-27T20:43:00.000-08:002011-02-25T20:47:14.989-08:00United-Sunderland: Ratings and recap<a _mce_href="/sunderland" href="http://bleacherreport.com/sunderland">Sunderland</a> visited Old Trafford on Boxing Day and lost 2-0 like they were supposed to.<br />
<br />
United came out of the gates like a cartoon horse that'd just been branded. Berbatov scored within five minutes after Giggs made a marauding run through the center and fed Rooney, who curled his cross onto the Bulgarian's head.<br />
<br />
Berbatov and Anderson each hit the post while Rooney came very close with a delicate chip, all within the first 20 minutes.<br />
<br />
After that, as is usual, United took their foot off the gas, and you wondered if they'd blow another lead.<br />
Eventually, around the 60th minute, they started dominating possession again. It paid off yet again. Berbatov braced on XX minutes when his trivella from inside the box took a great deflection.<br />
<br />
Sunderland achieved their only shot on target with a few minutes left, a 30-yard driven shot from Zenden, which his co-patriot saved easily.<br />
<br />
The final scoreline was 2-0. Why didn't I bet on that beforehand? In hindsight it seemed so obvious.<br />
<br />
<b>Player Ratings</b><br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a></span><br />
<br />
van der Sar: <b>8</b>: Had one save to make. Kicked some goal-kicks. Bravo, sir, bravo.<br />
<br />
Rafael: <b>7</b>: Awesome to see Rafael getting more mature while retaining his buccaneering style. United's first-choice right back put in a quality shift today.<br />
<br />
Ferdinand: <b>7.5</b>: Extremely composed. One of the best footballing central defenders in Europe, still.<br />
<br />
Vidic: <b>9</b>: So utterly dominant.<br />
<br />
Evra: <b>7</b>: Up and down the wing, very effective on attack, made few poor challenges.<br />
<br />
Park: <b>7</b>: Even I have to admit he looked good today. That doesn't make him good, but he at least appeared to be against the Wearsiders.<br />
<br />
Carrick: <b>5</b>: So frail and expressionless. Passed the ball forward so few times. It's always square or back for this pusillanimous being. Get his ass outta here. Even on a day when he plays well he's scarcely above average.<br />
<br />
Anderson: <b>7</b>: Provided bustle up the middle. Distinguishes himself from his peers by dribbling in the position. Must improve his passing, though. Hit the post.<br />
<br />
Giggs: <b>7</b>: Made a few vintage runs today. Nice to have his natural width, even if his natural time is soon approaching. Subbed.<br />
<br />
Berbatov: <b>8.5</b>: I defended him all of the last two years. This season I don't have to. Scored importantly on a header and finished the game with a fortunate deflected goal. Could have scored others, which means he was either penetrating or wasteful. Neat tricks and balanced as ever.<br />
<br />
Rooney: <b>7</b>: Some decent cross-field passes and such. Assisted Berbs on the first with a delicate curler. Also almost resembled Cantona on another chipped effort from outside the box. Profligate with the ball at his feet, aimless when driving at defenders. More suited to a central midfield role.<br />
<br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;">Sunderland</span><br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><br />
</span><br />
Gordon: <b>7</b>: Kept his side in it while they often defended poorly around him.<br />
<br />
El Mohamady: <b>6.5</b>: What a funny name. I thought he did decently going forward and got stuck-in about.<br />
<br />
Onuoha: <b>6</b>: Central defenders are hard to come by. He may be one for the future. I think he'll look better on other days.<br />
<br />
Ferdinand: <b>6</b>: Didn't do too much beside repel many attacks, and what more can you ask, really? But he got skinned here or there and was out of position at times.<br />
<br />
Bardsley: <b>4</b>: Tried too hard to impress.<br />
<br />
Malbranque: <b>5.5</b>: Tried to spell his side forward. But, it was never going to be enough.<br />
<br />
Henderson: <b>6</b>: Good engine, eager to express himself. Could have played better or definitely worse.<br />
<br />
Riveros: <b>5</b>: Did little to distinguish himself.<br />
<br />
Zenden: <b>7</b>: Had the experience and gumption to at least attempt to get something from the game for his side. Unperturbed throughout a trying match.<br />
<br />
Bent: <b>3</b>: I realized he was playing in the 65th minute.<br />
<br />
Gyan: <b>5</b>: Apparently he looks decent when he's not playing against Monster Vidic.<br />
<br />
<i>United grabbed the two points in a predictable scoreline. The first twenty minutes were perhaps their best football of the season. However, the Red Devils need to start playing that hard throughout the whole match, instead of just at the beginning or end of each.</i><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-58427322371130780042010-12-14T20:42:00.000-08:002011-02-25T20:43:07.187-08:00Ronaldo adapts technique on short-range freekicksCristiano Ronaldo's latest cracking free-kick success had a minor but significant distinction from his numerous others.<br />
<br />
The Portuguese highlight reel has had a proclivity—from his <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> days—to use the top of his foot, without following through, to create a driven, dipping, swerving strike on all his free kicks.<br />
<br />
The only problem was that it's nearly impossible to get it over the wall using that technique. It's no coincidence that especially this season in Madrid the majority of his attempts bang into the wall.<br />
<br />
Last weekend against <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/real-zaragoza">Real Zaragoza</a>, Ronaldo curled instead of driving and sweetly bent the 24-yard free kick into the corner with accuracy over power.<br />
<br />
It's a single data point, but even if it only implies instead of proving his continued maturation of a player, then it's an important one.<br />
<br />
Ronaldo's trademarked technique for dead balls is only practical on longer free kicks where the ball has more distance to sink under the crossbar.<br />
<br />
But curling a shot is not only more accurate but provides more spin and dip to get it over the wall and under the bar from inside 28 or so yards.<br />
<br />
It only took him five years, but it seems like he finally figured that out.<br />
<br />
He gets a lot of attention from simple-minded people for whatever hijinx he chooses to create in his personal life. It's good to know he still finds time to think about improving his game.<br />
<br />
It's hard to see why anyone else bothers caring about anything beyond that.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-18660165950516175852010-12-14T20:40:00.000-08:002011-02-25T20:41:24.575-08:00United somehow top the league after edging ArsenalPark Ji-Sung once again transcended an inherent mediocrity to edge Manchester United to victory Monday against Arsenal.<br />
<br />
The Korean mimicked Javier Hernandez' own contortionist header against Stoke City to somehow steer Nani's cross into the net just prior to the interval at Old Trafford.<br />
<br />
The second half, as the first, contained enterprising football from each side in a combative, classy affair between the two perennial contenders.<br />
<br />
United should have gone two goals to the good but Wayne Rooney, despite looking quite fit, managed to balloon a dubiously-awarded penalty into the Stretford end.<br />
<br />
Rooney aimed for the top-left corner but supplied far too much power than is required when aiming at one of the two corner quadrants of the goal the keeper can't reach regardless.<br />
<br />
But it didn't matter as United held on confidently to finish match day 17 on top of the Premier League table with a game in hand.<br />
<br />
Nemanja Vidic and Rio Ferdinand comprised a dynamic duo in the back without need for grappling hooks or prosthetic muscles. Vidic particularly asserted himself—as he tends to, being the most dominant central defender in the world. Rafael and Evra each happened to put in workman-like shifts to steady their squad going forward.<br />
<br />
And going forward United were good enough. Alex Ferguson's five-man midfield could be hyperbolized as being genius, but how genius is it when everyone knew he'd do it anyways, as is his wont against England and Europe's better sides.<br />
<br />
Somehow Michael Carrick managed not to make a fool of himself while Anderson and Fletcher harried about compensatorily, crashing into those in yellow, leaving them whinging on the floor clutching limbs.<br />
<br />
Nani was predictable in his unpredictability; as is his proclivity: he made poor decisions and usually executed them with flare, seldomly—but appreciably—with effect. Players who dribble too much tend to be bad passers; it's not really rocket science. They practice dribbling more than passing, even when they're playing.<br />
<br />
Ji-Sung, amidst turning the ball over under no pressure, displaying poor balance, and ever-showcasing an inability to work towards his left side, popped up for the crucial header before the break to ensure his lamentable inefficiencies are glossed over for another week by editorialists (well, most of them).<br />
<br />
Up front Rooney showed good fitness and focus, two necessary attributes flagrantly lacking in his recent form. Of course, he's still the same player. His need to work the ball onto his right foot from the left side of the field is so obvious it's a wonder he ever gets a shot off.<br />
<br />
But Rooney makes up for an inarguable lack of guile (except when attempting the odd chip) on days like this with tenacity and bottle, flying after headers, sweeping balls left and (usually) right, and importantly staying in position.<br />
<br />
As for Arsenal, who really cares. There's 50 writers on this site who'll each have a different perspective of their game Monday, and I won't read a single one.<br />
<br />
If I was forced to proffer an opinion, I'd say uninterestedly, and based on knowledge more intuitive than deep, the following:<br />
<br />
Chamakh is an egregious diver. Nasri's combination of ambidexterity, balance and pace is world-class. Arshavin should arrive on form in January, resplendently for neutrals, and crucially for his side; and lastly, their defense without Vermaelen is a bit rubbish. <br />
<br />
That's sums up the amount of neurons I'll spend on Arsenal. Thankfully United's unlikely march to the top of the Premier League have most of mine firing again.<br />
<br />
If only it had less to do with Ray Wilkins' departure and more to do with consistent United potency this year.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-68194409814173770472010-10-24T20:34:00.000-07:002011-02-25T20:36:21.416-08:00Stoke-United: Player ratings and recapAgility trumped strength today as Javier Hernandez nimbly saved <a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> from drawing with <a _mce_href="/stoke-city" href="http://bleacherreport.com/stoke-city">Stoke City</a> at the Britannia Stadium.<br />
<br />
If any side deserved to win, it was the visitors. But neither team could produce spells of flowing football. Most of the match was spent retrieving balls gone out of bounds.<br />
<br />
United struck first. Evra implored Nani to play him the corner kick short. One wall-pass later and Nani was crossing in left-footed. Vidic powered up and headed it across the box. It was barely near Hernandez, but the jumping Mexican twisted in midair like a thrown cat to head in from close range on 26 minutes.<br />
<br />
The match remained quite open for the rest of the half. Neither side was overly dangerous. That trend continued into the second half. The game slowed down, somehow, as Manchester tried to edge out the narrow win.<br />
<br />
In the 80th minute Stoke equalized after Scholes turned over under little pressure. Even more, Tunjay equalized for Stoke. He cut inside Evra with surprising ease before curling in from 16 yards out at 81 minutes.<br />
<br />
It was déjà vu all over déjà vu. The Red Devils lacked bottle with the lead and gave it up like chumps.<br />
But, suddenly, our hero emerged from the din of doubt.<br />
<br />
Berbatov controlled, stalling smartly before chipping into Stoke's box. Scholes rose importantly and headed on to Evra. The Frenchman half-volleyed somewhat wildly, but it deflected onto Hernandez who plundered heroically!<br />
<br />
Chicharito must earn around six-times less than Wayne Rooney, <a _mce_href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/484719-five-reasons-why-javier-hernandez-is-more-valuable-than-wayne-rooney" href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/484719-five-reasons-why-javier-hernandez-is-more-valuable-than-wayne-rooney">but who's really more valuable</a>? Certainly Hernandez was today, just as he was against Valencia last month, and just as he was for his national side throughout the World Cup. Meanwhile, Rooney is on vacation in Dubai after demanding, and receiving, an additional 60,000 quid-a-week from a Manchester United club currently relying on his alternate.<br />
<br />
United saw out the final 10 minutes to mercifully hold onto the victory beating Stoke away 2-1.<br />
Gary Neville got his 600th cap for the club, but lasted only 45 minutes. Stoke managed to score against the Red Devils for the first time in their Premier League history.<br />
<br />
<strong>Player Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Manchester United</strong></span><br />
<br />
van der Sar: <strong>6</strong>. What do goalies earn when they've saved one shot all match but didn't screw anything else up egregiously? A six! But seriously, Stoke sent in a lot of throws and free kicks. Most were cleared by Vidic, while the rest were split between VDS and Ferdinand.<br />
<br />
Neville: <strong>4</strong>. Did not look at the races again. Should have been sent off, technically, but his first yellow card was dubious anyway. He didn't last past halftime, when Brown came on for him. Poor game, so let's assume he's still not at full fitness. The 600th cap for United ('Grats bro—Ed).<br />
<br />
Ferdinand: <strong>7</strong>. Quite solid. If this means his fitness is improving, then the Red Devils might not be out of the Premier League race yet.<br />
<br />
Vidic: <strong>9</strong>. So imperious. Vida had everything to do as City's aerial attack from set pieces was relentless. The Serb was an absolute rock and remains the best center-back in the world over three years' form.<br />
<br />
O'Shea: <strong>6</strong>. Actually played well today. Importantly, the Irishman performed within his limitations on offense thereby not betraying his inability. On the other side of the ball, he was desired and required as Stoke hammered in on attack.<br />
<br />
Nani: <strong>5.5</strong>. Dribbled well, passed poorly. <em>He must improve his decision-making and passing ability if he is ever going to evolve further</em>.<br />
<br />
Scholes: <strong>5.5</strong>. After starting the season in great form, Scholes has fallen off the wagon a bit. His maturity and generalship were useful today, but he turned the ball over needlessly on more than one occasion. The second occurrence led to Stoke's equalizer, but, it may have been Carrick's fault.<br />
<br />
<br />
Fletcher: <strong>6.5</strong>. Better today than in his last few matches. The Scottish captain was United's best player last season, but he has yet to regain that form. However, even playing averagely in an important role makes a huge—and positive—difference for his club.<br />
<br />
Evra: <strong>7.5</strong>. Employed on the left wing proper for the first time in his United career. Coincidentally, I called for it in my last article (Yes, Fergie reads my editorials). The Frenchman did well in the role, swung in many crosses, showed his good engine, and contributed directly to both goals.<br />
<br />
Berbatov: <strong>8</strong>. Very good match from the Bulgarian after possibly slipping off form in the last month. His cool touches were vital to retain possession going forward. He was simply masterful engineering the second goal and his overall open play was very good, displaying confidence, awareness, and a range of passing vision and technique.<br />
<br />
<strong>Hernandez</strong>: <strong>9.</strong> Huge brace from the Mexican. He's paid a fraction of what Rooney makes but is worth more both on and off the pitch. His first goal was simply awesome. He twisted like Neo in midair and headed home almost impossibly. For the late winner, Chicharito was right where van Nistelrooy would have been, and performed much the same, slotting home in a crowded box to save a near-death United. Hernandez will become a world-class striker in his time: evidence already exists for club and country.<br />
<br />
<em>Subs: </em>Brown (reinforced the back line), Carrick (emasculated his own team), Obertan (came on late)<br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Stoke City</strong></span><br />
<br />
Sorenson: <strong>6.</strong> Could do nothing with either goal and had little else to deal with. United only had three shots on goal. Two scored.<br />
<br />
Huth: <strong>6.</strong> Stoke's defense was solid today despite losing...<br />
<br />
Faye: <strong>6.</strong> ...leading to United not being exactly fluid nor dominating in the final third.<br />
<br />
Shawcross: <strong>6.</strong> City lost the match, but its defense escapes great rebuke.<br />
<br />
Collins: <strong>5.</strong> However, this guy didn't do much and got subbed.<br />
<br />
Pennant: <strong>6.</strong> Did a few things going forward before being subbed late.<br />
<br />
Delap: <strong>6.</strong> Several long throws led to some danger but no goals.<br />
<br />
Wilson: <strong>5.5.</strong> I don't know anything about this player and never really noticed him. It's likely that Fletcher outplayed him, in general, though Wilson probably shackled Scholes at times.<br />
<br />
Etherington: <strong>7.5.</strong> One of few players to shine offensively for Stoke today. Provided good, natural width on the left and sent in many crosses.<br />
<br />
Jones: <strong>6.5.</strong> Thankless task against Vidic, but the former <a _mce_href="/sunderland" href="http://bleacherreport.com/sunderland">Sunderland</a> striker did pretty good on those 10/90 balls that would be 50/50 against most other central defenders.<br />
<br />
Walters: <strong>5.</strong> Anonymous to my eyes.<br />
<br />
<em>Subs: </em>Tuncay (scored a fantastic individual goal), Higginbotham (null), Gudjohnsen (cool)<br />
<br />
Manchester United ended its away malaise all thanks to cult hero Javier Hernandez.<br />
<br />
Whatever crusade he is leading, I am on-board. The Mexican was a godsend again today. Hernandez has flat-out saved Man United in each of its two most important competitions this season.<br />
<br />
<em><a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">Follow me on Twitter</a>, where I predict everything that'll happen throughout every United season.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-21829709282874400162010-10-22T20:33:00.000-07:002011-03-03T09:01:59.837-08:00Selection hurting United more than Rooney absenceI know, it's so very interesting: Wayne Rooney decided not to re-sign at <a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a>. (He's since changed his mind.)<br />
<br />
But let's be honest: It's within his right. He signed a mutual agreement with Man United until 2012. Then, it'll run out. It happens. Did he misrepresent his desire to stay at United? Perhaps. Or perhaps it just changed. That happens too.<br />
<br />
Frankly, as poor as he's been playing for the last seven months, and even considering his average over his United career, he may be better off elsewhere; and the club, as well.<br />
<br />
It's not unreasonable. Rooney is a good striker. He's probably a better footballer, but his manager plays him almost solely up front, where his talents seem to naturally befit a central midfielder.<br />
<br />
Regardless, at the moment, the saga between club and manager and player only helps to overshadow how bemusing Alex Ferguson's selection has been recently.<br />
<br />
The Manchester club are not the same one they were two or three years ago. Form varies, players age, Ronaldo and Tevez are elsewhere, and United's most improving player, Antonio Valencia, is a long-term injury absentee. The United manager has been over-reliant on the fringe players he has left, players he overvalues against teams he underestimates.<br />
<br />
Michael Owen, Park Ji-Sung, Kiko Macheda, Gabriel Obertan, Bebe, Darron Gibson and Nancy Carrick are each either simply not good enough to consistently feature—much less player better than their opposites—in the top flight; at worst, yet, for most, period.<br />
<br />
Park's form this year has been nothing short of horrific. Carrick couldn't carry my own boots. Gibson, though young, does not particularly inspire, nor portend greatness. Macheda and Owen should be entering—not leaving—games late. Obertan and Bebe are for the future, yet, here we are needing them in the present; not a coincidence given the first team's depth.<br />
<br />
Ferguson's lack of self-awareness about the tenability of his squad, and his over-reliance on unworthy or unproven players has been trending all season, but especially relevant in United's last two domestic outings.<br />
<br />
Away to <a _mce_href="/sunderland" href="http://bleacherreport.com/sunderland">Sunderland</a> two weeks ago, Ferguson opted for Macheda and Owen up front, though, one or the other was shoe-horned at left-wing, at times, as United floundered with its manager's nebulous tactics. <a _mce_href="http://t.co/mWi9TZA" href="http://t.co/mWi9TZA">Both were dreadful</a>.<br />
<br />
Rooney was "injured," while Dimi Berbatov—arguably United's best attacker until then—and Javier Hernandez, who'd just heroically defeated Valencia late, away in a crunch Champions League tie, sat the bench. The Scottish manager thought any ragtag team he put out would suffice for three points away. United only managed one in a dire scoreless draw.<br />
<br />
When United returned last weekend from international break, hosting West Brom at home, Ferguson rested two players his side cannot—does not—perform without this season: Paul Scholes and Berbatov. Neither player had international duties; each was fully rested. Ferguson didn't even start Darren Fletcher, a player with an immense gas tank who's been the core of his side's midfield for two seasons now.<br />
<br />
When Giggs went off injured against the Baggies, Ferguson introduced Darren Gibson. This is a player who is essentially a poor man's Michael Carrick, who was also on the pitch, equally strangely. Calling someone a poor man's Carrick, for those who don't realize, is a scathing insult.<br />
<br />
Ferguson could have put Rooney on the left wing then, in an unnatural position he's nevertheless somewhat accustomed to, but he was ignored for the Irishman. Rooney would be introduced later in the match, belatedly, in futile endeavor for an equalizer than never came. "To prove a point, Ferguson dropped two," <a _mce_href="http://soccernet.espn.go.com/columns/story?id=834154&sec=england&root=england&cc=5901" href="http://soccernet.espn.go.com/columns/story?id=834154&sec=england&root=england&cc=5901">as Norman Hubbard wrote</a>.<br />
<br />
Without a natural left-winger (having chosen, or been forced to sell Zoran Tosic, a promising left-footed winger never given a real go at United) Ferguson should consider moving Evra up into left-wing. Fabio can deputize in the Frenchman's usual position. But one thing is certain, with so much talent on the side proving not talented enough, he has to play his best players elsewhere.<br />
<br />
Darren Fletcher, Scholes, and Berbatov must start every game going forward if United are going to have enough attacking verve to finish games instead of drawing them. It's understandable to grant each a rest now and then, but the old bloke must realize that it's more practical to put them on the bench after you have the lead, instead of taking them off the bench when you need one.<br />
<br />
Rooney being injured or unruly, or both, isn't a pleasant problem for the club or most fans, but, as Roy Keane agrees, Man United can survive without him. However, they won't survive if their manager continues making fundamental errors in the valuation and application of the talent in his squad.<br />
<br />
It's a great time to write articles about Wayne Rooney. But it's a bad time for United regardless. The paucity of talent at the squad that is the claimed harbinger for Rooney's departure is very real, to a point where you'd almost not blame him.<br />
<br />
Almost.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-63216735410540077852010-10-19T20:30:00.000-07:002011-02-25T20:31:37.401-08:00Rooney sale enables regrowthNot for the first time, and not for the last, necessity forces a difficult, but correct decision.<br />
<br />
Presumably <a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> don't want to sell Wayne Rooney, but with admissions from the Englishman about his "adamant" desire to leave presently, it looks like they'll have to.<br />
<br />
And that is not necessarily a bad thing.<br />
<br />
Wayne Rooney is worth more to Manchester United in the transfer market than he is on the pitch. <a _mce_href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/484719-five-reasons-why-javier-hernandez-is-more-valuable-than-wayne-rooney" href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/484719-five-reasons-why-javier-hernandez-is-more-valuable-than-wayne-rooney">Javier Hernandez is already a more effective out-and-out striker</a>, with far more potential, less worth on the transfer market, and a much better disposition. With at least ₤30m for Rooney's signature, United can buy five players who might already be better than him, or at least may evolve to be.<br />
<br />
But Rooney, at 24, has already plateaued. He may be the oldest 24-year-old player in Europe. He started playing consistent top-flight football eight years and many injuries ago. The growth we all hoped for has manifested in only modest goal returns for club and drastic, dreadful failures for country.<br />
<br />
Frankly, the only stylistic trademark Rooney has is one he rarely uses: dropping his shoulder and shifting his weight to deke past a defender. He used to have a penchant for long-range belters, but no more. We hoped he might evolve enough skill to beat defenders one-on-one, but he hasn't. He always dribbles to his right, like a schoolboy.<br />
<br />
He is fast, but not very. He has strength, but less than most central defenders. His proclivity to drop deep and spray long balls doesn't really befit a striker. Oh yeah, and he's seriously emotionally troubled.<br />
<br />
What is the big deal, here? Oh, right: millions of people around the world are deeply emotionally attached to a player they've been conditioned to adore.<br />
<br />
That same marketing appeal will garner an absurd fee on the transfer market. Other European clubs will either also believe the hype, or, more likely, simply want him to sell more jerseys to those who perpetuate it.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, it's obvious United have been reluctant to replace Giggs and Scholes as the heart of their side. Cashing in on Rooney will mercifully quicken that process, as it may just as mercifully assuage its manager's departure.<br />
<br />
Alex Ferguson's recent selection and tactical decisions have been bemusing at best. When Rooney leaves, a new chapter will begin, and it's unlikely Ferguson will be around long enough to be its author in full.<br />
<br />
It's possible Rooney may grow into a better player. But, as a bitter, rich, adulterous, troubled 24-year-old, I'd say the signs aren't very good. But they certainly—and hopefully—lead out of Manchester.<br />
<br />
<em>Follow me on <a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">Twitter</a> where I aggregate United news for everyone.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-26031479908695376772010-10-16T20:28:00.000-07:002011-02-25T20:30:10.638-08:00United-West Brom: Player ratings and match recap<a _mce_href="/manchester-united" href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> went up 2-0 and then let it all crumble away. Again.<br />
<br />
It all started so brilliantly. Hernandez niggled home after a deflected Nani free-kick after just five minutes.<br />
<br />
United controlled easily. Later in the half, they scored again after some interplay between Nani and Berbatov, with the latter setting up the other for a pretty simple slot. Two to the good, home and dry.<br />
<br />
But the second half was all hairy. West Brom scored luckily with some pinball after a low-cross from a shallow free-kick. That was early in the half. Five minutes later, van der Sar howled ridiculously, dropping a blasé cross so Tchoyi could pass it home. Barthez-esque from the Dutchman.<br />
<br />
So, United gave it up, again. At this point, let's just hope they compete this year, much less win anything. After such a dismal match, what'd you expect, a detailed recap? Come on! Onto player ratings.<br />
<br />
<strong>Player Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;">Manchester United</span><br />
<br />
van der Sar: <strong>1</strong>: Only had to make one or two real saves. Otherwise, his gaffe was atrocious. Sure, it's just a gaffe, some mistake that belies how good he usually is; but, it changed the game for the worse, and he was mentally at sea from then on. Maybe he deserves a four, but that's boring.<br />
<br />
Rafael: <strong>5.5</strong>: Added some impetus down the right. Usual stuff. By that, of course, I mean he doesn't play the most fundamental defense, but the end justifies the means. Nice to have him when United go forward, and besides, every game is an improving one for the Brazillian, unlike O'Shea or Brown who've already plateaued long ago.<br />
<br />
Vidic: <strong>6.5</strong>: Pretty quiet. West Brom weren't exactly besetting United's backline. Two crap goals weren't really anyone's fault. Wears the armband with pride. Vocal. Good enough for me.<br />
<br />
Ferdinand: <strong>6</strong>: Not too much blame to assign here. Rio surprises me with how consistently he's starting playing only just returning from injury. Good tidings, despite the suicidal result.<br />
<br />
Evra: <strong>5.5</strong>: Wonky back-tracking sometimes. Buccaneered forward enough though.<br />
<br />
Nani: <strong>5</strong>: Wasteful. Dove a bunch. Scored after some nice play with Berbatov, though. But, it doesn't matter how skillful you are when you don't apply it correctly. Looks good more than he plays well.<br />
<br />
Carrick: <strong>4</strong>: Absolute Nancy. Too scared to try to be above average. Content to pass the ball and hope no one notices him. Waste of space. If only United bought Huddlestone instead, way back when. Hated him then, still do; at least he rewards me by reinforcing the narrative that he is completely effing useless. Inevitably subbed.<br />
<br />
Anderson: <strong>6</strong>: Did a good job in the middle in the first half hour. Sadly he was again lampooned on the left-wing when Giggs took a knock. His drive and impetus in the center was not coincidentally paralleled by United's best patch of the game.<br />
<br />
Giggs: <strong>4</strong>: Came off just prior to the break with a little knock. Didn't have much say in what was going on, but did some good things here and there without overcommitment. Sadly, United needed his creativity, a dour indictment of a would-be elite squad.<br />
<br />
Berbatov: <strong>6</strong>: Some market correction going on here. Berbatov was in positive form in the beginning of the season. Looks to be equaling out a little. Granted, his form was over-stated by his <a _mce_href="/liverpool" href="http://bleacherreport.com/liverpool">Liverpool</a> hat-trick. Still, some nice touches, good through-balls, and important headers were still hallmarks. A little wasteful here or there, though. Still fun to watch, still a great footballer.<br />
<br />
Hernandez: <strong>6.5</strong>: Portends well. Scored nice and early like a good poacher. From open play, he didn't have much influence. Unfortunately he didn't' make as many vertical runs behind defenders as much as his speed may allow. Got shifted to the left-wing when Fergie got desperate—since the mule gaffer sold Tosic and has no natural winger on that side, and the Mexican did alright there too.<br />
<br />
Subs: Rooney (as poor as he's been lately), Scholes (briefly ineffective), Gibson (too much like Carrick)<br />
<br />
<span _mce_style="text-decoration: underline;" style="text-decoration: underline;"><a _mce_href="/west-bromwich" href="http://bleacherreport.com/west-bromwich">West Bromwich Albion</a></span><br />
<br />
Carson: <strong>5.5</strong>: Parried Nani's early first-half free-kick right onto Hernandez. So that was a big of a gaffe. Couldn't do much with United's second. Otherwise, he didn't have a lot of work to do, because the Devils weren't getting many shots on target. Carson got better as the game went on, but his punting was poor at times.<br />
<br />
Shorey: <strong>6</strong>: Misplayed a cross here or there. Otherwise did pretty well snuffing out Nani's play.<br />
<br />
Ollsen: <strong>6</strong>: Presumably handled Berbatov and Hernandez for the most part. United weren't overly dangerous in the final third of open play, so, I give this guy a six without being able to spot him in a police line-up.<br />
<br />
Tamas: <strong>6</strong>.<strong>5</strong>: Another player I was studiously tracking throughout the match. I don't know where these guys come from, but I know they leave Old Trafford with a big point after shutting down the immensely more expensive team for the last 45 minutes.<br />
<br />
Jara: <strong>6.5</strong>: Got beat here and there by Hernandez and Giggs. Got forward really well, though. Didn't always work out, but when does it. United afforded a lot of space, and this bloke obliged.<br />
<br />
Brunt: <strong>7</strong>: Bluntly blunted the free-kick into the danger zone for the first goal, like mushrooms growing from a pile of dung. Got stuck-in, and such, and enjoyed space in the middle.<br />
<br />
Mulumbu: <strong>6.5</strong>: I predict West Brom turning a profit on him in a year or two. Athletic holding midfielder. Explosive too. Well, not really, just making an inside joke. This guy played pretty deep today. Hey, can't fault him.<br />
<br />
Scharner: <strong>5</strong>: Quiet match for one of the few Baggies I was familiar with. Where's Jonathan Greening? Yeah, that's all I got.<br />
<br />
Tchovi: <strong>6.5</strong>: Played soccer. Scored when van der Sar spilled his milk.<br />
<br />
Morrison: <strong>7.5</strong>: Nuisance. Good on the young lad. Not awed by the stage, played like he was on the home side. Good stuff. Deserved the result more than anyone<br />
<br />
Fortune: <strong>6.5</strong>: Able to befuddle his defenders sometimes, which is enough for a striker. Even if you're successful a third of the time squaring up and beating your opposite, you're doing alright. Got space, fired some shots; not bad for a visiting forward at Old Trafford against a supposedly elite side.<br />
<br />
<em>United should have won this game. The heart of the team quivers, pumped by no one. Ferguson would be sitting on three points if he starts Fletcher, but hey. In the end, they should have won, regardless, but totally gave it up. The vacancy showed by Carrick throughout personified United's lackluster drive to take back the lead once squandered. Who sees them beating <a _mce_href="/chelsea" href="http://bleacherreport.com/chelsea">Chelsea</a> domestically or abroad this year? Not I, nor anyone else. </em><br />
<br />
<em>Follow me on <a _mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce" href="http://www.twitter.com/dioforce">Twitter</a>.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-66185134419367410532010-10-07T17:17:00.000-07:002011-02-25T20:25:21.921-08:00Five Reasons Why Chicharito is More Valuable for United than Wayne RooneyWayne Rooney has done too little to get so far. His stature as world footballing icon is assumed, but unearned: His actual skill with the leather has never been of the highest tier. It's time for the facade to end.<br />
<br />
Luckily for Manchester United fans, Javier Hernandez is the white knight. At 22, he's faster, hungrier, and more polygamist. And those are only three reasons why, despite being less "experienced", and having less and less-prestigious winner's medals, Javier Hernandez is already better than Wayne Rooney, and more important to United.<br />
<br />
<b>POLYGAMY </b><br />
<br />
Hernandez is 22 and ridiculously good-looking. He's not dumb enough to get married just as he's becoming one of the most popular footballers in the world. It shows more character to intelligently remain relatively single than to marry presumptuously, cheat repeatedly with prostitutes, and lie about it. Even Cristiano Ronaldo has enough sense to stay untethered, paying off any girls he impregnates. Rooney's personal misgivings unfortunately have a lot to do with his current professional malaise. It's systemic, and it's not the first time.<br />
<br />
<b>STYLE</b><br />
<br />
Wayne Rooney is a midfielder playing forward. His most lauded attributes relate more to a buccaneering tackler than a finesse finisher. Rooney has a great long ball as well as a penchant for incisive chips or driven passes through the middle. Unfortunately he's plays in a position that necessitates him being the receiver, not the passer. He loves to drop deep and track back, two tendencies which are fine in a vacuum, but can be counter-productive to the larger picture.<br />
<br />
As a more direct striker, Hernandez fits United's scheme better, better complimenting striker partner Dimitar Berbatov's creative style. The Bulgarian takes more joy in the final pass than scoring the goal itself. He also loves to drop deep to instigate play and express himself on his side's build-up. Hernandez supplements this perfectly, having the speed and inclination to be the first man darting into the box once his side opens up opposing defenses.<br />
<br />
Rooney and Berbatov, though, often get their lines crossed, as both may abandon forward and drop deep; one out of frustration and impatience, the other from penchant and necessity. Hernandez is a more suitable yang to Berbatov's yin and quite simply plays more like a striker than a grumpy, roaming Rooney.<br />
<br />
<b>POTENTIAL</b> <br />
<br />
<br />
Rooney homers used to rely on his potential as a crutch. But now, having played eight full seasons in the English top flight, he is a very old 25. He looks more like Danny Glover than a mid-twenties British lad. The period when most of his improvement would have occurred is over. He has now plateaued.<br />
<br />
Wayne hasn't added or changed his game for the better in several years. In fact, he's picked up some bad habits, losing the abandon and naivete that actually helped his earlier style. Having trained at the same camp for six years, in addition to the complacent influence of stardom he's projected, among other factors,has homogenized his current style. And quite frankly, he's not as good as people hoped.<br />
<br />
Hernandez, a much fresher 22, has only begun to mature. Only last week he entered his first UEFA Champions League game, away to Valencia, and scored clinically on his first two touches. The Mexican international has netted against Spain, France, and Italy, among others, this year. He plays happy, as opposed to Rooney, and shows none of the stress and disturbance than mars Rooney's displays.<br />
<br />
Hernandez might already be better than Rooney. At the very least, though, he has plenty of growth ahead of him during which to prove it, while the English pugilist looks every bit his 431 senior appearances.<br />
<br />
United aren't going to outlast Chelsea domestically, nor numerous better clubs abroad, throughout the long season, so there's really no reason why Hernandez should continually sit the bench at the profit of Macheda, Owen, or even Rooney.<br />
<br />
<b>QUALITY</b> <br />
<br />
Over eight years, Rooney has proven that he isn't a world-class striker. His moderate goal-scoring exploits over the years have rarely met expectations. His goal tally averages to 13 each season as the most forward player on one of the world's most dominant football clubs. Many resulted more from finishing a team-worked attack than creating through personal brilliance. His individual ability has ever warranted promotion into the elite "world" class, despite the hopeful projections of so many.<br />
<br />
Theoretically, the Englishman uses a mixture of speed and power to beat defenders. In truth, he can rarely get past or behind defenders. Wayne is definitely faster than some players, but he's smaller than more. He also doesn't use his body as well as he could. His current striker partner Berbatov is wiry, but shrugs off defenders easily because his body control and balance are both impeccable. Wayne usually fires himself like a dumbfire missile between or through defenders, using blunt-force trauma over agility, and can only rarely create by himself running at anyone.<br />
<br />
Running is Hernandez's specialty. The Mexican was the fastest player in the World Cup according to FIFA. Their guns clocked him running at almost <b>20 MPH</b>. That's one asset Rooney no longer shares and perhaps the single most important attribute of a through striker. Hernandez also shows a decent turn with his back to goal and an ability to finish with both feet. He is taller than Rooney and jumps higher. With speed, athleticism, ambidexterity, and prowess, he has raw natural ability upon which more skill will continue flourishing, besides being the more effective of the two players on current form.<br />
<br />
<b>MONEY</b> <br />
<br />
Wayne Rooney is undoubtedly very marketable. Just as David Beckham's did when he unwittingly became a footballing advert, Rooney's own image has long since surpassed his footballing ability. In other words, it's a seller's market.<br />
<br />
After winning little with an incomplete and aging squad again this year, United should be able to garner around £60m for Rooney next offseason. Quite basically, that's a lot more than he's worth. United could buy several younger, better players with that money—enabling the paradigm shift necessary for Alex Ferguson's final retirement—as "Chicharito" assumes the forward-running striker role for many years.<br />
<br />
Hernandez is quickly becoming a hero for Mexico, naturally displacing the aged Cuauhtémoc Blanco and Rafael Marquez rabid footballing country's darling. Furthermore, his best years are ahead of him instead of behind him. Mexico is fervorous about soccer, yet remains untapped by British clubs. It's a completely new marketplace of opportunity for United, and don't think they don't know it.<br />
<br />
Most casual United fans—those that occasionally buy jerseys and such—will be interested in anyone who plays striker for United, as long as he's good. Hernandez is better than Rooney, in addition to having stronger character, being more consistent, better-mannered, and a far less hesitant star.<br />
<br />
United, for better or worse, are more or less shit-broke. Even the most simple man knows money is the fuel that drives most clubs' decisions, making this (arbitrarily) the number one reason Hernandez, not Rooney, is United's future first striker.<br />
<br />
<b>Sell Rooney High</b> <br />
<br />
In "Chicharito", Manchester United have an emerging star who, despite being worth less on the transfer market, is arguably already better than Wayne Rooney—certainly on current form. Yet, the Mexican still possesses a much larger gap in which to grow, instead of the Englishman who, after almost 400 senior appearances, looks like a 35-year-old drunkard and hasn't added anything salient to his game in years.<br />
<br />
Hernandez represents a sector of the world with little connection to English soccer, presenting a unique marketing opportunity to United's globalizing brand. His direct attacking style more befits a striker, particularly one next to Berbatov, than a player who's most celebrated function is tracking back and yelling "fack off" at referees. The Mexican is also one of the fastest players in the world and has little history of injury.<br />
<br />
United still need Rooney to find some form, eat some minutes, and bang in some goals this year. Along the way, Hernandez should be used here and there, starting more, always growing. Once the year ends, if a cannibalistic Spanish giant are again inclined to offer an egregious amount, tight-wads United would be fools not to sell.<br />
<br />
Because the bottom line is this: We already know Wayne Rooney won't be what we hoped he'd become. It's time to place our hope in someone else while Rooney's appeal is still inflated among nations and clubs who don't yet know better.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-25780788516908913992010-10-04T17:08:00.000-07:002010-10-07T17:11:04.821-07:00Ferguson's Sundered ArmsIt's hard to figure out what was going through <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a> manager Alex Ferguson's mind when he made the starting lineup away to <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/sunderland">Sunderland</a> last Saturday.<br />
<br />
Away to a burgeoning, physical side, against a motivated protege, the legendary gaffer opted for two strikers up front, neither of whom really belong in the starting 11 of any Premier League side.<br />
<br />
Both Federico Macheda and Michael Owen have profiles of an impact substitute, as neither display enough ability from open play to create flowing team football throughout a whole match. Not yet, at least, for one; not likely ever again for the other.<b> </b><br />
<br />
<b>Macheda too embryonic as top flight feature</b><br />
<br />
Federico <span class="spellcheck">Macheda</span>'s greatest contribution to Man United was in his first appearance, when he netted heroically against <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/aston-villa">Aston Villa</a> in the late spring of 2009. It's a testament to a players' value when his first action a year-and-a-half ago remains his greatest display of striking intuition. Unfortunately, the 19-year-old has subsisted largely on reputation since that day.<br />
<br />
Macheda simply isn't that good—yet. What are his assets? He's not especially fast. He's not tricky, doesn't drive at guys. His passing is, at best, average. His finishing is nothing to write home about. He's not particularly strong and doesn't contend greatly for headers.<br />
<br />
His touch is too loose to inspire great hope. His style belies a footballing intelligence easily rivaled by better players who never made the grade at United. The evidence exists on video and we've all seen it; this is not merely cynicism.<br />
<br />
<div class="article-image"><img alt="104652288_crop_340x234" src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/article/media_slots/photos/000/014/186/104652288_crop_340x234.jpg?1286229902" /> </div><div class="article-image">Macheda's growth has seemed to stagnate already <br />
Michael Regan/Getty Images </div><div class="article-image"> </div>Given time, he may grow into his body and become more useful. But now, at 19 years old, he is another of many starburst prospects at United that deserve to be on loan or playing for the reserves.<b> </b><br />
<br />
<b>Owen a super sub, not serious starter</b><br />
<br />
Michael Owen does not belong for different reasons.<br />
<br />
His fitness is not only historically suspect, but obviously mediocre on more present testimony. As simply as possible, he is far too poor from open play to be a marquee striker. He has the "experience" and enough guile to niggle in for a goal late in games, but not after already playing 85 minutes.<br />
<br />
Owen has proven his worth on large occasions during his United tenure, netting very late against Man City last season and equalizing nicely on a precious header recently away to Bolton. Both came after being introduced late in each match (It bears mentioning that a hat-trick away to Wolfsburg last season is an exception to this norm).<br />
<br />
Despite being a sympathetic figure that we'd all like to get behind, Owen has little business starting up front regularly, especially with an unproven striker like Macheda. From open play, he is positively horrible. He can't outrun anyone, he can't out-muscle anyone. He can't dribble past anyone. His pacing has never been his hallmark.<br />
<br />
In other words, he's just a bloke you throw on late to sneak into the box and steal a late goal, not someone you'd want involved throughout a grinding match. Of the two players, at least Macheda is young and may possibly improve, while Owen's hayday is long past and was short-lived.<b> </b><br />
<br />
<div class="article-image"><img alt="103635887_crop_340x234" src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/article/media_slots/photos/000/014/192/103635887_crop_340x234.jpg?1286229934" /> </div><div class="article-image">Owen: More useful in a suit than a kit? <br />
Pool/Getty Images </div><br />
<b>Ferguson's tactics bewilder again</b><br />
<br />
Ferguson's decision to start either player—much less both—away in the top flight, as he did against Sunderland, was extremely curious. As United's best footballer this season, most assumed Dimitar Berbatov would be a shoe-in. Who'd partner him should have been an academic choice: Javier Hernandez.<br />
<br />
The two form a complimentary pairing. Berbatov likes to drop between midfield and defense to harry play intelligently through the final third. Hernandez is inclined to make these vertical runs by utilizing his outstanding pace (The Mexican was the fastest player at the 2010 World Cup, clocking in at 20 MPH at full trot).<br />
<br />
Furthermore, Hernandez finishes with both feet, something far underrated among top-tier players in England and abroad. He has scored against the Netherlands, Mexico, Argentina, and France in the last six months.<br />
<br />
"Chicharito" had just scored epically away to Valencia in midweek, stealing two important points. He's shown better finishing instincts than Macheda, and more athletic ability to enforce them than Owen. He was primed for his second league start.<br />
<br />
But against Sunderland—matching wits with his friend and former charge, Steve Bruce—Alex Ferguson seemed to take it easy, on some level. Bruce must have been elated when he saw United's teamsheet. Throughout the match, Ferguson uncertainly tarried between 4-4-2, with Anderson on the left, to 4-5-1, with either Macheda or Owen up front, at different times.<br />
<br />
<div class="article-image"><img alt="104546600_crop_340x234" src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/article/media_slots/photos/000/014/202/104546600_crop_340x234.jpg?1286229984" /> </div><div class="article-image">Hernandez scored awesomely against Valencia <br />
Alex Livesey/Getty Images </div><div class="article-image"> </div>The result was domination, and it was United wearing the gag-ball, getting spanked, and screaming the safe word. Thankfully, Vidic and Ferdinand prevented an ultimate penetration the rest of their outfield players were so passive to enable. Berbatov and Hernandez both appeared in the second half as United feigned to compete, but Sunderland had long since established control.<br />
<br />
With two weeks of international break ahead, there was no reason to rest Berbatov, and little reason to protect Hernandez. Berbatov has two weeks of nothing ahead of him. Hernandez was rested more than enough to deserve participation Saturday.<br />
<br />
At least the Mexican's class is not suppressed on his national team. There he'll likely continue to perform like he did in the World Cup, and could have against Sunderland: A dynamic pistol of a striker with reasonable prospect to evolve into a world-class player.<br />
<br />
It's important to remember that Alex Ferguson's reputation is built more on motivating men and spotting and weening talent than for being a celebrated tactician. He proved that again Saturday.<br />
<br />
<i>You may follow me on <a href="http://twitter.com/dioforce">Twitter</a>. You may not, also.</i><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-88260006970323958822010-10-04T17:07:00.000-07:002010-10-07T17:08:12.060-07:00Letting van der Vaart go to Spurs proved paucityEver summer, every fall, United fans like you and I wonder and whine aloud why Sir Alex Ferguson hasn't bought any number of attractive players on the transfer market.<br />
<br />
Each time, ultimately, we are assuaged and affirmed by the old gaffer, claiming a complete squad is the reason for inactivity, not fiscal restrictions from up in the ivory tower.<br />
<br />
But if there was proof that the Manchester side is being strangled by their owner's surfeit, it existed plainly when they let Rafael van der Vaart transfer from Real Madrid to Spurs for just £8m.<br />
<br />
On form, the 26-year-old Dutch dynamo is one of the most creative left-footed attackers in Europe, and he is already in resplendent form (he needed no time to "adapt" to the Premier League, a rationalization reserved for less-focused players fumbling through the transition).<br />
<br />
Sure, his form will vary and go down—presumably, but his mean should prove much higher than two players United have struggled to replace: their mid-30s stars, Paul Scholes and Ryan Giggs.<br />
<br />
On the wing, "Vaartman" is far quicker than Giggs, with much more pace and a far better strike. In the middle, his movement, passing, and vision rivals Scholes, being more like the ginger prince at the turn of the century, not 10 years since. Van der Vaart is younger, fitter, and has more gas than either.<br />
<br />
He may not fit perfectly in a two-striker system, but his worth on the wing for United, or filling in as a second striker, would have arguably fixed two of the Manchester side's most impending problems with one player (it also would have helped plug the gap left when United have to sell Rooney this summer).<br />
<br />
There were no reasons they wouldn't have wanted van der Vaart, especially at such a low price. United have sold most of their best players to Madrid, so there is a clear relationship. Real were desperate to off-load players players that didn't fit Jose Mourinho's vainly projected image.<br />
<br />
These factors, and the Special One's sycophantic affection for Sir Alex, insures that roaming texts and calls were relayed between the two superclubs at some point before Tottenham's last-minute grab.<br />
<br />
Ferguson has a history of buying and selling, but since Ronaldo's departure two years ago, his hand has been forced out of the transfer kitty (that's why John O'Shea, Michael Carrick, and Federico Macheda are starting in the Premier League).<br />
<br />
The United gaffer may be forced to recite the company line, claiming that money is plentiful, and his recent, uncharacteristic miserliness in the transfer market is by choice. But we all know he'd have fancied van der Vaart, alas, just as he fancied Adam Johnson.<br />
<br />
It was a lack of money—not desire—that decided glaring inaction, thereby providing more persuasive evidence of it's dearth.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-59065223587812745512010-09-28T17:04:00.000-07:002010-10-07T17:07:06.401-07:00Partizan Belgrade-Arsenal: Player Ratings and Recap<a href="http://bleacherreport.com/arsenal">Arsenal</a> travelled to Serbia today to match up against Partizan Belgrade on the second matchday of the 2010 UEFA Champions League.<br />
<br />
Arsenal led Group H after demolishing Braga 6-0 on the inaugural day of fixtures while Belgrade lost 1-0 to Shaktar Donestk. The Gunners travelled without Robin van Persie, Cesc Fabregas, or Manuel Almunia, but manager Arsene Wenger could easily afford wholesale changes with such a robust squad of attacking talent.<br />
<br />
Each side pinged the ball around in the beginning, getting a feel for what promised to be a physical match in the loud, intimidating atmosphere of the FK Partizan Stadium.<br />
<br />
Completely under the kosh, Arsensal broke on the counter after 15 minutes through Andrei Arshavin. He played through to Wilshire who brilliantly back-heeled back to the little Russian to strike home from eight yards, quieting the raucous crowd. <strong>Arsenal led 1-0</strong> against the run of play.<br />
<br />
On 26 minutes, the Londoners broke through with clinical triangular passing only for Arshavin to over-elaborate. They broke again from the half-clearance but <span class="spellcheck">Arshavin</span>'s close-range chip was blocked. The Russian sparkplug fed Rosicky through a moment later as the Gunners unloaded their clip; Belgrade's keeper did well, though.<br />
<br />
On 32 minutes, an arbitrary handball by Denilson gifted Belgrade the chance to equalize from the spot. Cléo obliged, slotting calmly to the right..<strong>B</strong><b>elgrade 1, Arsenal 1.</b><br />
<br />
<span></span>The equalizer buoyed Belgrade enough to see the half out without any more clear-cut chances for either side.<br />
On the opposite side of the break, after ten minutes, Chamakh was sent through down the middle and was felled by Jovanovic inside the box. The Belgrade defender was shown red; Arshavin banged the penalty, with power instead of accuracy, and Stojkovic saved heroically.<br />
<br />
Despite being up a man, Arsenal were unable to consistently pressure the Serbian side. However, on 70 minutes, Rosicky crossed to Chamakh whose header was athletically saved by Stojkovic onto the bar. The Moroccan turned in the rebound, giving <strong>Arsenal a 2-1 lead</strong>.<br />
<br />
Arsenal utilized their man advantage, playing keep-away for the next ten minutes. After winning a corner, substitute Samir Nasri curled in a sweet cross for Squillaci to rise to. <strong>Belgrade 1, Arsenal 3</strong>.<br />
<br />
Immediately following the goal, Belgrade penetrated Arsenal's penalty box and earned a penalty via a Kieron Gibbs tackle. The head referee called it straightaway without help from any linesman. Fabianski saved the Cléo's penalty, diving left and low.<br />
<br />
The Gunners pressured casually until the whistle, and left Belgrade as 3-1 winners and Group H leaders on goals, virtually assured of qualification into the knockout stages.<strong> </strong><br />
<br />
<strong>Player Ratings</strong><br />
<br />
<div class="article-image"> <img alt="104513340_crop_358x243" src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/article/media_slots/photos/000/011/943/104513340_crop_358x243.jpg?1285707533" /> <span> </span></div><div class="article-image"><span>Not all the lights were on in Belgrade <br />
Michael Regan/Getty Images </span> </div><strong><br />
</strong><br />
<span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Partizan Belgrade</strong></span><br />
<br />
<strong>Stojkovic</strong> (<strong>8.5</strong>) The best player on his side, despite ultimately letting in three goals. Ridiculous save after ridiculous save was a hallmark of his game today.<br />
<br />
Krstajic (<strong>6</strong>) Masked captain led by example but couldn't keep up with Arsenal's passing, mostly.<br />
<br />
Jovanovic (<strong>4</strong>) Being sent off enables me to give him a four without having to justify anything else.<br />
<br />
Lazevski (<strong>5.5</strong>) Did well in the first half, but did little in the second.<br />
<br />
Stevanovic (<strong>5</strong>) Most of Arsenal's joy was on the left side, where he was defending.<br />
<br />
Petrovic (<strong>6</strong>) Had some joy in the first 15 minutes of the match, but only just.<br />
<br />
Medo (<strong>6.5</strong>) Competed in the center with strength and flare until inevitably overrun by the more trained side.<br />
<br />
Ilic (<strong>4.5</strong>) Anonymous, perhaps because of my own ignorance, but, what am I gonna do?<br />
<br />
Tomic (<strong>5</strong>) Subbed early after generally ineffectual performance.<br />
<br />
Cléo (<strong>7</strong><img alt="" src="http://bleacherreport.com/images/pixel.gif" />) Belgrade's newest signing looks like a bargain after scoring eight times in qualifying and netting again today.<br />
<br />
Boya (<strong>6</strong>) Tracked back nicely on some occasions, otherwise did his best to contain an uncontainable Arsenal side.<br />
<br />
<span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Arsenal</strong></span><br />
<br />
Fabianski (<strong>8</strong>) Fabianski had a great game at a great time for his career. If Almunia continues to blunder, you may expect the Polish keeper to earn more time between the sticks.<br />
<br />
Djourou (<strong>5.5</strong>) Some needless tackles, but otherwise did what little was required from him.<br />
<br />
Squillaci (<strong>8</strong>) Headed strongly for Arsenal's important third goal. The summer signing was also the most assured member of his backline today. Central defenders are a real commodity in European football, and on evidence it seems Wenger made another intelligent signing.<br />
<br />
Gibbs (<strong>5.5</strong>) Contributed on both sides of the ball, but conceded a silly penalty late.<br />
<br />
Sagna (<strong>6</strong>) Belgrade offered little in attack. All the Frenchman had to do was pass sideways and track back occasionally.<br />
<br />
Song (<strong>6</strong>) Marshaled the midfield athletically. Passing was askew at times. Good, positive drive.<br />
Denilson (<strong>7</strong>) Needed to make a fantastic tackle early, and did. Partnered Song nicely to provide Arsenal's bevy of attacking talent.<img alt="" src="http://bleacherreport.com/images/pixel.gif" /><br />
<br />
<div class="article-image"> <img alt="104513301_original_crop_358x243" src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/article/media_slots/photos/000/011/944/104513301_original_crop_358x243.jpg?1285708916" /> <span> </span></div><div class="article-image"><span>Wilshire was on the verge of tears at one point <br />
Michael Regan/Getty Images </span> </div><br />
Wilshire (<strong>7</strong>) Fans of the London club prize this young man. He's deserved their adoration and hope more on prior performances than that today, but to be fair, he was hacked down at every turn. Nice assist on the first goal.<br />
<br />
Arshavin (<strong>7</strong>) Had several chances in an outstanding first half. Over-elaborate at times, though, and faded in the second. Took the dumb-fire approach on the penalty and earned the save from the keeper.<br />
<br />
Rosicky (<strong>6.5</strong>) Saw plenty of the ball but didn't do anything totally remarkable with it.<br />
<br />
Chamakh (<strong>7.5</strong>) Rose to score a crucial second goal, one of many nicely won headers. Seemed too eager to go to ground, which is not something new for the former Bordeaux man.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-6229236404870546592010-09-28T17:03:00.000-07:002010-10-07T17:04:11.436-07:00Scholes injury is bad ju-juPaul Scholes was ruled out of Manchester <span class="spellcheck"><span class="spellcheck">United's</span></span> crunch clash tomorrow at <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/valencia-cf">Valencia CF</a> due to a calf complaint.<br />
<br />
This is when things get pretty hairy.<br />
<br />
Scholes has started every senior match this season, and he's looked bloody great. But his forced preclusion from the side on Wednesday will expose <span class="spellcheck"><span class="spellcheck">United's</span></span> lack of natural cover in the central attacking midfielder role.<br />
<br />
Let's run down the brief list of candidates: Anderson is a poor passer and only just recovering from injury, on top of being more natural to a holding role. Fletcher and Hargreaves are both holding midfielders, albeit good ones, decent passers, but not incisive or creative. <span class="spellcheck"><span class="spellcheck">Carrick's</span></span> effect can best be described by awkward silence. Gibson can crack from range, but otherwise is a poor man's Fletcher. Giggs is crocked and obviously makeshift at best in the role. Who else is there?<br />
<br />
If Rooney wasn't injured, he'd be the most natural replacement to Scholes in midfield. In fact, it's where he should probably play, period, especially as Javier Hernandez proves to be the better striker. But that's way out of <span class="spellcheck"><span class="spellcheck">anyone's</span></span> paradigm.<br />
<br />
Tomorrow is going to be a low-scoring affair. Take the under, sure, but hope that Scholes gets back sooner than later. Otherwise, it's going to not only be an aesthetically ugly season, replete with boring hoofs and hopeful crosses, but it'll be one filled with increasingly mediocre results.<br />
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Scholes is one of a few players United can't afford to lose this season; a strange circumstance for a 35-year-old player, a damning indictment of United's transfer and youth policy.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-19610357175496878902010-09-27T17:00:00.000-07:002010-10-07T17:03:08.981-07:00Valencia-United: Too early to need points... right?It's far too early in the Champions League season to be having must-win games, just as it's probably far too early in an editorial to use a cliche like "must-win."<br />
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Forgive me, but don't forgive <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-united">Manchester United</a>. The club's plight is highly relative: they're merely not a veritable top three side in the world. It's not enough reason for fans to go out and commit seppuku. But integrity and altruism from the owners, more courageous decisions from the manager, and simply better performances from the players would all benefit the product on the field.<br />
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And that's just the place they'll meet Valencia on Wednesday in the second matchday of the Champions League group stage.<br />
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<strong>Dearth of wingers, yet youth displaced</strong><br />
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With Ryan Giggs out with a calf strain, United manager Sir Alex Ferguson is forced to shoehorn in Park Ji-Sung—admittedly a player he'd probably wrongly use anyway—going away to their toughest competition in the group, La Liga leaders Valencia.<br />
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Park has been arguably United's worst player so far this year, with Jonny Evans and Wayne Rooney both competing for the indistinction. Ferguson could afford to play Park in the past in such ties, at least when Ronaldo was around to release counterattacks and gloss over the Korean's attacking shortcomings.<br />
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<div class="article-image"> <img alt="104459728_original_crop_358x243" src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/article/media_slots/photos/000/011/511/104459728_original_crop_358x243.jpg?1285640366" /> <span> </span></div><div class="article-image"><span>Fergie is not faultless <br />
Alex Livesey/Getty Images </span></div><div class="article-image"><span> </span> </div>But now, it's not as if the Scotish gaffer has many options: or does he? God forbid anyone suggest something radical, like playing Patrice Evra at left wing with a da Silva behind, or giving Gabriel Obertan or Javier Hernandez berth along one of the touchlines.<br />
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Antonio Valencia's injury—hell, even Cristiano Ronaldo's departure in 2009—will continue to reverberate up and down the peaks and valleys of this season without the right cover continually being purchased or selected.<br />
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United's youth must grow by fire, and fast, to compete throughout the long season, something that won't happen if they only get 15 minutes every other game.<br />
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<strong>Evans fails as defense wobbles</strong><br />
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Having only mustered one point at home to semi-minnows Rangers, United definitely need at least one point come Wednesday. <br />
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Unfortunately, their usually Jupiter-solid defense is more likely to implode into a black hole than gravitationally deflect projectiles away from it's figurative blue marble.<br />
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Evans has been stretched further than that analogy throughout most of this season, and each time Vidic orbits away from the back line, United's inner atmosphere is inevitably penetrated.<br />
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He's been so bad, frankly, that I had to use the analogy again. That bad. This is the same player who displaced current European treble winner and World Cup winner Gerard Pique who, to be fair, at times looked just as wonky in his United tenure.<br />
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There's no reason to assume ultimate failure for Evans, but as Rio Ferdinand malingers in perpetuity on the sidelines, we might assume ultimate failure for United this season.<br />
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And not just for one reason; not just for Evans' current malform (were it to continue). United's other failings are well documented. They are a club in transition since they cashed in and sold Cristiano Ronaldo, led by an aging manager with a proclivity—or necessity—to rely on aging players, with an overrated talisman and without a natural on-field leader.<br />
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<div class="article-image"> <img alt="103996381_crop_358x243" src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.net/images_root/article/media_slots/photos/000/011/512/103996381_crop_358x243.jpg?1285614210" /> </div><div class="article-image"> <span> United fans would like to see this image less this year <br />
Michael Regan/Getty Images </span></div><div class="article-image"><span> </span> </div>Doesn't mean they can't barely eek by <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/liverpool">Liverpool</a> at home, or deserve to; but it should lead—on probability at least—to a tough, drawn-out season, inevitably ending in defeat to clearly more complete and robust squads. <strong></strong><br />
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</strong><br />
<strong>Valencia sales not enough to assure hope</strong><br />
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</strong><br />
A point away in Spain would be a positive result, despite the Spanish leaders being presumably weaker this year. In place of their two best players, Valencia now have over £70 million, having sold David Villa to Barcelona and David Silva to <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/manchester-city">Manchester City</a> at robust profits.<br />
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On travels this year, though, goals have passed through United's defense like neutrinos, penetrating their back line wherever Vidic wasn't. Through six games this season, the Mancs have conceded nine goals, seven away from home. In their double-winning 2008-09 term, they conceded 24 overall, and just 10 away from Old Trafford.<br />
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That'll have to change to get anything out of a game that should be viewed, at least by the United team, as a "must-win," lest the cliche becomes more and more applicable to their match previews as the European season unfolds.<br />
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At the very least, fans of red or neutral orientation may enjoy the glorious, final bow from an in-form Scholes, and the majesty of Berbatov on song; two conditions less likely to continue throughout as United fall short, if not only just. <br />
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<strong>Forecast</strong><br />
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As abysmal as Wayne Rooney has been lately, and considering their manager's penchant for the 4-5-1 in away European ties, the best-case scenario here probably involves Berbatov up front, alone. Rooney needs the rest, being knocked, tired, off-form, and stressed, and quite frankly, shouldn't even travel. (Reports state that Rooney is, in fact, not traveling.)<br />
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United's defense has been so porous, they could use an extra midfielder holding in front. The inclusion of Ji-Sung, in theory at least, contributes to more defending, but scoring should pose a problem. Expect a low-scoring game, perhaps even a nil-nil, as United continue to be competitive this year, if only just.<div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8946479684303243385.post-71100776672324019992010-09-19T16:56:00.000-07:002010-10-07T17:00:29.809-07:00United-Liverpool: Player ratings and Recap<div class="article-image" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"> <span> </span> </div><br />
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United hosted <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/liverpool">Liverpool</a> in Sunday's early kickoff. If you hadn't heard, it was totally awesome.<br />
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The game started very slowly, though. United controlled everything; Liverpool didn't appear to mind. Most of the first half consisted of long periods of possession for the home side punctuated by the odd half-chance or two.<br />
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After 42 minutes of dominant but deliberate United build-up, Berbatov opened the scoring from a Giggs outswung corner. The Bulgarian didn't have to jump, or even really try, as Torres pretended to apply defensive pressure. It was an awkward moment for the Spaniard, but who cared: United led 1-0 into the break.<br />
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This game would eventually get very hairy. Liverpool still didn't look like they felt like playing. United pressure with half-chances and whatnot until Berbatov braced up on 59 minutes with serious aplomb.<br />
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Nani crossed left-footed from out wide. Berbatov juggled the ball on his thigh and bicycle-kicked into the top corner from 10 yards. No luck about it. To call it "masterclass" would not be a misapplication of the vaunted term. His first touch was deliberate; his second was religious. United led 2-0.<br />
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As soon as the froth subsided, the match took a "Thelma and Louise"-type turn off a cliff. Johnny Evans clearly felled Torres in the box after 64 minutes of anti-football from the Mersey men. Gerrard stepped up and slotted in the penalty kick. Liverpool trailed 2-1.<br />
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Five more minutes, more bad juju. Gerrard curled in a free-kick from 21 yards out when Fletcher and O'Shea formed a window instead of a wall. Van der Sar was less stranded than he appeared, but it didn't matter. United gave up another lead in the top flight; the game was level at two.<br />
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As the violins played their despairing songs, Dimitar Berbatov stepped up and got his first United hat-trick to save the world from ending.<br />
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On 84 minutes he leaped highest and strongest, heading in <span class="spellcheck">O'Shea</span>'s cross after a square Scholes dish. I put down my samurai sword, stood up, and continued the live blog.<br />
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United saved at least blushes, at most their domestic season, by not utterly failing in the most Shakespearean way today. Berbatov deserves all the headlines he'll soon claim. The classiest player on the pitch proved his worth empirically today, and let me be the first to welcome so many finally onto his bandwagon.<br />
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<strong>Player Ratings</strong><br />
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<strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Manchester United</span></strong><br />
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Van der Sar (<strong>5</strong>) Every shot on goal Liverpool had today scored.<br />
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O'Shea (<strong>6</strong>) Slowly traversed the right flank with characteristic neutrality. Subtracted from a few attacks before assisting Berbatov's final goal.<br />
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Vidic (<strong>8</strong>) Finally got the better of Liverpool today after being sent off in their last two matches. Vida is in very good form and it shows no sign of receding. Any errors his back line made today were not made by him.<br />
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Evans (<strong>5</strong>) This player looked so promising two years ago. Last season his form was forgettable. This year he is not even into third gear yet. Potential is great but only if it becomes kinetic.<br />
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Evra (<strong>7</strong>) Easy game for Patty because Liverpool had no width, intent, or desire. It's nice to see the Frenchman have an individually positive day at the office, for a change, after what's been a rough calender year.<br />
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Nani (<strong>6</strong>) Needs to stop diving so egregiously. It's pathetic and embarrassing.<br />
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Fletcher (<strong>7.5</strong>) Commanded possession. Played with real and obvious desire. Slowly, methodically getting into fine form for the season. Arguably his side's most most important player, and definitely one of three or four candidates.<br />
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Scholes (<strong>7.5</strong>) Fletcher and Scholes form a very yin-yang partnership which should have featured more last season. Unfortunately, Sir Alex was still playing Carrick then. Scholes has not played poorly yet this season. Today Liverpool didn't try to get in his face as much as they could have. One remarkable turnover led to an opposing chance. Assisted Berbatov's last goal by feeding O'shea out wide.<br />
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Giggs (<strong>6</strong>) Giggs had some moments. He also didn't have some moments. Fairly average day for him.<br />
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<strong>Berbatov</strong> (<strong>9</strong>) Played about as good as he always has for United in three years. The Bulgarian maintains a level of consistency throughout his play with only minor variance. It was only a matter of time until his positivity resulted in goals, just as it was only a matter of time for Rooney's own inflated numbers last season to self-correct. <br />
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Berbatov scored a masterclass goal today. He also scored two others. Furthermore, he importantly won headers throughout the match and contributed to build-up just as you'd expect. <br />
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United need him to play big up front more often and win more of those 50/50 headers than he did last year. Majestic day from Berbatov and a very fulfilling one for his greatest supporters. Leads the EPL in scoring with six.<br />
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Rooney (<strong>6</strong>) Had some decent passes, but otherwise appeared tentative to pull the trigger or assert his true self.<br />
<strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><br />
Liverpool</span></strong><br />
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Reina (<strong>4</strong>) Off form, frazzled, bald. Didn't make many saves, let in three goals.<br />
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Skrtel (<strong>5</strong>) Assumed the same general sense of bewilderment as his teammates throughout.<br />
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Carragher (<strong>5</strong>) Pretty bad.<br />
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Konchesky (<strong>4</strong>) Meh.<br />
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Johnson (<strong>6.5</strong>) At least pretended convincingly to care about the result. Really good player; outshone the really bad performances elsewhere on his team without actually objectively playing that well himself.<br />
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Poulsen (<strong>4.5</strong>) Allowed Scholes and Fletcher to run proceedings according to their every whim. Is this really a player Hodgsen wants?<br />
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Gerrard (<strong>6.5</strong>) Converted a penalty. So. Also scored, somewhat luckily, direct from 22 yards. Otherwise he didn't really embody the gusto and hustle Liverpool unfairly require. Still almost stole a point by himself, though.<br />
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Meireles (<strong>5</strong>) Half chance here or there. Mostly ran around trying to contain Manchester's onslaught of patient, deliberate build-up. Might be a decent player, but will need time to gel with the rest of his asynchronous team.<br />
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Cole (<strong>5</strong>) Not so much. Tried to do some things on his own, but. Basically fell into the black hole of shitty football the rest of his team were spiraling down.<br />
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Rodriguez (<strong>3</strong>) This man was paid more this week than I'll make this year despite me having produced far more for the game today than him. When he was substituted, I remembered he was playing.<br />
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Torres (<strong>4</strong>) What's up with emo footballers? These guys get paid millions to play sport. Torres was very bad today. He got sent through and drew the penalty from Evans. Otherwise, from open play, he didn't appear to care. He literally let Berbatov score his first goal, standing behind him instead of defending the corner kick. It was a strange and awkward manifestation of his obvious listlessness.<br />
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<em>Follow me on <a href="http://twitter.com/dioforce">Twitter</a> or not.</em><div class="blogger-post-footer">dioforce -- trading wares and breaking down soccer since 96</div>ntlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14723018187072702566noreply@blogger.com0