Tuesday, 30 April 2013

#football updates# End of an era, or bump in the road?

End of an era, or bump in the road?

End of an era, or bump in the road?
What Went Wrong?
FC Barcelona has been heralded as the greatest team to have ever played the game for five years now. So why were they so poor last night? How were they humiliated by Bayern? What the hell went wrong?

Misfortune

One cannot underestimate the run of bad fortune that has plagued the side this season. The emotional impact of Èric Abidal’s cancer on the squad last season was difficult to bear. While such tragic events often galvanise a group of players and tighten the bonds of friendship, it also diverts focus and inflicts trauma that inevitably affects player performance on the pitch. Even more so as Abidal’s presence on the field proved to be irreplaceable. He was a rock in defence and an aerial threat that was so often lacking this season. How many soft goals from set pieces could have been prevented this season with “King Èric” holding the fort?
Captain Carles Puyol has additionally been sidelined for much of the season. Plagued by a series of injuries, Puyol’s absence cannot be highlighted enough. When fit he marshals the backline with steely determination and controlled aggression that was nowhere in evidence in his absence. He crucially conducts the backline and barks orders at one Gerard Piqué, who always looks a little lost without his mentor. While clearly past his peak, Puyol’s commanding presence was sorely missed in many games. He is the one player who will be almost impossible to replace as Barcelona trys to build for the future.
The fact that head coach Tito Vilanova was struck down by the same disease as Abidal this year cannot be overstressed. Barcelona hit the ground running this season and embarked on a series of performances that dazzled oppositions and fans alike with many people forgetting to miss Pep. A two month spell after Christmas saw the head coach hospitalized and left the Barcelona juggernaut rudderless. The worst spell of performance in many years followed and the team looked jaded and leaderless and to be frank, complacent. Many players obviously feared for their colleague and realized there is more to life than football. Other squads had no such philosophy. Losses to AC Milan and Real Madrid seemed to signal a turning of the tide in terms of dominance. The cracks were beginning to show.

Failure to Act

Any team that suffered injuries to players of the caliber of Messi, Puyol, Mascherano, and Adriano at this crucial stage in the season is bound to feel the pinch, but failure to take action when warning signs were on the horizon has meant a sudden collapse. In similar fashion to the Spanish economic crisis, failure to implement change sooner has made the fall from grace all the more sudden, and all the more insufferable.
The centre back crisis at Barcelona is no new concept. Puyol is far too old and prone to injury to be depended upon. Piqué is capable of great things but is becoming increasingly more inconsistent and fallible. Abidal, who was often used to shore up the hole at the back in the past, has been out for over a season, and during the last two transfer windows was laid up in hospital. Javier Mascherano has the heart of a lion and can pull off a bone crunching tackle when needed, but the fact remains that he is a midfielder and too small in stature to succeed at this level. Marc Bartra may make it in the future but even at age twenty-two, he has had no first team experience and looks far too meek and slight to be depended upon. When observing teams with young solid and confident centre backs such as Marquinhos at Roma and Raphael Varane at Madrid, one cannot excuse Bartra’s performances based on tenderness of years. The centre back problem has been exacerbated by the height of the full backs Alves and Jordi Alba. Essentially there is no aerial strength and that is why they are punished time and time again. Thiago Silva was on the market last summer, however a failure to sign such a crucial asset was missed. And may never present itself again. If FC Barcelona, the most popular team on the planet, cannot afford to sign a star player, something is seriously amiss.
Messi’s brilliance has papered over the cracks in this side for two seasons, for not only is the defence coming up short (pun intended), the forward line is experiencing a grueling goal famine. Goal tallies from Pedro, Alexis Sánchez and David Villa have scarcely touched double figures. Too often they hang on the wing and take a touch and pass the ball backwards. Where is the aggression? Where is the will to take on their man or make a beeline for goal? Or to take a shot, God forbid. Furthermore the total lack of any aerial threat must also be acknowledged and questioned. When one cast a glance back to the star-studded forward line of Henry, Messi, and Eto’o, one wonders how we slipped so far without realizing it. Messi has been bailing out the boat for seasons – but it has been sinking none the less.

Tragic Performance in the Transfer Market

Cáceres, Hleb, Chygrynsky, Henrique, and Keirrison are not household names yet the Barcelona board considered them worthy of millions of euros. And while they all belonged to the previous directorship, newer transfers that have not delivered include Ibrahim Afellay, Alexis Sánchez, and Alex Song. It must be noted that Cesc Fàbregas and David Villa have not lived up to their hype, for whatever reason. It doesn’t even bear remembering the catastrophic deal that saw legend Samuel Eto’o along with 45 million odd euros leave for Inter with Zlatan Ibrahimovic arriving. The Swede departed the following year for a paltry 25 million to be paid in installments by AC Milan. This must go down in history as the most horrendous business done in the history of sport. Eto’o went on to shoot Inter to Champions League glory the next season. Ibrahimovic continues to be the top scorer at every team he plays for. When one considers the talent the club has let go since the Guardiola era; Eto’o, Yaya Toure, Henry, Ibrahimovic a pattern appears. The aggressive talented, tall players have no place at this club. The meek shall inherit the earth – and the Barcelona jersey. While Guardiola inherited an epic squad from Rijkaard, Tito has inherited a depleted, more one-dimensional side due
 to Guardiola’s poor performance in the transfer market.

Obsession

Barcelona has three obsessions; possession, the 4-3-3 formation, and development of home-grown talent. These have turned from healthy foundations on which to build the philosophy of the club and team upon into an obsession.
Having the lion’s share of possession is a positive thing. However, when the ball is being moved from wing to wing and is passed backwards more than forwards – then something is wrong. When they move the ball with lightning pace and surgical precision like they did against Milan, they are unplayable and a joy to watch. However, too often players seem afraid to lose the ball and merely play the safe option. The defence splitting pass is not risked for fear of losing the all too precious ball. Count the amount of times the players on the wing such as Alba, Sánchez, Pedro, and Alves tip the ball back instead of running for the touchline, bearing down on goal or charging past their marker. The lack of bodies to aim at in the box is also a factor. To score a goal, players have to commit. Commit to a run, commit to a pass. Commit to something other than blind faith in possession.
The 4-3-3 formation has served the club well since its introduction in the Cruyff era. It has yielded multiple titles and helped the world fall in love with their attacking brand of football. It has however left them vulnerable at the back and at times a tad predictable. Every other team in Europe, including the Spanish national team, plays with two pivots in midfield. This formation has led to too many defeats by inferior opposition and a side of this caliber should have a plan B option when things are not going to plan.
Grooming home-grown talent is something to be proud of and a huge part of both the club’s success and its identity. No other club in the world invests so much money or effort into their academy or produces such giants of the modern game. However, when certain positions are not being grown, they must be purchased. It may be a generation or a millennium until La Masia produces another golden generation of such stellar quality as Messi, Xavi, Iniesta, and Puyol. In the meantime, use the financial resources of the club to plug the gaps.

Conclusion

In many ways Barça’s season is all the more impressive by virtue of the fact that they will soon claim another La Liga crown. This title is in many ways more impressive than a Champions League win as it requires consistency in a year when fate has thrown up many a hurdle to test the team’s mettle. The future is also potentially bright and I predict that with the likes of Piqué, Messi, Iniesta, Tello, Fàbregas, Thiago, and Deulofeu in the squad, this side will continue to be a giant of European football for the remainder of the decade – provided the club are willing and able to make the relevant changes. Anything is possible with the closest thing to a footballing god on our side. And luckily he has pledged his future to the club for many more seasons before he returns to Argentina. As fans I am sure we will make a similar pledge and enjoy many more future successes.

Monday, 29 April 2013

#football updates# selection dilemma in Bayern Munich


Heynckes and his team selection dilemma

Heynckes and his team selection dilemma

FC Bayern Munich coach Jupp Heynckes has spoken about his possible team selection for the Camp Nou match on Wednesday, considering that Bayern have six players who are one yellow card away from suspension. Philipp Lahm, Javi Martínez, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Dante, Luiz Gustavo and Mario Gómez could each miss the possible final in Wembley should they get cautioned.

It was thought that Heynckes might risk resting some of those key players against Barça, but he has said that he will select the best available team. While Barça should be flattered that Heynckes refuses to underestimate them despite a 4-0 lead on aggregate, it will not make their job on Wednesday any easier.

Tuesday, 23 April 2013

#FOOTBALL UPDATES# ALL ABOUT BAYERN MUNICH

Scouting Report: Bayern Munich

Scouting Report: Bayern Munich
FC Bayern Munich are already champions of the Bundesliga. They were duly crowned victors on April 6th with a 1-0 win in Frankfurt, with six league matches remaining, and remember it’s only an 18 team league. It was however hardly a surprise when they did win with the gap between themselves and second place around 20 points for most of 2013.
Dominating is the only way to describe their season, which was the plan from the outset. Three years without a trophy was too much for the Bavarian giants to take and combined with Borussia Dortmund’s resurgence inspiring them, Bayern Munich’s board and staff set out to ensure that the trophy drought ended immediately. They won the league with six games left of 34 total, a new German record, and currently sit with 81 points (equaling the all time points total) out of an available 90, winning 26, drawing only three, and losing just once. In route they scored 89 goals (2.97 per game) and conceded a mere 14 (0.47 per game), besting by some distance any of the other current leaders in Europe’s top leagues. This is particularly true defensively, with FC Barcelona, Manchester United, and Juventus allowing 33 (1.03 per game), 35 (1.06 per game), and 20 (0.61 per game) goals respectively. In brief, Bayern Munich are good.
Bayern fell just short of the Champions League crown last season, in their home stadium. They battled to defeat Real Madrid in the semis only to dominate the final, concede a very late equalizer, miss a penalty in extra time, and then go down in the shootout to the seemingly preordained winner Chelsea. It is no exaggeration this shattered the Bayern players and contingent. The trophy has now eluded them since 2001. That was two years after the bamboozling 1999 defeat to Manchester United, again a match on the balance of play they merited to win. Since the 2001 conquest Bayern have lost in a further two finals. They are desperate for European glory.

The Leader

Jupp Heynckes, 67, will be vacating his post as manager over the summer. We know his replacement. Heynckes is as pedigreed a manager as you’ll find in the game with over 1,000 Bundesliga matches as player and then manager, the second highest ever. As a player during the 60s and 70s, he was a star striker in the golden era of Borussia Mönchengladbach, winning five league titles, one domestic cup, and one UEFA Cup. The goalscorer also won both the European Championship and World Cup with West Germany (as it was then) in 1972 and 1974 respectively. And no bit part player was he, Heynckes’s goal scoring ratio when compared to other Germans is only bettered by one, Gerd Müller.
Then began his illustrious and lengthy managerial career, unsurprisingly at his home club of Borussia Mönchengladbach. He was unable to secure a trophy during this initial eight year stint (1979 – 1987), but his ability was obvious enough that Bayern Munich came knocking. This would eventually be the first (1987-1991) of three stints at the Bavarian club during which he won two league and two domestic cup titles. Yet his departure deviates from the norm. Struggling financially, Bayern sold a host of players in his last season and could not afford Heynckes’s wages any longer.
He then began his managerial journey around the continent: Athletic Bilbao (1992-1994), Eintracht Frankfurt (1994-1995), Tenerife (1995-1997), Real Madrid (1997-1998), Benfica (1999-2000), Athletic Bilbao (2001-2003), Schalke 04 (2003-2004), Borussia Mönchengladbach (2006-2007), Bayern Munich (2009), Bayer Leverkusen (2009-2011) and finally back again to his current post. It was reported he was to retire this season, but of late stories have surfaced that he may continue in either Germany or England. Highlights during this span include leading Tenerife to the UEFA Cup semi-finals (1995), winning Real Madrid’s first Champions League in 32 years (1998), and two Intertoto Cups with Schalke 04.
But Heynckes will not go quietly into the night. The man known as “Osram”, after a German light manufacturing company due to the reddening of his face under stress, has already left his mark domestically and now plans one last hurrah. Listening to excellent reporter Raphael Honingstein over the years, it’s no surprise Bayern are where they are. After Pep Guardiola’s Barça lashed them 5-1 on aggregate, Bayern Munich’s directors recognized the distance they had fallen behind Europe’s elite and vowed to make up the gap. Large investment into star players and successful development of youth team players combined with managerial know-how like that of Heynckes has seen Bayern return to the upper echelon of the game. In fact Heynckes has modeled Bayern’s game and team on the FC Barcelona ethos, emphasizing possession and pressing. Don’t believe me, take the words of the man himself:  ”If we do draw Barcelona, we’ll be ready. I know them like the back of my own hand, maybe even better than my own team … I know their philosophy, their system, their tactics and all their players.” For certain Barça will not be facing a desultory Bayern team.

So where exactly are they good and who is good?

Everywhere and everyone.
Between the sticks
Manuel Neuer joined Bayern in 2011 for 22 million euros making the 27-year-old the second most expensive goalkeeper of all time. At 6 foot 4 inches, he is dominant in the air yet has as agile reflexes as anyone. If Bayern continue their stingy defensive prowess domestically, Neuer is on route to conceding the fewest amount of goals over a Bundesliga season ever.
Defense
Ironically enough in seasons past the Bayern defense was clearly the weak point, much like the German national team. This was particularly relevant at the 2010 Champions League final against José Mourinho’s Internazionale Milan where Bayern were predictably defeated. Hans-Jörg Butt in goal was rather past his sell by date, yet it was the defensive pairing of Martín Demichelis and Daniel van Buyten that experts pointed to and said there was no way they could stop Inter. Furthermore, up and coming talent Hölger Badstuber was shifted out left and clearly looked out of position.
That was then. Demichelis was rightly dumped and Bayern brought in Rafinha (5.5 million euros) to deputize the wide positions and Jérome Boateng (13.5 million euros) from Manchester City to provide genuine quality in the middle and competent cover on the right. Yet arguably the most important defensive move was the recalling of youth team player David Alaba and recreating him as a left back. Immediately his quality was evident and now Alaba is recognized as one of the game’s premier talents in the position. Arguing that Alaba was not the critical defensive change is only possible thanks to new man Dante. The big Brazilian, with eight years of experience in Europe, is enjoying a fantastic debut season at the German champions and with a cost of under 5 million euros, he was a steal. Now while the epic game Championship Manager is too often detrimental to how football followers consider transfers, I often wonder why at times it is not more closely studied because Dante was one of those cheap pickups that became a monster defender. (And that is far from the only example of the game’s amazing predictive powers). A combination of physicality and ability, Dante is described by Honingstein as “a defender of quiet, unassuming elegance and unshakeable calmness, he has become the unlikely figurehead” of the team whose “dependability, athleticism and passing have taken Jupp Heynckes’s side that extra step further.” And let’s not forget the progress Badstuber has made since being a raw talent. From Butt, Lahm, Demichelis, Van Buyten, Badstuber in 2010 to Neuer, Lahm, Dante, Badstuber, Alaba in 2012 is chalk and cheese. Thankfully for Barça the young local boy Badstuber is injured but Van Buyten is currently in a purple patch of form.

Midfield

So while the defense is the most improved area, the midfield is comfortably the most stacked. Megastars like Arjen Robben, Franck Ribéry and Bastian Schweinsteiger barely warrant introduction. So when someone like Robben, with near 70 million euros in total transfers to his name, often rode the bench this season, it tells one there are options. Robben has his critics but when he’s on, I will argue to the end he’s almost unplayable. Then there are the younger guys like Thomas Müller and Toni Kroos, starters for both club and country. Müller may not be the most elegant but he has ingenuity and that unteachable knack of being in the right spot at the right time. Kroos may not feature at all over the series with an injury.
These midfielders above dictate tempo and catalyze attacking force so the more physical and defensive game is left to Basque man Javi Martínez, who Busquets described as the “key piece which the team needed”. So desperate were Bayern to sign him that they paid his buy-out clause, a hefty 40 million euros, a club and Bundesliga record.
The midfielders on the bench are worth noting as well. Luiz Gustavo, a 25-year-old Brazilian defensive midfielder was a starter the prior season and showed his potential and ability. Then there is Swiss national Xherdan Shaqiri. The former Basel man caught the eye of many during the 2011/12 UEFA Champions League and so keen on his talent were Bayern they dropped near 12 million euros on the 20-year-old at the time. He’s quick, competitive, unafraid of contact, versatile, creative, and ambidextrous. Watch for this guy to become a true starter when Robben moves along.

Forwards

Mario Gómez scored 41 goals last season. So the obvious move was for Bayern to pull out their cheque books and sign Croatian Mario Mandžukić, who has usurped “Super Mario”. This move is an ideal simulacrum for Bayern’s ambition following the Champions League final hurt. Yes, Gómez scored 41 goals, but his immobility was seen as too harmful on Heynckes’s tactical plan and that was enough to have him replaced. Mandžukić is essential for Bayern’s pressing game so his absence tomorrow could prove more influential than most would have thought. Claudio Pizzaro, on his second stint at the club, provides experienced cover and a high probability of goals from the bench (four goals in five substitute appearances). Looking to the game, Gómez is more likely to start, as his height could prove deadly versus the shortest team in Europe.



All Guns Blazing


Bayern are coming off back to back 6-1 victories in the league, before that a 4-0 and barely a month ago a 9-2 hammering of Hamburg. The weekend 6-1 thrashing of Hannover was done without Lahm, Dante, Martínez and Schweinsteiger, and only 45 minutes each from Ribéry, Müller, and Robben. Mario Gómez and Claudio Pizzaro helped themselves to a brace apiece. Like I’ve said, Bayern are deep.

Conclusion

A hunger for success, a well crafted strategy, a seasoned leader and word-class professionals from one to eleven. Bayern will be Barça’s toughest test of 2012/13.  In conclusion, Bayern Munich are good.

#FOOTBALL UPDATES# Unbeaten in Germany for a decade

Unbeaten in Germany for a decade


On recent visits to Germany, Barça have won five, drawn three and lost none of their matches

They are seeking their first ever away win at Bayern Munich in an official encounter
Photo galleries
German clubs traditionally make for tough opponents, but Barça, who are away to Bayern Munich on Tuesday night, have a good record in the country this century. In fact, they haven’t lost any of their last eight matches played away to Bundesliga clubs, having won five and lost three. The four most recent meetings were all in the knockout stages of the Champions League, and the four before that came in the group stages of the same competition. Their most recent visit to Germany was a year ago, when they beat Leverkusen.

The following are the results of Barça’s last eight official games in Germany, all in the Champions League:

2011/12: Bayer Leverkusen-FCB (1-3). First leg of round of 16.

2009/10: Stuttgart-FCB (1-1). First leg of round of 16.

2008/09: Bayern-FCB (1-1). Second leg of quarter finals.

2007/08: Schalke-FCB (0-1): First leg of quarter finals.

2007/08: Stuttgart-FCB (0-2): Group stage.

2006/07: Werder Bremen-FCB (1-1). Group stage.

2005/06: Werder Bremen-FCB (0-2). Group stage.

2002/03: Bayer Leverkusen-FCB (1-2). Group stage.

Eleven years since last defeat

We have to go all the way back to 2001/02 for the last time FCB lost in Germany, against Bayer Leverkusen in the UCL group stage (2-1). Since then, Barcelona have never lost to a German club, with an impressive record, home and away, of 14 wins and 3 draws.

Winless in Munich

All of the above may sound like wonderful news, but on a less positive note, Barça’s record away to the club they play on Tuesday, Bayern Munich, reflects the fact that the Bavarians are one of the strongest forces in the continental game. Barça have never won an official match away to Bayern. They drew there in the UEFA Cup semi finals in 95/96 and also in the second leg of the Champions League quarter finals of 2008/09. On their last visit to Munich, they lost. That was in the 98/99 group stages.

#FOOTBALL UPDATES# Unbeaten in Germany for a decade

Unbeaten in Germany for a decade


On recent visits to Germany, Barça have won five, drawn three and lost none of their matches

They are seeking their first ever away win at Bayern Munich in an official encounter
Photo galleries
German clubs traditionally make for tough opponents, but Barça, who are away to Bayern Munich on Tuesday night, have a good record in the country this century. In fact, they haven’t lost any of their last eight matches played away to Bundesliga clubs, having won five and lost three. The four most recent meetings were all in the knockout stages of the Champions League, and the four before that came in the group stages of the same competition. Their most recent visit to Germany was a year ago, when they beat Leverkusen.

The following are the results of Barça’s last eight official games in Germany, all in the Champions League:

2011/12: Bayer Leverkusen-FCB (1-3). First leg of round of 16.

2009/10: Stuttgart-FCB (1-1). First leg of round of 16.

2008/09: Bayern-FCB (1-1). Second leg of quarter finals.

2007/08: Schalke-FCB (0-1): First leg of quarter finals.

2007/08: Stuttgart-FCB (0-2): Group stage.

2006/07: Werder Bremen-FCB (1-1). Group stage.

2005/06: Werder Bremen-FCB (0-2). Group stage.

2002/03: Bayer Leverkusen-FCB (1-2). Group stage.

Eleven years since last defeat

We have to go all the way back to 2001/02 for the last time FCB lost in Germany, against Bayer Leverkusen in the UCL group stage (2-1). Since then, Barcelona have never lost to a German club, with an impressive record, home and away, of 14 wins and 3 draws.

Winless in Munich

All of the above may sound like wonderful news, but on a less positive note, Barça’s record away to the club they play on Tuesday, Bayern Munich, reflects the fact that the Bavarians are one of the strongest forces in the continental game. Barça have never won an official match away to Bayern. They drew there in the UEFA Cup semi finals in 95/96 and also in the second leg of the Champions League quarter finals of 2008/09. On their last visit to Munich, they lost. That was in the 98/99 group stages.

#football updates# THE NUMBER :13


Number of the Day: 13

Number of the Day: 13
By the time Barça takes the field tomorrow, it will have been 13 days since Lionel Messi last featured in a game. With the exception of the winter holiday, this will be the Argentine’s longest stretch without playing a competitive match in the 2012/13 season. Like Puyol, Messi is incredibly competitive, and this extended rest – though necessary to recover from injury – has likely infuriated him. While he may not be at 100% fitness tomorrow, after nearly two weeks on the bench he will undoubtedly be raring to go. Bayern Munich has an impressive defense, but even the likes of Dante and Neuer may find themselves hard put to stop an impatient and eager Messi.

#football updates# Andres iniesta equals new record


Iniesta equals Carles Rexach with 447 official appearances

Iniesta equals Carles Rexach with 447 official appearances
The midfield magician that is Andrés Iniesta has equalled Carles Rexach in the FC Barcelona appearance hall of fame, with an astonishing 447 official appearances.
The La Liga game against Levante is when Iniesta reached the new mark, and he now has only team mates Victor Valdés, Carles Puyol and Xavi Hernández, plus ‘Tarzan” Migueli ahead of him in the all time list. More after the jump.
One of the best players in the history of the club, Iniesta’s appearances are made up of the following: 296 league games, 87 Champions League, 3 UEFA Cup, 46 Copa del Rey, 8 Supercopa of Spain, 2 European Super Cup and 5 Club World Cup.

#football updates# VIKTOR KASSAI TO REFEREE TUESDAY"S SEMI FINAL BETWEEN BATERN AND BARCA


Viktor Kassai to referee Tuesday’s semi-final

Viktor Kassai to referee Tuesday’s semi-final
FC Barcelona won’t be unhappy at the choice of referee for the first leg of their Champions League semi-final against Bayern Munich on Tuesday.
Hungarian Viktor Kassai will be the man in the middle at the Allianz Arena and Barcelona have fond memories of matches in which he has officiated.
Just over a month ago, Kassai, 37, was in charge at Camp Nou when AC Milan were destroyed (4-0) and he was also present at Wembley in 2011 to officiate the final against Manchester United, a match which ended with Barça’s last triumph in the competition.
The Spanish internationals in the Barcelona side will also recognise him as the referee from the recent 2014 World Cup qualifier between France and Spain (0-1) at the Stade de France in Paris.

Thursday, 18 April 2013

#FOOTBALL UPDATES#

The master of risk management: Tito’s defensive changes

The master of risk management: Tito’s defensive changes
Ever since Tito Vilanova was appointed as FC Barcelona’s new coach, the team has broken many records, scored tons of goals, and played some beautiful football. Perhaps not as breathtaking as some of the best of the 2010/11-Barça, but still, beautiful. However, it hasn’t all been all smooth, as Barça’s defensive problems have come to the point where the team has managed to keep a clean sheet only 7 times in La Liga. How have we come to this?
The one thing that has to be stated is that Barça already struggled with defensive issues last season. It’s safe to say that Pep’s Barça struggled with the exact same problems that Tito’s Barça now struggles with; defending counter attacks. However, Pep attacked this issue with a different solution than Tito has.
Pep Guardiola addressed the defensive issues by moving to a formation of 3-4-3, with Sergio Busquets in a crucial role in the midfield. The idea behind this was to add one more man in the midfield to cover the defense line and prevent the opponent from getting to attack directly against the vulnerable back three. This, however, left a huge space to exploit on the wings, as we saw against Chelsea or Real Madrid. What also happened was that there was a huge space behind our defenders, and with only three men at the back, we were simply outnumbered.
Tito has done things differently. He did give the 3-4-3 a shot, but as it failed to impress, he moved back to the more traditional backline of four. He saw a need for a change, and didn’t hesitate to do what had to be done.
Tito’s philosophy regarding the defense could clearly be seen in the beginning of the season. Barça was suffering from many injuries, with both Piqué and Puyol out. Although it’s only speculation, one could think that Pep would’ve attacked this issue by playing with his 3-4-3. Tito didn’t. The first league Clásico is a good example.
Tito put Adriano in central defense, a man who had never played there before. But Tito knew what he was doing. Adriano has the pace and aggressive attributes that a Barça center back needs. And apart from a few positional mistakes, Adriano did a great job. That match was clear proof of the fact that Tito prefers a traditional 4-3-3, or some variation of it.
And perhaps Tito has to prefer a backline of four. That has been the only way to be able to balance with two attacking fullbacks, Jordi Alba and Dani Alves. Tito’s ability to make tactical variations has however been seen in the Champions League match against Milan, as he allowed Dani Alves to attack more freely, with Alba staying back with the two CBs. This has shown that Tito is not obsessed with one tactic or formation alone, he is also willing to make changes, and as he knows the players from his four years as Pep’s assistant, he can make those changes and utilize each player’s potential in an admirable way.
But problems have continued to persist. What has caused the problems with Tito’s Barça is the lack of defensive support from the midfield. With the traditional backline of four, from which Alves and Alba make their runs forward, Busquets plays really deep in the midfield, allowing the attacking midfielders to roam forward. This could be viewed as a good thing when speaking of attack, but it also leaves our midfielders really high up the pitch when they’re supposed to track back and defend. This problem has been even more evident in the absence of some of our key defenders, as we’ve had to play with Song in defense. Song is not the fastest player on the planet, and often tends to drop back a bit too early to cover up for his lack of pace. This leaves a huge space between the defense and midfield, and allows the opponent to attack against the defense alone. The attacking fullbacks added to this have caused us some serious trouble. This is one of the main reasons Tito trusted Adriano in the central defense ahead of Song and Busquets in the first league Clásico.
So all in all, both Pep’s and Tito’s Barça struggle with the open space they leave for the opponent to exploit. With Pep, that space was often behind the defense; with Tito, that space is between the defense and the midfield. Against AC Milan in the second leg, Tito attacked this problem by “going back to basics”. He used a backline of four (which was often a backline of three with Alves roaming forward), and played Busquets in his typical role. But the formation wasn’t the thing.
Tito had advised the center backs to be really aggressive. You could see Mascherano and Piqué really high up the pitch on many occasions. Sometimes, they were even defending in the opponent’s half. Surely, there was a risk of Milan exploiting the space left behind, there was a risk of Barça going back to the problems we faced with Pep, but Tito had thought this through as well. With the aggressive center backs and the compact midfield of three (of which all stayed in the midfield instead of playing as ‘false strikers’), the space between defense and midfield was almost non-existent. With the gaps between Barça’s players being very small, they were able to pressure Milan’s players and prevent them from making the accurate through balls behind the defense.
So as Tito’s tactics can be considered risky, it can also be said that Tito is the master of risk management. Instead of covering the space behind the defenders, instead of hesitating and playing it safe, he was bold. His tactics made sure, that although there was space behind our defense, the opponent wasn’t allowed to play the ball there. This aggressive pressure and compactness was often missed when both Pep’s Barça and Tito’s Barça struggled defensively. And it was Tito who brought it back, while being in New York. And now that he is back from his treatment, it’s obvious that Barça must continue doing the same; keeping the gaps small, allowing the opponent no space or time to build up.
As it still remains difficult to judge Tito’s time as a manager due to his health problems, credit has to be given. Tito has managed to find solutions to the problems that have been there for a long time, not to mention, he’s done all this with many players injured and while being in New York to receive cancer treatment. Many hail Pep as a genius, which he certainly is, but Tito is exactly the same. And most importantly, Tito is a genius when it comes to risk management

Friday, 12 April 2013

FOOTBALL UPDATES # PEDRO WE DESERVE TO BE IN THE FINAL#

Pedro: “We deserve to be in the semi-finals”

The forward proved to be crucial against PSG as his goal sealed qualification for FC Barcelona to the next round of the competition

Piqué, Alves, Bartra, Villa and Iniesta highlighted Messi's contribution to the team

Anti-doping tests for Messi and Cesc

After the match against Paris Saint-Germain, Leo Messi and Cesc Fàbregas passed an anti-doping test.

The team will train this Thursday at the Ciutat Esportiva.
He works hard throughout the entire game, he wins possession back, he assists his teammates and he simply doesn’t stop. Pedro Rodríguez is the type of player that any team would love to have on their roster. But the forward also has another quality that makes him special: in big matches, in the moment of truth, he’s decisive.

Yesterday evening, a goal from the Spanish forward with 20 minutes to go in the match against PSG sealed qualification for FC Barcelona to the semi-finals of the Champions League. After the match, Pedro said: “we deserve to be in the semi-finals.” The player went on to say that PSG “are a great rival, like any team that make it this deep in the competition.”

Lastly, Pedro had words for Leo Messi: “he worked very hard all week to be with us tonight. We need to thank him and congratulate him for helping the team, he’s the best.”

Here are the statements made by some of the Barça players after the match:

David Villa

“They hurt us on the counter but despite their chances and our errant passes in the first half, I think we played a good match. We’re pleased that we’re going to the next round and that we are still in the Champions League.”

“Leo is the best player in the world and we have to congratulate him for his gesture of dedication and commitment.”

“The semi-final will be complicated regardless of who we play against. We’ll have to prepare ourselves well when we know who our rival is.”

“When you’re in a competition like this one, against a rival like PSG, you have to know how to suffer in order to move forward.”

Piqué

“PSG are a great team with great players, we came into the match knowing that it would be difficult.”

“They also wanted the ball and that forced our defence to cede ground to them."
“There are few teams that come to the Camp Nou and play like they did.”

“When we talk about Leo we’re talking about the best player in the world and when he’s on your team and things aren’t going well, you need to use him. Even though he was practically limping, with him on the pitch, his eagerness to play and ours, the overall game changes.”

Marc Bartra

“In Europe you have to suffer and even more so when you go up against a team like PSG.”

“I was aware that it was an important moment for the team and it was my turn to go in."

“In the semi-finals we’ll play like we always have in order to get to the final. It will be difficult no matter who we play against, but we’ll give 100% to be in the final. We know that from now on each match is a final.”

“It’s difficult to defend against players like Ibrahimovic and Lavezzi, but I’ve been working for years to be able to do it. However, when you play alongside these Barça players, everything is easier.”

Dani Alves

“We knew that it would be a difficult match, they had little to lose and a lot to win, but we took advantage of our chances.”

“They gave it their all and they made it difficult for us, but we knew that we would have to suffer if we wanted to get to the next round.”

“We’re going through a pretty terrible period of injuries to our back line. But if we want meet our objectives we have to overcome these problems.”

Iniesta

“It was a match worthy of the quarter-finals of the Champions League, we went up against a great team with great players and in the end we achieved our objective.”

“There are three great teams in the semi-finals, it doesn’t matter who we go up against. We know that we’re just a step away from the final.”

FOOTBALL UPDATES #THE MESSI FACTOR#


The Messi factor

The Messi factor
On Saturday night, Barça went out and trashed Mallorca 5-0. They did it without Messi, without Puyol, Xavi or even Busquets. Sure it was Mallorca and not Man United, Madrid or PSG. But still, it is one of many games that have proved that Barça is not dependent on one or a few players. Of course, Messi is important for Barça, but the team has never been dependent on him. There are games when he came to play from the bench and contributed to a winning result, changed the outcome of the game, like the other day against PSG or like that cold night in Ukraine against Shakhtar in 2008. Let’s make this clear: Barça without Messi wouldn’t collapse. The team isn’t built around Messi, it’s built to get the best out of Messi. The Barça style isn’t dependent on him.
Without Messi, Barcelona wouldn’t have won 14 trophies during four years under Guardiola. But Barça wouldn’t have won those 14 trophies without Valdés either, they definitely wouldn’t have won them without Xavi, Puyol, Iniesta nor Busquets. FC Barcelona isn’t a team that has one world class player but twenty-three of them. Take away one of them and yes, the team will get weaker. But they won’t collapse because there are other players that have the qualities to drive this team.
Without Messi, Barça would be a fantastic team, with him they are an extraordinary team. Against PSG, if Messi hadn’t come on, Barça might not have scored that goal and they wouldn’t have proceeded to the semifinals. But Messi’s presence wouldn’t have been enough hadn’t Victor Valdés saved those seven shots. Messi’s presence wouldn’t have been enough if Pedro had missed his shot or if Villa had misplaced that pass. At this level, one player can never be the entire team. Messi needs his teammates and his teammates need him. FC Barcelona is also a team that will never be about one player, rather it’s a team where every player is an integral part of their playing style.
valdes-PSG-efe
Obviously, some players are a bit more important than others depending on their position or their performance during a game. Clearly, Messi has the ability to influence a game on his own. But the entire team will never solely rely on him alone. After losing to Inter Milan in the Champions League in 2010, Carles Puyol went over 50 games before losing another game with Barça. During this period of over two years, Barça only lost when Puyol wasn’t playing. It shows the importance Puyol had on the team. When he wasn’t there to scream at his teammates, they would at times find trouble concentrating 100% on what had to be done and Barça dropped points, regardless of Messi’s presence. Andrés Iniesta became the player with the most consecutive games without losing a league game in the club’s history as he went with 55 games before losing to Real Madrid in 2012.
Does this mean Barça are dependent on Puyol or Iniesta? The answer is simply no. Barça is dependent on all their players, and them having a good day.
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As a record-breaking, statistics-shattering best player in the world, Messi tends to have more of an impact . Puyol with his leadership is another. Valdés has shown more than a few times how crucial he can be to the team.  But if I was a coach for a team that was going to face FC Barcelona and I had a say in which player would not be aligned in Barca’s starting XI, I would not make them take off Messi, I’d make them take off Sergio Busquets.
For the same reasons that I would have asked them to take off Xavi a few years ago. Back then, it was Xavi who held the maestro stick at Barça, today it’s Busquets. It is him who makes the team play the right symphony. When Xavi had a bad day the entire team had a bad day, when he had a good one the entire team had a good one. A good example is when Xavi had maybe his best ever game, Barça won 5-0 over Madrid. It’s the same with Busi today, if Sergio plays bad then Barça plays bad. If he isn’t playing, the team undoubtedly suffers a lot. The team suffers more without Busquets than without Messi, because Busquets is the conductor and Messi is his star.
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Does this mean Busquets is better than Messi? No. Does it mean Barça are dependent on Busquets? No, not that either. It just means that Busquets’ role for Barça on the pitch is just as important if not more than Messi’s role.
Without Messi, Barça would still win titles, but not as many as with him. Barça without Messi is a fantastic football team, Barça with Messi is an extraordinary football team.

FOOTBALL UPDATES #RESULT VS PHILOSOPHY# FC BARCELONA

Imbalances: Result vs philosophy
Imbalances: Result vs philosophy
Prior to Wednesday’s Champions League clash against FC Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain F.C. had given their supporters plenty of reason to believe that the big-eared Champions League trophy was within striking distance. However, Barça limped their way into a sixth consecutive Champions League semifinal (3-3 on away goals) despite the strong counterattacking performance of PSG. While this defeat is likely to prove a valuable learning experience for them in the future, for Barça, the match threw into sharp relief the pragmatic (albeit slightly bitter) reality of imbalances that exist in the team, as PSG clearly succeeded in disrupting the blaugrana passing game and exposed the limitations of an increasingly fragile Barcelona defense.


PSG’s Formation and Style

Ibrahimovic’s menacing presence allows PSG to play a direct style of football, employing a defensive 4-5-1 formation that often becomes a 4-4-1-1. Compared to Watford and Wimbledon’s direct football of the 1980s, PSG’s reinterpretation is significantly more complex since they incorporate modern elements such as pressing and quick wing play to become a more well-rounded counter-attacking side.
Against Barça, Ibra had the perfect chance to bully his former club’s back four, particularly given Adriano’s unfamiliar position. However, he tended to drop back  into a slightly deeper role, in order to be in a better place to initiate the Parisian counterattack and pass the ball to the PSG wingers. Ancelotti hoped to take advantage of the space left behind the attacking Alves, which eventually led to Pastore’s goal and to a lesser extent wanted Moura to attack Alba in one-on-one situations, as had occurred in the first leg. As a result of Ibra’s positioning, he was often marked by Busquets and not just Piqué and Adriano. When in possession, Busquets had to rush his passes because of Lavezzi’s effective pressing. Without the ball, Busquets had to deal with Ibra’s aerial threat. As a result, Busquets, who is largely responsible for Barcelona’s build-up of play from the back, was overwhelmed and the Barcelona midfield was unrecognizable.

imbalances photo 2
Barcelona’s Struggle

PSG and Barça clearly have contrasting styles of play and the encounter can be rightfully characterized as a battle between Barcelona’s possession and PSG’s counter-attack. However, one of the most interesting statistics of the match (as is often the case with Barça) was possession, with Barcelona holding 61% possession. While it is normal that Barça’s possession is somewhat lower in Champions League games than in La Liga, the return leg showed that the blaugrana are beginning to lose patience in the possession-based philosophy, with several frantic attempts to catch PSG out of position on the break.
Pep often insisted that the players’ belief in the system is almost as important as the system itself. In recent times, Barça have looked unsure as to whether attack or defend. In fact, the Barcelona midfield seems to have reached a turning point:  Should it play more horizontally to try and control the game (at the risk of becoming predictable) or should they pursue a more vertical style of play to allow the forwards more space and opportunity to run at the opposing team’s defense  (even though this means they will have less control of the game and may concede more goals) ?

Re-balancing the Individual and the Collective

Messi may have rescued Barça against PSG but the episode has also highlighted the triumph of the individual over the collective.  As the football romantic Marcelo Bielsa points out:
“Totally mechanized teams are useless, because they get lost when they lose their script. But I also don’t like ones that only rely on the inspiration of their soloists, because when God doesn’t turn them on, they are left totally at the mercy of their opponents.”
imbalances photo 3
Of course, few dare question Pep’s decision of moving Messi into the false 9 position, as this has made him the best player in the world (perhaps of all time). While Messi should obviously play where he is most effective, his role in relation to the rest of the team is unbalanced. The dangerous term ‘Messi-dependence’ is creeping up more frequently than ever before; the shift towards accommodating Messi has become too extreme. Barcelona must redefine Messi’s role within the collective if they are to replicate the brilliant achievements of the Guardiola era, and more importantly, if Barça are to rediscover their beautiful style of play.

Bilardistas and Menottistas: What Direction is Barcelona Going?

The debate between a result-based footballing philosophy and the romantic football ideal is as old as football itself. In Argentina, this division is embodied in the ideas of their two World Cup winning coaches. On one hand are the Bilardistas, named after the results-above-all-costs coach Carlos Salvador Bilardo, who won in 1986. On the other hand are the Menottistas, named after the more romantic Cesar Luis Menotti who won in 1978  in what is considered the last incarnation of “la nuestra”. Uncharacteristically, the blaugrana approach against PSG was more in line with the Bilardista philosophy, though it could be argued that this has been the case for most of this season. Barça was always aware of its defensive weaknesses and injuries, employing a cautious approach that brought them to the brink of elimination.
Throughout Tito’s first season, individual traces of brilliance have masked the team’s collective shortcomings as a unit, in the same way that favorable results have allowed Barcelona to hide the flaws that have been apparent since the beginning of the season.

Tuesday, 9 April 2013

FOOTBALL UPDATES #MESSI TRAINS WITH THE GROUP#

UPDATED: Messi trains with the group

UPDATED: Messi trains with the group
FC Barcelona’s first team held a training session this Tuesday afternoon at the Ciutat Esportiva to help prepare for tomorrow’s Champions League match against Paris Saint-Germain. Lionel Messi was able to join his teammates, and was seen to be working normally with the group under the orders of Tito Vilanova during the opening minutes of the session. At the press conference before training, Jordi Roura noted the “positive evolution” of Messi’s recovery. Adriano and Pedro, without medical clearance, also trained at the same pace as the rest of their peers.
Deulofeu and Oier, from the B team, worked today with the first team, though neither one will be on the final squad list for Wednesday’s quarter-final match.
After the session in Sant Joan Despí, the 20 players named to Vilanova’s squad traveled to the hotel where the team will be staying overnight. Leo Messi’s name is on the squad list, as are Pedro and Adriano’s, though none of the three has been medically cleared yet. Dos Santos has been left off of the list for tactical reasons. Barça will hold its final training session on Wednesday at the Camp Nou.

FOOTBALL UPDATES #CHAMPIONS LEAGUE PREVIEW BARCA VS PSG

Champions League Preview: FC Barcelona vs Paris Saint-Germain

Champions League Preview: FC Barcelona vs Paris Saint-Germain
The circumstance for this UEFA Champions League return leg is drastically different from just weeks ago. A 2-2 draw in Paris is gigantically superior to a 2-0 deficit, yet, the team should approach Paris Saint-Germain not vastly differently to AC Milan. The objective must certainly be to score, multiple times, if not simply because Tito Vilanova cannot plan the match realistically believing the team will keep a clean sheet. More after the jump.
I watch a bit of PSG. Well, full disclosure, I try my best to watch PSG in Ligue 1 but rarely can stomach a full match of what is usually insipid and lethargic football that predictably concludes with a Zlatan heroic. It makes sense, PSG hire mercenaries to win trophies but none of those players ever dreamed of playing in Paris, and frankly they cannot motivate themselves to peak performance on a Saturday afternoon versus Stade Brestois 29.
But last week was different. I am open to correction but aside from Maxwell and Beckham, no other PSG player has a Champions League medal to his name, and that was the motivation needed to produce PSG’s best performance of their season, both my opinion and that of the journalists closest to them. 2-2 is certainly advantage FC Barcelona, but the threat from set-pieces was only too evident in France and then names like Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Javier Pastore, Ezequiel Lavezzi, Lucas Moura, and Thiago Silva sprinkled with some David Beckham, Jérémy Ménez, and Marco Verratti are concern enough.
Then there is Lionel Messi, or rather, will there be Lionel Messi? His blood ran red, to the disappointment of many, so an extraterrestrial he is not, still his recoveries from injury of late have been nothing short of alien. My guess is he will play, but is there concern if he does not?
Yes, a 5-0 demolition of Mallorca was enjoyable, Fàbregas and Alexis ran riot, but a home match versus the worst team in Spain is not a Wednesday night versus some of the game’s finest individuals hungry for validation. ‘Messi-dependence’ is a term cules dislike, it’s too often exaggerated, but it’s simultaneously hard to argue the numbers. If one takes a ratio of top goalscorer (always Messi) to next highest scorer since Pep Guardiola’s debut year, a trend emerges: 1.06, 2.04, 2.3, 4.87, and currently 3.93. Messi’s importance has grown to scoring just more than Samuel Eto’o in 2008/9 to doubling his teammates and most recently scoring nearly 5 times more than anyone else. That is far from exact correlation, clearly without Messi others would inevitably pick up the slack, but his importance is never more clear than in tight matches versus well-drilled defensive setups. PSG need to score, but what if they score first, a bumbled in corner perhaps, then sit back in the mold of Inter Milan and Chelsea and La Pulga isn’t there to create space, assists, and goals.
And defensively? Officially only Mascherano is absolutely out, but Puyol isn’t even near top fitness, Abidal just made a return after about one year, Bartra lacks this level of experience, Song has proven himself a mess at the back, and while Piqué has proven himself class, even the most fervent of us cannot say this year’s performances instill total confidence. Choosing Piqué’s partner, and the permutations it creates, is Tito Vilanova’s most critical decision.

Team News

FC Barcelona
Javier Mascherano is sidelined, Pedro and Adriano are expected to be available, and Lionel Messi will be a game-time decision.
Line-up wise, the permutations depend on Piqué’s partner and Messi’s inclusion. Tito could leave Busquets at his best in the midfield and trust in Bartra, or Busi may move backwards into a position he plays competently and create space for an inform Cesc to enter and focus more on ball retention than classical defending. Has Song earned enough faith? Can Alexis’s industry be sacrificed for the poacher Villa? All questions, of which there are many more, to be answered soon enough.
Predicted line-up:  Valdés; Alves, Piqué, Busquets, Alba; Xavi, Fàbregas, Iniesta; Alexis, Messi, Villa
PSG
Both ‘Thiagos’, Silva and Motta have made the traveling squad. Blaise Matuidi’s suspension is Carlo Ancelotti’s only proper personnel absentee. His role as destroyer will almost certainly be filled by former blaugrana Motta.
David Beckham will start again to fulfill his role as chief engineer of a more direct approach and set-piece executioner. Be under no illusions, PSG will have been practicing many variants of dead-balls over the past days.
Predicted line-up:  Sirigu; Jallet, T. Silva, Alex, Maxwell; Beckham, T. Motta; Moura, Pastore, Lavezzi; Ibrahimovic
Squad (23, 5 to drop): Alex, Areola, Armand, Beckham, Camara, Chantome, Douchez, Gameiro, Ibrahimovic, Jallet, Lavezzi, Le Crom, Lucas, Maxwell, Ménez, Pastore, Sakho, Sirigu, Motta, Silva, Tiéné, Van der Wiel, Verratti

Prediction

Barça will find a way. Success in the Champions League of late has been fundamentally predicated on home performances, so thankfully the Camp Nou beckons. Whether it will be comfortable enough or nail-biting remains to be seen. PSG was manageable mostly from open play, aside from Moura early on, so Barça need to be focused and vigilant about not committing needless fouls around the penalty area. Rather let the PSG man beat you and earn his cross than barge him over carelessly and allow them to set up a routine and send bodies, much larger and taller bodies, forward. The dead-ball is the only area PSG unequivocally hold advantage.

FOOTBALL UPDATES #XAVI HERNANDEZ I FEEL POSITIVE#

Xavi: “I feel positive”

Xavi: “I feel positive”
Xavi Hernández recently sat down with uefa.com to discuss a range of topics: upcoming challenges for the team, the second leg of the Champions League quarter-final, the importance of Tito Vilanova, and the team’s current style of play. Excerpts from the interview can be found after the jump.
 
UEFA: A few hours have passed and your head is cooler, so what do you now make of the draw with PSG?

Xavi: I feel positive, because it was a 2-2 draw away from home. But looking back at the game, I feel bad about it, because we went 2-1 up practically in the 90th minute and then they equalised in the very last move of the match. But it wasn’t a bad result, it was good. There are 90 minutes left at home and we’ll be playing in front of our own fans, and against Milan they made as much noise as they could. It’s a pity about the injuries, both Mascherano and Leo. We’ll see how Leo is, but it looks like Mascherano is out for a month or a month and a half. … They’re big losses. But it was a good result, we’re the favourites, we’re at home and there are 90 minutes left to play. But looking back at the last game, the way they scored with the last move of the game leaves a bad taste in your mouth.

What can you say about the return leg now that you have such big defensive losses in Mascherano, Puyol and Adriano?

We’re suffering a lot of injuries at the back. Puyol has had an operation. Abidal has come back from a long and serious problem. Adriano is injured, now Mascherano… We’re having no luck at the back. But we’ll have eleven players, that’s for sure, and we’ll see what the boss decides to do. There are players to bring in as substitutes. We’re optimistic because we know we’re playing at home, but PSG have a great team, they’re quick up front and play well on the counter. They’re no small fries, they’re a big team.

You said just now that it hurt to concede an equaliser so late. But it’s still an away draw and you scored the second goal from a penalty. That could make a big difference to the tie…

The most important thing was getting two away goals. It was important to score and Leo Messi’s goal gave us a lot of confidence and that boosted the team. We did well in the second half, we had the possession, and came close to 2-0. Then they equalised, but we kept dominating and eventually got a penalty and it looked like the tie was sorted. But then they got an equaliser in that unfortunate move. But overall we’re positive about it, even though the way it ended hurt.

One of the best pieces of news is that Tito Vilanova is back on the bench. How important is it for the team to have your manager back?

It’s vitally important. We have been without our head coach, without the boss, and that shows. We have all worked hard together, from Jordi Roura to Altimira and Edu Pons, who are all part of the staff, and even the captains and the youngest players. We’ve all pulled together and trained hard, but we were still missing the man who for months and months has been doing the team talks, who has been laying the first stone. And you miss that. But he’s back, and back in a confident mood and with a positive mentality despite what he’s been through. He is an example for us all, because of the way he has fought and suffered. He’s been away for two months but we have been in contact with him. He is very motivated about the rest of the season and our objectives. We’re doing well in the league and in a good position in the Champions League. We’re are really hoping that things can work out, and even more for him, because he deserves everything we’ve fought for, and for the way he has stood by the team even though he’s been fighting against an illness.

What did the comeback against AC Milan mean to you?

It was heads or tails. I think we were unlucky in Milan. We didn’t play well as a team, but 2-0 was too cruel a result. We knew we’d have things in our favour at home, with our fans, with the pitch damp as we like it, because that gets the ball moving. I think it was a turning point, because we had just lost the cup semi-final against Real Madrid, and that was a big blow to us. But we recovered well, we recovered the best of Barça in attack, we started creating pressure up front again, what we’d been missing in games before … We all pulled our socks up and made sure of making a comeback against such a great team as Milan.

As a midfielder, what are you trying to do when you play? What is your aim in each game?

I think a lot about the game and imagine what the opposition will play like. I think about whether we should keep the ball in the middle or whether they’ll give us space to prove superior on the wings. There are a lot of things. I try to make the game flow and to think a bit about where the keys to the match lie, and to transfer all the things that you get from being a veteran of the game, to help your team mates, to make the team work together … So many things. Obviously I try to play well individually, and to help the team to play good football and win.

You have made more passes than any other player this season in the Champions League. What kind of notice do you take of these statistics?

None. I read a lot about these things, but what I always try to do is find a chance for my team mates. I go where the ball goes. I try to understand the game a bit and work out what the team needs. I try to get us to outnumber them two against one or three against two. I try to understand the play and work out what the team needs, and my role stems from that: hold onto the ball, not lose it, create fluidity, go from one side to the other, to have an idea of where the other team is going to attack from. That’s why I’m the kind of player that participates more in attacking moves.

You won the Champions League two years ago at Wembley. Was that the greatest display yet by this generation of FC Barcelona players?

Evidently it’s titles that have brought us to that level. Everyone respects us and admires us, and we are very happy to have won so many things. And yes, the team played very well against Manchester United that day, it was generally excellent all round. We did what we train to do each day, to be the protagonists and to have the ball. We saw an excellent Barça that day, but we also saw that in the final against Manchester in 2009 and in so many games against Real Madrid both home and away. I think we’ve had four or five excellent years in which Barcelona have been very, very good. But I think there are still some great games left in this generation and we’ll enjoy even further success.

#FOOTBALL UPDATES#


Number of the Day: 37 years and 149 days

Number of the Day: 37 years and 149 days
37 years, 149 days – with his participation over the weekend, José Manual Pinto became the oldest player to participate in a La Liga match for FC Barcelona.
Pinto came in under the radar but nobody can dispute he has been of value to the club and never let us down.

#CHAMPIONS LEAGUE#

History vs. the French at Camp Nou favours Barça

History vs. the French at Camp Nou favours Barça
The official FC Barcelona site reports that out of seven games against French teams at the Camp Nou in the past, six final results would be favourable considering the current standing after the first leg at the Parc de Princes (2-2). More information of the past encounters against French teams after the jump!
FC Barcelona’s first leg encounter in the UEFA Champions League quarterfinals against French ‘galacticos’ Paris Saint-Germain last week ended in a 2-2 draw with Messi and Xavi scoring the clutch away goals for the blaugrana. Barça have played French teams at the Camp Nou seven times in the past. Six out of these results would result in FC Barcelona advancing in the 2-legged affair when the current 2-2 score is taken into account.
Victories vs. Niza (2-0), Monaco (2-0), Lyon (2-0 , 3-0 & 5-0) and a draw against current opponents PSG (1994-95, 1-1) are the results that favour FC Barcelona. A loss against Metz in 1984-85 is the only result that would see Barça’s CL campaign come to a premature end.
Looking at the present with the 2-2 scoreline, any victory or a 0-0/1-1 draw would see Barça go through.  A 2-2 draw after 90 minutes would force extra time while a loss would mean disappointment for the Catalans.

FOOTBALL UPDATES #CHAMPIONS LEAGUE PREVIEW BARCA VS PSG#

Champions League Preview: FC Barcelona vs Paris Saint-Germain

Champions League Preview: FC Barcelona vs Paris Saint-Germain
The circumstance for this UEFA Champions League return leg is drastically different from just weeks ago. A 2-2 draw in Paris is gigantically superior to a 2-0 deficit, yet, the team should approach Paris Saint-Germain not vastly differently to AC Milan. The objective must certainly be to score, multiple times, if not simply because Tito Vilanova cannot plan the match realistically believing the team will keep a clean sheet. More after the jump.
I watch a bit of PSG. Well, full disclosure, I try my best to watch PSG in Ligue 1 but rarely can stomach a full match of what is usually insipid and lethargic football that predictably concludes with a Zlatan heroic. It makes sense, PSG hire mercenaries to win trophies but none of those players ever dreamed of playing in Paris, and frankly they cannot motivate themselves to peak performance on a Saturday afternoon versus Stade Brestois 29.
But last week was different. I am open to correction but aside from Maxwell and Beckham, no other PSG player has a Champions League medal to his name, and that was the motivation needed to produce PSG’s best performance of their season, both my opinion and that of the journalists closest to them. 2-2 is certainly advantage FC Barcelona, but the threat from set-pieces was only too evident in France and then names like Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Javier Pastore, Ezequiel Lavezzi, Lucas Moura, and Thiago Silva sprinkled with some David Beckham, Jérémy Ménez, and Marco Verratti are concern enough.
Then there is Lionel Messi, or rather, will there be Lionel Messi? His blood ran red, to the disappointment of many, so an extraterrestrial he is not, still his recoveries from injury of late have been nothing short of alien. My guess is he will play, but is there concern if he does not?
Yes, a 5-0 demolition of Mallorca was enjoyable, Fàbregas and Alexis ran riot, but a home match versus the worst team in Spain is not a Wednesday night versus some of the game’s finest individuals hungry for validation. ‘Messi-dependence’ is a term cules dislike, it’s too often exaggerated, but it’s simultaneously hard to argue the numbers. If one takes a ratio of top goalscorer (always Messi) to next highest scorer since Pep Guardiola’s debut year, a trend emerges: 1.06, 2.04, 2.3, 4.87, and currently 3.93. Messi’s importance has grown to scoring just more than Samuel Eto’o in 2008/9 to doubling his teammates and most recently scoring nearly 5 times more than anyone else. That is far from exact correlation, clearly without Messi others would inevitably pick up the slack, but his importance is never more clear than in tight matches versus well-drilled defensive setups. PSG need to score, but what if they score first, a bumbled in corner perhaps, then sit back in the mold of Inter Milan and Chelsea and La Pulga isn’t there to create space, assists, and goals.
And defensively? Officially only Mascherano is absolutely out, but Puyol isn’t even near top fitness, Abidal just made a return after about one year, Bartra lacks this level of experience, Song has proven himself a mess at the back, and while Piqué has proven himself class, even the most fervent of us cannot say this year’s performances instill total confidence. Choosing Piqué’s partner, and the permutations it creates, is Tito Vilanova’s most critical decision.
Team News
FC Barcelona
Javier Mascherano is sidelined, Pedro and Adriano are expected to be available, and Lionel Messi will be a game-time decision.
Line-up wise, the permutations depend on Piqué’s partner and Messi’s inclusion. Tito could leave Busquets at his best in the midfield and trust in Bartra, or Busi may move backwards into a position he plays competently and create space for an inform Cesc to enter and focus more on ball retention than classical defending. Has Song earned enough faith? Can Alexis’s industry be sacrificed for the poacher Villa? All questions, of which there are many more, to be answered soon enough.
Predicted line-up:  Valdés; Alves, Piqué, Busquets, Alba; Xavi, Fàbregas, Iniesta; Alexis, Messi, Villa
PSG
Both ‘Thiagos’, Silva and Motta have made the traveling squad. Blaise Matuidi’s suspension is Carlo Ancelotti’s only proper personnel absentee. His role as destroyer will almost certainly be filled by former blaugrana Motta.
David Beckham will start again to fulfill his role as chief engineer of a more direct approach and set-piece executioner. Be under no illusions, PSG will have been practicing many variants of dead-balls over the past days.
Predicted line-up:  Sirigu; Jallet, T. Silva, Alex, Maxwell; Beckham, T. Motta; Moura, Pastore, Lavezzi; Ibrahimovic
Squad (23, 5 to drop): Alex, Areola, Armand, Beckham, Camara, Chantome, Douchez, Gameiro, Ibrahimovic, Jallet, Lavezzi, Le Crom, Lucas, Maxwell, Ménez, Pastore, Sakho, Sirigu, Motta, Silva, Tiéné, Van der Wiel, Verratti
Prediction
Barça will find a way. Success in the Champions League of late has been fundamentally predicated on home performances, so thankfully the Camp Nou beckons. Whether it will be comfortable enough or nail-biting remains to be seen. PSG was manageable mostly from open play, aside from Moura early on, so Barça need to be focused and vigilant about not committing needless fouls around the penalty area. Rather let the PSG man beat you and earn his cross than barge him over carelessly and allow them to set up a routine and send bodies, much larger and taller bodies, forward. The dead-ball is the only area PSG unequivocally hold advantage.

Monday, 8 April 2013

#WELCOME BACK ABIDAL#

A miracle at Camp Nou

A miracle at Camp Nou
As the referee blew the whistle for full time, Éric Abidal dragged off his shirt. Under it he had on another one, one with a very special message: “Merci mon cousin”. The message in French means “thank you my cousin”. As the first reporters found their way to the man of the evening, the first thing Abi told them was “Merci Gérard! Without him I wouldn’t be here today.
Gérard is Éric’s cousin who over one year ago donated part of his liver to save Abi’s life. “Without him I wouldn’t be here today.” A few very strong words that tell a story about a hard fight between life and death. When in March 2012 it became official that Éric Abidal had relapsed and needed a liver transplant, few thought he’d ever play football again. Still that wasn’t the biggest concern, the biggest concern was that he’d survive. If he would see his girls grow up, if he would see his team play another game. Gérard was the one who put himself under the scalpel to save Éric, something Éric will forever be extremely thankful for. But it wasn’t only thanks to Gérard that we got to see Éric Abidal out on the Camp Nou pitch this evening. It was also thanks to Éric. He never let his guard down, he never gave up, he just kept on smiling and encouraging everyone around him.
tB ABidal
Éric even took the time to encourage others who also suffered from cancer.
You have in your head the same thing that Abidal has in his liver, and tomorrow they will remove it.” This is what a dad told his 15-year-old son, two minutes after they received the terrible news about his condition. The son looked at his dad and said, “Dad, buy me an Abidal shirt. I’m going to fight like him and win my own Champions League.”  The boy didn’t cry, and he was the only one who didn’t as he went into the operating room with his Abidal shirt.
One week later the dad ran into Abidal at a store and told him the story about his son, showing him a picture of his child at the hospital with his Abidal shirt. Five months later, Abidal, Puyol and Alexis visited the hospital. When Éric entered the room, the boy cried for the first time since getting his diagnosis. Abidal went up to the boy and told him that he was there to encourage him. Before leaving, Abidal gave the boy his Rolex watch that had his number 22 inscribed, saying that the watch was better off with the kid as it could bring him happiness. According to the dad, the visit from Abidal gave his boy a joy he had never seen in him before and at night he would put on the light to look at the inscription on the watch just one more time.
It has been more than a year since Éric Abidal last played a football match. A year in which he has suffered physically, but mostly mentally. During the months he spent in the hospital he only saw his daughters on three occasions, as he didn’t want them to see him in his condition. Not seeing his daughters was one of the hardest things Éric had ever gone through. But he always kept on fighting, and he never stopped believing that one day he’d be out on that pitch again. Neither did the club, who decided to renew Abidal’s contract even though they couldn’t be sure he’d ever play again. During the presentation of the squad in August 2012, Tito Vilanova said that they would keep on waiting for Abi, for as long as he needed. Tito also said “Abi, your fight is our strength.” Words Abidal revealed, after yesterday’s game, that have helped him on his way back.
When Éric was in the squad for the Celta Vigo game last week, player after player took a picture with him, on the bus or on the plane. Each post on twitter or Facebook was to tell the world that look, our hero is back! Yesterday after the game they all did it again. Youth players and ex-teammates also tweeted about their happiness for Abi’s return, posting old pictures they had once taken with him.
tB abiiii
Éric Abidal’s comeback yesterday was so much more than a professional football player returning to a football field. It was about a young man winning over cancer. A young man inspiring a whole world. A young man showing strength that is out of this world, but also giving strength to those who need it.
When Abidal came out to warm up, it felt like the entire Camp Nou just stopped watching the game. You could feel how the football match taking place did not matter. Instead the fans’ eyes were on this man running back and forth on the sideline. The fans’ lips were screaming his name.
tB ABI dani alvés
Éric Abidal has shown Barça fans that football is just football and there is more to life than football. He has also made it possible for Barça fans to celebrate the biggest victory any club, any person, any one could ever celebrate. The victory of life.
Yesterday, April 6th, 2013, Camp Nou saw a miracle take place. And I was there.
Merci Gérard for saving our Rey Éric and Merci Abi for never giving up. You are a true inspiration and role model. Merci!