veryfatchocobo
New member
Problem is 100% Roura. The club should try to deal with Pep until the end of the season <_<
The UEFA website has a couple of interesting documents that are good for analysing Barca's performances. The below image shows comprehensive passing stats included the total number of passes and percentage accuracy for individual players and the team as a whole, the distances of each pass, the total number of passes received by each player and my personal favourite - the number of passes played between players, ie passes played by Xavi to Iniesta.
The headline stats are that Xavi completed the most passes (99) and Busquets had the best completion percentage (87%).
However, looking at the from/to stats shows some interesting results. Busquets to Xavi was the most common passing outcome (26) and Xavi to Busquets was the second most common (21). One that stands out for me is the high number of passes from Busquets to Messi (16), this shows that Messi was Busquets' second most preferred passing outcome, which is significant for me as it shows how Busquets looked to play midfield splitting passes and get the ball to Messi frequently.
Another headline stat is that David Villa received just 15 passes in his 75 mins on the pitch and actually completed just 6 passed in that time. This shows that although he played a central role he was largely anonymous and Barca's attacking focus came from Messi (62 passes received) and the wingers Dani Alves (46 passes received) and Pedro (40 passes received). However, this matters little when Villa scores a goal from one of his rare received passes.
Not to mention Villa's presence itself affects the game, as it takes defenders off Messi, and provides another goal threat. The most important changes that were made to the lineup on Tuesday were putting Iniesta back in midfield and Villa up front.
Barcelona should play with a commanding libero (last man) that is perfect position-wise and communicates with the other 4 defenders: a CB and the fullbacks in one line in front of him, with the DM a bit further up working as a hybrid CB/DM (which is already the case for Barcelona).
It's so amazingly secure, cause if the attacker gets past the CB, the libero has a chance of defending him, while both CBs on one line allows the attacker to pass them by at once. It also really helps against counterattacking teams, cause the libero sees the whole pitch in front of him, which makes going past him a lot more difficult (and communication a lot easier).
It's all about tactics and leadership (the kind of leadership that Puyol/Silva/Muniesa types of defenders have)
e.g. 1. If the opposing CF sticks to the libero deep, he moves up on one line with the other 3, then tracks back to his position, leaving the CF on that line, where he eventually stays by the CB.
e.g. 2. If one of the FBs goes forward (they should interchange who goes), the libero takes his place, and they form a 3 man defence line.
It essentially gives the libero space to roam between the keeper and the other defenders to close/open up the field, confuse the opposition and play around with the offside trap.
The libero doesn't do as much physical work as the CB, who's always in contact with the attacker, but he needs to command them in every area of the game (and even shout at/motivate them at times), especially on corners, where he should stick between the keeper and the back post to guard it. It's perfect for "injury-prone"/old players, cause they don't TOO MUCH physical work all the time (more mental work, vision and extreme concentration).
Teams were scoring at will against my team until we used and perfected this defensive system, and it really worked well (when well executed). When we got the hang of it, we went 5-6 straight games without conceding one goal, throughout the season.
BTW: I was really disappointed with Xavi when he got so discouraged after going down 2 or 3-0 against Bayern. I guess he's not used to losing (so badly), but that's when the team needs their captain the most (he's arguably the coach on the pitch). That's why Puyol is such a great one. He never loses hope and always keep on motivating the team (getting rid of any kind of complacency along with it), and constantly talks to them.
That's why Muniesa must get a new contract and go on loan if he won't get enough playing time, or don't loan him out at all and let him learn from Silva, cause he'll be one of the best in a few years time. He could well play libero behind Bartra.
I could just imagine the Masia team that they could play with in 3 years time, with a perfect rotation.
Starting Lineup Next Season
Would like to see this starting lineup often next season (again, with a good rotation).
With these subs: Pinto, Muniesa, Bartra, Puyol, Alves, Adriano, Song, Roberto, Xavi, Pedro, Deulofeu, Alexis/Villa.
Dat attack(ing speed), dat midfield, dat defence :emotions16:, dat depth, …
Sell Mascherano (to Napoli), Affelay, Cesc (to Manchester United, if only to give Thiago - he'll stay - his number 4 back and playing time for Roberto) and Villa (or Alexis).
Sell Dos Santos, Fontas (done) and Bojan with buy-back clauses.
Loan out Cuenca, Rafinha, and if necessary Deulofeu.
Buy Neymar (done), and Thiago Silva (the defenders - especially the young ones - need a person they can learn from, with Puyol being injured).
And finally stop playing Adriano or Song at CB, ever!!!
Tito gets a lot of slack (partly deserved), but if he pulls the strings right next season and doesn't listen to Roura's advices, we should be set for a treble + Super Cup.
Sorry for the long article, but as a defender and a long time Barcelona fan, I always suffer to see them mess up at the back while there are many ways to avoid it.
I've been preaching a permanent libero for ages, glad to see someone who's thought of it as well :beer2:
Organization at the back and cutting out longballs/throughballs makes the libero system effective even if we don't have the best of defenders.
Interesting analysis. The question is the cost/benefit of giving up the offside trap for the libero. With a slower back line (and out of position wingbacks), the libero formation could be the safer choice.