After a hiatus for more than 2 months, Football Freaks finally returns.. Akash Nair takes a look back at the hugely entertaining clash between Manchester United and Athletic Bilbao two days ago, as he praises the project Marcelo Bielsa has undertaken at the Basque club....
I will
confess now and here that I am a fan of Marcelo Bielsa. This is not a
consequence of Athletic Club de Bilbao’s triumph over my beloved United, but a
gradual appreciation from the time I first saw him manage a side – Chile
against Spain at the world cup, the only match where Spain was threatened.
Now coming
to the original question – was it Bilbao’s supremacy or United’s frailties? The
answer in my opinion is a combination of both.
Disagree? Agree? In any case read on !!
Athletic club de Bilbao and ‘Vertical Football’:
Believe it
or not, Athletic club de Bilbao under Marcelo Bielsa is not your typical
Spanish team, it’s an English team with technically good players. How many
times do you see a muscular tall centre forward in a Spanish team? They don’t
strut around with their tiki-taka and don’t obsess over possession of the ball.
They follow a philosophy called "Vertical Football". Many of you may be familiar
with it. There is tremendous importance attached to winning the ball high up
the pitch (a tactic employed by Pep Guardiola and AVB) and then launching quick attacks, either
through the middle or with the help of galloping fullbacks who occupy the space
left by the inverted wingers.
Bielsa’s
start at Bilbao wasn’t a great one, but whose is? He has created a team which
suits his tactical methodologies to the hilt. Nimble-footed young players with
great stamina who never stop running. His training routines are arduous and
revolutionary with a maddening attention to detail. Enough drooling over Bielsa
and Bilbao! So what did they do when they played at old Trafford? Simple, they
pressed hard....Really hard. Fernando Llorente closed down both Smalling and Evans with effective ease. At times, you
could see Evans or Smalling high up the pitch. The reason was a single striker
left one free defender who could move ahead with the ball. The same happened at
the other end. But the problem for United was Hernandez and Rooney aren't habituated to the pressing game Bilbao play. Rooney drops deep and hence his
marker is usually the CDM of the opposing team, whereas Hernandez sometimes just
can't keep himself outside the offside zone, let alone pressurizing defenders (oh Tevez .. I remember thou!). Welbeck would have been a better choice since he had done
the closing down job well at Anfield and in many other games this season.
This left a Centre-back free and on top of that, Rooney’s tracking back was pathetic in the
first half, which left their deep-lying midfielder free to roam ahead into the United half. Bilbao kept it simple, played at high tempo, didn’t give United
centre-backs and midfielders any time on the ball and United quite evidently
struggled. Bilbao’s system though, has certain chinks in the armor. All it needs
to exploit Bilbao is a midfielder who is adept at dribbling (Modric), leave one
or two of their players in the lurch and find vast amounts of space behind
their defenders and a pacey striker to latch onto them. Unfortunately in Giggs and Jones, we didn't have a specialist midfield pairing and their positional naivety was exposed
very badly.
Do United miss a certain Portuguese?
Okay. Most of
you know Manchester United’s midfield conundrum like multiplication tables. What I would
like to focus is the change affected by the introduction of Carrick and
Anderson in midfield. Anderson's energy helped us launch 3 counter attacks while Carrick's passing range nullified Bilbao’s pressing threat. Those counters were
expertly bottled by Chicharito who should have scored at least one.
SAF favors
the 4-5-1 or 4-4-2 . the problem with a midfield two is that when you play
against a midfield 3, you are outnumbered. Add to that, 3 young ones hunting
you down like a pack of wolves .. you are in for a nightmare. United’s midfield
2 consists of a runner and a passer. At present united have 2 passers (Carrick, Scholes) while our runners are absent ( Cleverly, Anderson, Fletcher ). One of
the best examples of a perfect 2 is Modric(passer) and Parker(runner). So now you know the present predicament at Manchester United.
Coming to
title of this section. The Portuguese we are missing badly as most have guessed
is not Cristiano Ronaldo, but the mercurial Carlos Queiroz. SAF, I will have to
concede was never tactically brilliant in Europe. We have many occasions that
this has come to the fore .. most notably the 2 finals against Barcelona , semifinal against Milan and matches against Real
Madrid. Ferguson, combined with the tactical acumen of Queiroz then adopted a shape which loosely
resembled that of Juventus of Marcelo Lippi. With Scholes playing as the
regista(deep lying playmaker .. like Pirlo) with a midfield destroyer along with
him (Hargreaves). Sadly we don’t have such players around and nor do we have Carlos Queiroz around.
What United
need to do is play a 3 in Europe till we get the perfect combination, but again
we rarely adopt such a shape in the league. We did play a midfield 3 against
Bayern in quarters, but that is the only match which lingers in recent memory.
Concluding
my piece, it would be interesting to see what Ferguson does at St. James' next
week. With an away trip to Wolves looming, I don’t see him playing a strong
side. I wouldn't want us to compromise the league in any case. Manchester United are in a transitional period. The sooner we come out of it, the better
for us. As for Athletic club de Bilbao, I hope Biesla holds onto his stars. The
legendary club’s rise will do a world of good to the Spanish league and Europe
in general.
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