by bigmick » Wed Feb 15, 2006 10:47 pm
Despite the fact that I have been very critical of Morientes for just about the whole of this season and indeed from from very early in the piece after he signed, I felt he had one of his better games last night.
JBG is correct in saying that me and him have disagreed (amicably of course) over the contribution or lack thereof of Nando, and my problem has largely been that he has little or no influence over too many games and what's more never looks like scoring. Last night that wasn't the case as he had a couple of chances.
To score consistently, a striker must broadly do one of two things. He must either A) make himself open lots of times in the box with movement and constant re-alignment. Crespo, Owen and Van Nistelroy are masters of this. The only variable is whether or not their teammates can feed them in. Van Nistelroy will make himself open for the pass in the Liverpool box on a number of occasions on saturday. Hopefully good defending to block or poor delivery will prevent him from scoring but you know if they get the ball out wide he will go in to the near post, check out and back track, stand still dive back in near and then duck out again. In short he is a brilliant striker (also unfortunately a horrible ponce but there you go) who will always score goals.
Similarly Crespo with his arcing runs away from the point of play, never in the line of sight of the central defender then bosh it's in the back of the net. Note Owen's first goal for the barcodes against Blackburn. away from the line of sight of the defender and then BAM infront of Ryan Nelson and scores with a nearpost header. The Blackburn man didn't know what was going on, he didn't even see Owen and did the old full flex of the neck muscles to head out a ball that never even reached him.
This type of forward play has been totally absent from our team this season, none of our strikers do this with the notable exception Of Luis Garcia whose movement is excellent. Clever movement also includes moving to anticipate rebounds. It won't bounce to you every time but it won't bounce to you at all if you stay stood behind a defender all night. It's all about playing the percentages, taking a gamble, getting yourself open. Last night Morientes did some good movement for the header from Gerrards cross. Ok it missed but it was a good effort and encouraging.
How to score consistently part B) is quite simply a DIY effort. Once again we have been bereft of inspirational striker play. Chelsea's second goal at Stamford bridge against us. Was it a good goal, a classy build up? No it was simply a striker playing off a defenders shoulder, gambling that the ball might get played down the channel and then converted with a fantastic finish. Bad defending? not really, a goal out of nothing. Look at Thierry Henri, the amount of times he gets played in is high but equally high are the occasions he makes a goal out of nothing. You've got him and then bang, it's 1-0. Everyone looks at each other but your one down. Van Nistelroy does it aswell though not as often as Henri at his best. Owen very rarely does it, he prefers to rely on his clever movemnt to rack up the goals.
It was lovely to see Fowlers effort last night, a chance created out of nothing. A ghost into the box folowed by a sublime first touch creating the opportunity to score.
Sooner or later we are going to have to accept that ourfront players must score goals. If they continually make themselves open in the box, and they posess enough talent to go DIY and change a tight game in an instant then we will have a team to be feared. Last night was encouraging, particularly as in these days of windows and such-like we are stuck with what we've got. My suspicion is howeve rthat come the end of the season, Morientes and Cisse at least will be traded in for players who can do more often what I have described.
Last edited by
bigmick on Wed Feb 15, 2006 10:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"se e in una bottigla ed e bianco, e latte".