redmikey wrote:some of the attacking play that we had this year has been top draw imo
gala at home was some of the best football i've seen us play in a long while
we have hit the post 7 time already this season which just shows the difference between sucess and failure at this level, good post st mike but i think we aren't far from clicking all the pieces together soon
as for people who just say rotation is sh!t well you weren't moaning last year, no last year you were moaning about strikers
and the year before that you were moaning about carra
and the year before that it was all GH fault
and on and on just feck off and support your local pub team where you can blame the wheather and a dodgy pint and where i don't have to listen to your ssn opinion
I'd agree with that, mate, which makes this thread a bit of a strange one for me. No one was complaining about our attack before the Bolton game. Indeed, we'd banged in 8 goals over 3 games just prior to the weekend so we can't be that blunt an instrument going forward (especially considering the chances we spurned against the Barcodes and Galatasaray in particular).
I mean, look at the types of goals we've scored this season:
(1) lovely finishes from pinpoint crosses (Crouch and Garcia vs Gala; Gonzales against Spurs; Crouch against MH; Gonzales against MH)
(2) clinical strikes following great through balls (Kuyt vs. Spurs; Kuyt vs. NUFU; Crouch vs. West Ham)
(3) long-range thunderbolts (Riise vs. Spurs; Alonso vs. NUFU; Agger vs. West Ham)
There's been plenty of creativity on display in these goals, and that's not mentioning the ridiculous number of times we've hit the woodwork this season. We are creating plenty of chances. We just need to be more clinical in finishing them, especially on the road.
It follows, from what I've just said, that I don't think we are significantly less creative on the road than we have been at Anfield. We have carved out some very nice chances on the road--especially in the first half of games--but are just not putting them away. Indeed, if we had taken the chances that fell to us at Everton, Chelsea and Bolton those games probably would have gone quite differently. Once the opposition get their noses in front, though, we get nervous, try to force things too much and run out of ideas before the end of the match.
This to me, is the more worrying problem: conceding silly first goals on the road (and, at home in the West Ham game) that allow opponents to pack the defense and concentrate on stifling us. As Saint points out, once we go behind we don't seem to have the composure and guile to claw our way back into the game (especially on the road). We had that last year and we need to get it back.