by bigmick » Sun Sep 23, 2007 9:34 am
Well people are understandably angry it seems, but things still aren't as bad as they look right now. We are still involved, and if we can rediscover something close to our best form, would be a match for anybody in the Premiership I am certain of it.
Going back to the rotation thing again, I still stand by my earlier statement that the selection for this game was largely sensible. I do however believe that the seeds for us not winning the game were probably sewn in our selected line-ups against Portsmouth and Porto, and possibly even prior to that. I did start a thread in the aftermath of the Derby game that I was beginning to get worried that some people(and especially Rafa obviously) may become carried away with the whole concept and start to believe that our "stronger squad this year" may mean that the idea of rotation might work. I have never for one minute believed that it would and Saturday demonstrated for me exactly why.
The team, and I say this again, he selected was fine. It appeared to have balance, there was nobody playing in a position which was foreign to them, and there was probably only one/maybe two at a push changes from our strongest available team (Torres obviously and Finnan slightly more debateably). And yet, most people would accept that we didn't play too well, so why? Well my point has always been and sorry for repeating myself, once you've slipped out of the groove as a football team you can't just slip back into it by picking the correct eleven, it takes time. Now we had Paul Tomkins's silly observations on the number of changes each of the top managers makes but I've always said it wasn't a numbers game out and out. That said, if one of the stats guys would be kind enough to dig out the numbers of changes from the first two matches where we picked the same team, through the next few matches both in Europe and at Home they might make interesting reading. You see eventually you arrive at a point where even if you return to some thing like your best eleven, the team has been disrupted completely out of its rhythm. Similarly with individual players. As Peter Crouch found to his cost last season, it is quite possible to be rotated out of form and with that in mind, we shouldn't be too surprised when Fernando Torres doesn't quite set the World alight when he comes back into the starting eleven, despite his "rest".
Those that are expecting him to leap around like a Gazelle and exude sharpness, as well as looking just as good as he did when full of confidence and verve a couple of weeks ago are probably in for a bit of a disappointment I fear.
"se e in una bottigla ed e bianco, e latte".