Tuesday 8 October 2013

Roma start the season strongly with Totti the usual suspect


A.S Roma are somewhat an enigma this season.  They have started with a 100% record after 7 games. They finished last season strongly and where originally tipped to start the season strongly especially after the introduction of former Lille manager Rudi Garcia as the new man in charge. However the start of this season saw an exodus of key players. Stekelenburg joined Fulham, PSG swooped for Marquinhos, Barcelona chose to buy back Bojan, previous top scorer Osvaldo left for the south of England with Southampton and Spurs bought the outrageously talented Lamela. Many people believed that this exodus of talent would set Roma backwards, all but two of their key assets where shown the door.


However the total value of the sales brought in just over €100 million for the Italians, this was a real testament to the reactive nature of Roma in player recruitment and this money was invested very shrewdly by Garcia in the replacements he brought in.


Italian cap Morgan De Sanctis replaced the Fulham bound Stekelenburg, Maicon was brought in after an unsuccessful spell at City on a free, Adem Ljajic came in from Fiorentina in a real coup for Roma,  replacing Lamela.  Another coup was landing PSV star man Kevin Strootman, reportedly beating Manchester United to his signature. Defensively the excellent Marquinhos was replaced by Mehdi Benatia from Udinese and Tin Jedvaj  was brought in from Croatian cracks Dinamo Zagreb. The other two big signings where Destro from Genoa and Gervinho from Arsenal.


Roma still made a profit on player sales of around €30million, and some might say looked stronger after selling all their key players and replacing them than before. Judging by the strong start to the season this already looks to be true.


Looking at this undoubted plethora of talent it would be very disrespectful to claim that Roma are a two man team, but when speaking about Roma it is undeniable that two players stand out above the rest. Danielle De Rossi & Francesco Totti. De Rossi is the highest paid player in Italy and seems to have put his troubles that affected him last season behind him and moved back in to the Roma starting eleven after falling out of favour when his form dipped. The pair are few of the last one team players which has recently become a rarity in football. Totti as he proved at the weekend in the win over Inter seems to be mercurial. Roma could exist for another 100 years and not have a player like him again. He is Roma’s greatest ever player and even now at 37 remains a key player for the side.

Despite being Italian football’s second top scorer, Totti has never been comfortable as the main focal point in the Roma attack. His strength is as a second striker, coming back to link the play, playing in between the lines. People talk about the superb ability of Lionel Messi and the creation of the new type of striker, the false nine but what many people do not realise is that at Roma especially under Luciano Spalleti, Totti was one of the first strikers to be a false nine long before the role even had that name. Italian football has always favoured the trequarista and the poacher combination.  At international level Totti was always partnered with a poacher type player, be that either Inazghi or Toni. This is reflected in the fact he only managed 9 international goals for the Azzurri. At Roma however Totti has become both the trequarista and the poacher.

His movement at the weekend against Inter was key to disrupting the Inter defence. They were unsure if they should follow him (exposing their back line) or stay put (allowing him space to run the game). Even when they got tight Totti’s superior skill and ball control meant that they could not even get close and he often brought team mates into play (as shown below.)


Also shown are two of Totti’s chalkboards from the Inter game. Totti’s variance of position is displayed in the positions he got into both to pass the ball and to receive the ball. What is amazing about him is that for all the bringing into play he does for others, he does not diminish himself as a goal threat, finishing the game with a brace in a 3-0 rout.  Even at 37 he manages to both be Roma’s key playmaker and also their key finisher.




In Britain Totti has never received the praise he has elsewhere on the continent. This might be down to the fact that at his last three international tournaments he never fully lived up to the hype. In 2002 in Korea he was dismissed as Italy crashed out, and in 2004 he was banned for a spitting incident. As Italy won in 2006 Totti was only half fit, playing with metal plates in his ankle. He finished with only one goal (from the spot) but still managed to finish with the most assists of the tournament and played in every game making him a World Cup winner.

Totti’s decision to end his international career prematurely means he has missed further chances to showcase his enormous talents on the world stage. This matters not to the Roma faithful who correctly hold him in massive regards. Totti has confirmed he will retire in 2016 at the age of 39 so time is running out for fans to see the Italian in action. He and De Rossi represent the dying embers of the breed of footballers who served one club, he is an endangered species in world football, but is still proving at the age of 37, that he is a dangerous species for opposition defences.

                                                                                                                                                                            

Tuesday 1 October 2013

How Sergio Busquets is flourishing under a new manager


Due to the unfortunate circumstances that occurred, Barcelona where forced into another new managerial change. It has been a turbulent year or so in the Barcelona managers office, the circumstances however where far beyond their own control. Tata Martino has come in and Barcelona will be hoping for a period of stability. It was unfortunate for them that last season saw the first without Guardiola, his assistant Tito Vilanova took over. This was the first period of change, and when tragedy struck and Vilanova took a leave of absence to help recover from cancer, a new period of change ensued which temporarily thrust Jordi Roura into the hot seat. Vilanova of course made his return but the bad news that his cancer had returned forced him to step down entirely, Tata Martino came to the front.

Martino only had one new signing, which was made before his arrival. The talented Brazillian Neymar joined the ranks and the new boss seems pretty pleased with his inherited squad, choosing not to add anymore new faces. The style hasn’t totally been changed, but there have been some major adjustments. Spectators where almost shocked to see Victor Valdes take a long kick this season, rather than roll the ball out so Barcelona could build from the back. The team pressing from Barcelona which was the key feature of the Guardiola era subsided slightly under Vilanova and now even more under Tata Martino.

The less pressing of Barcelona as a team and as a whole unit has in return highlighted the quality possessed by Sergio Busquets. He has been given more responsibility in the middle of the park to win the ball back for his side. In previous regimes he was renowned for his ability to step into defence allowing the full backs to bomb on, but under Martino we have seen a more combative Busquets. The Spaniard covers more ground than ever before, aggressively seeking the ball in more areas of the pitch than in previous years.
As shown below, last season in the Mestalla against Valencia Busquets operated mostly centrally, and either in his own half or just slightly above the half way line when Barcelona where in possession. This season however in the same fixture not one of his tackles came centrally, instead they happened out wide and high up the pitch.





Martino has given Busquets license to prowl that midfield and the early indications are that he is very comfortable doing so. This season, may just see Busquets going from Barcelona’s most underrated player, to one of the top midfield combatants in Europe.