Thursday, 6 August 2020

THE ONES THAT CAME BACK!

From the Midfield to the Touchline.
                                                     by Neil M Goswami.
 

The FA Cup final between Chelsea and Arsenal was an encounter which saw Frank Lampard and Mikel Arteta vying for the first silverware of their managerial journey, where ultimately Guardiola’s former assistant Arteta emerged victorious and picked up a trophy which saw him outwit his former boss Guardoila on the way.

This article looks into the journey of players who have made the shift from the center of the pitch to the touchline.

Lampard and Arteta greet each other before an Arsenal vs. Chelsea match (Metro.Co.Uk)

Legendary players making the transition from the field to the touchline is not a rare sight in football. Players find a way to be a part of the beatiful game by making the shift from the pitch to the touchline. It is worthwhile to note that there have been players who have failed to reach the heights in the dugout as they did on the pitch, most notably the likes of Diego Maradona and there have been others who have gone on to achieve great things on the touchline without having illustrious playing careers. However in recent years, former midfielders are creating waves in the world of football through their managerial skills and methods.

Lampard and Arteta are the newest additions to a list of former midfielders who have hung up their boots and gone on to donne the coaches tracksuit/suit after the likes of Guardiola, Zidane. Hans Dieter Flick who has led Bayern to a mid season revival is another individual who was a no nonsense player in the middle of the park for the Bavarian’s and his understanding of the club’s philosophy has been crucial to Bayern’s revival under him. Neil Lenon a former midfielder who amassed over 500 Scottish Premiership appearances is now leading Celtic to domestic glory while Steven Gerrard’s Rangers provide competition.

A host of former players are leading from the touchline in Europe’s top leagues. The Premier League itself has a range of former players who are doing tremendous work on the touchlines which include the likes of Ole Gunnar Solskjær at Manchester United and Nuno Espirito Sancho at Wolves. However this approach has not always ensured results, and this is particularly applicable to Italian heavy weights AC Milan, Clarence Seedorf, Pippo Inzaghi, Sinisa Mihajlovic, Cristian Brocchi, Vincenzo Montella and then Gattuso – Milan have developed a habit of hiring extremely successful footballers as managers, but this tactic has so far failed to pay off for them.

Pep Guardiola and Zinedine Zidane have achieved era defining success for Barcelona and Real Madrid respectively. ( DailyMail.co. uk)

Johan Cryuff created a style of play which ties Ajax and Barcelona together as they both continue to explore his philosophy. Guardiola himself was a keen learner and observer of the game. Although not an explosive and fast midfielder, everything Guardiola did was based on intelligence, movement and anticipation. Everything was considered and thought-out. In the latter stages of his career, Guardiola began to map his route into management as he moved to Italy and then to Mexico because he wanted to play under Juanma Lillo who is a big coaching influence for Pep and has linked up with him at Manchester City to take up the role of Pep’s assistant from Arteta.

Arteta was a integral part of Pep’s backroom set up at Manchester City before making the switch to North London (The Transfer Tavern)

However, it’s not necessary that only the most skilled midfielders make good coaches. Gattuso, Conte and Simeone spent their time raging for their respective teams and now they have built teams which have an identity that is attached to how their coaches were on the pitch. Gattuso has emerged as a shrewd operator and his gutsy approach picked up from his playing days has seen him improve AC Milan (although the club moved on from him quickly) and take Napoli to a domestic cup title whilst Simeone has managed to make Atletico Madrid a force to reckon with bringing them within touching distance of UEFA Champions League glory and winning the Europa League and La Liga in the process. Carlo Ancelotti wasn’t the most-skilled midfielder of his day, yet he seemed to fit in wherever his manager needed him. He’s achieved so much as a manager by adapting to the needs of his various squads rather than demanding they adapt to his. This has seen him win three Champions League Titles and he is part of an exclusive club of managers with Bob Paisley and Zinedine Zidane.

(DailyMail.co.uk)

On the pitch, they were at the centre of the action. They controlled matches, winning balls, transitioning from defence to attack, directing traffic. Watch a match and you’ll see number sixes and number eights telling their mates where to go much like a goalkeeper marshals the defence. Central midfielders orchestrate every aspect of the game. If they have the ability to communicate their expectations as players, it bodes well for their careers as managers. They are the hub of their teams and often dictate the tempo and the way their teams play. Midfielders need to read the game minutely, since they are instrumental in both building and breaking plays, they can understand the movements and the tactics of the opposition. Staying ahead of the game in turn gives them a chance to prepare counter-movements of their own.

Getting the ball in the middle of the pitch, looking at the whole pitch, players running around them gave these players a chance to be a the core of how their teams played and to develop tactical flexibility which is a must in the modern game. Midfielders are an important fixture for any team and they form the backbone for their coaches during their playing days, shuttling up and down the pitch, whilst breaking up play and initiating moves that allows their colleagues upfront to score them. They are expected to perform multiple roles, depending on the phase of transition their team is in and this allows them to understand the flow of the game better.

“Dominating the midfield is the most important thing in modern football. To succeed, you have to be good at everything.”

Toni Kroos

Midfielder always have players around him – one has to have very good awareness and possess the ability to make decisions quickly, which is necessary to ensure correct decision making in high stakes situations even on the touchline. Another very important aspect of becoming a great coach is to understand and read the players to bring out their potential. Because the midfielders are the ones who control the tempo of the game, it is very important for them to understand the ability of the players around them. They are used to passing the balls according to the pace, strong foot and keeping other parameters of all the players. This alone makes them capable of reading the players which becomes a big addition to their skillset as they venture into management.

Xavi is another former midfielder who is on the cusp of big things as his appointment in the Camp Nou hotseat seems imminent. Andrea Pirlo’s appointment as the Juventus U23 manager is also an inkling of what the future holds for the Italian maestro who could boss the midfield on his own in his prime. Elsewhere, the likes of Xabi Alonso (who has already achieved success as the coach of Real Madrid’s youth teams) Patrick Viera and Micheal Carrick are working their way into the world of management with Carrick having worked with both Jose Mourinho and Ole and being a key figure on the training ground during both regimes at United.

Michael Carrick has been a permanent fixture at Carrington, assisting both Ole and Jose Mourinho. (Manchester Evening News)

Clubs are beginning to adopt an approach where former fan favourites are coming back to the dugout as they imbibe the club’s philosophy into their methods. There are a host of midfielders coming through in clubs all over Europe who are in different stages in their coaching career and therefore the journey from the centre of the pitch to the touchline is becoming a reality for a lot of people.

Xavi and Pirlo are expected to make it big in management (TalkSport.com)

Friday, 24 July 2020

BALLON D’OR CANCELLED!

Was Lewandowski robbed?

By- Nabaarun Barooah




A footballing season already doomed by the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic received another
shocker when France Football announced that the much coveted Ballon d’Or has been
cancelled. But what does that mean to the world of football?
A competition for the best footballer in the world which was much dominated by the duopoly of
Leo Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo for the past decade, was only broken once, by Croatian star
midfielder Luka Modrić. However, 2019-20 finally looked like the time the global dominance of
the two all time greats was challenged by another worthy and serious competitor- Bayern
Munich’s striker extraordinaire Robert Lewandowski.

With the replacement of Niko Kovač with Hans-Dieter Flick, Bayern Munich has been
rejuvenated from a 7th placed team to thrashing Chelsea 3-0 at home and securing the double
in Germany. A pivotal part of Bayern’s lethal attack has been their main man Robert
Lewandowski. The Polish international netted 34 goals in the Bundesliga becoming the highest
scoring non-German in a single season and has amassed an amazing total of 51 goals in all
competitions this season. Leading the European Golden Boot, despite the Bundesliga playing
less games than all other leagues, as well as the Champions League scoresheet with 11 goals,
it seems the striker is indeed unstoppable. With most renowned sports journalists and football
pundits already hailing Lewandowski as the favorite to win the competition, it seems unfair that
the trophy won’t be awarded this year.

But this isn’t definitely the first time. In 2012-13, French winger extraordinaire Franck Ribéry
spearheaded Jupp Heynckes’s Bayern to a historic treble. Yet the Ballon d’Or was awarded to
Cristiano Ronaldo, a decision that divided several footballing pundits. The very next season,
World Cup winner and Golden Glove recipient Manuel Neuer missed out on the same trophy to
the same player, leading the footballing community to introspect if anyone apart from the likes of
Messi and Ronaldo will ever be considered capable enough to lift the Ballon d’Or.
Their records stand testimony to the fact that Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo are indeed the
greatest footballers the world has ever seen, two giants of the game who not only dominated
Europe but defined an era in world football. However, the Coronavirus-doomed 2019-20 season
belonged to talisman Robert Lewandowski. The question now remains if he would be able to
work
his miracle again next season to get close to the Ballon d’Or.

Monday, 20 July 2020

The Story of Manchester's biggest footballing tragedy.


The Munich Air Disaster and the "Flowers of Manchester".
By Rupayan Bhattacharjee


 February 6, 2020, marked 62 years since the Munich air disaster, which robbed Manchester United of eight players and therefore the football world of an exciting young team that would have challenged Real Madrid's global domination back then. Under their inspiring Scottish manager, Matt Busby after the War, Manchester United became one of the most brilliant and exciting football teams in England. United had won three league titles in six years from 1952 to 1957 and defied FA desires by competing in the newly-established European Cup. 'Busby Babes', as the team was nicknamed after their manager Matt Busby, was returning after securing a place into the European Cup semi-finals for the second year running. Busby and his players and staff boarded a BEA aircraft at Belgrade in a driving snowstorm.

 Notably, the club opted to use scheduled airline services so that the players do not experience the fatigue of long journeys by road, rail or sea, when they play their first two away fixtures in European Cup. The flight from Belgrade to Munich was delayed for an hour when Johnny Berry couldn't find his passport. When the plane touched down in Munich the weather conditions were extremely poor with a chill factor wind swirling around the airport. On its way back to Manchester from Yugoslavia, the flight stopped in Munich to refuel and had two take-off failures before a third fatal attempt. Between the plane's aborted second and disastrous third take-off attempts, heavy snow had begun to fall. After two failed take-off attempts, the players were already nervous when they re-boarded the plane. The pilot had rejected an overnight stay and went for a 3rd effort despite the snow falling. The sports fraternity was rocked on February 6, 1958, when Manchester United lost eight players among 23 fatalities and 21 survivors as British European Airways Flight 609 crashed on take-off at Munich-Riem Airport. Of 44 on board, 21 were killed. Matt Busby, who was badly hurt, and Bobby Charlton, a future England international, were among those taken to hospital. Charlton had come around to find himself outside the plane but still strapped into his seat. Geoff Bent, Eddie Colman, Mark Jones, David Pegg, Liam "Billy" Whelan, star striker Tommy Taylor and captain Roger Byrne died at the scene - while the great Duncan Edwards gave up the ghost in hospital 15 days later.

 Bobby Charlton, who was severely injured in the crash, said: "I was just lucky and sitting in the right place." 
"We never got off the floor and ran into a house and a few other obstacles. It was just a nightmare."


 "The medical people came around and gave me an injection in the back of my neck and I just collapsed. I didn't wake up until the following morning.
 "This German lad was there and he had paper. He had a list of all the players and he read them out and if they were alive he would say 'yes' and if they were dead he said 'no'."

 United completed the season with a rebuilt side under assistant manager Jimmy Murphy, as Busby recuperated. Remarkably they reached the FA Cup Final, but a team featuring just four crash survivors was beaten 2-0 by Bolton Wanderers at Wembley.

 An investigation by West German airport authorities originally blamed Thain, one of the two commanding pilots, saying he did not de-ice the aircraft's wings, despite eyewitness statements indicating de-icing was not necessary. It was later established that the crash was caused by the slush on the runway, which slowed the plane too much to take off. Thain was cleared in 1968, ten years after the incident.

 Manchester United was trying to become the third club to win three successive English league titles; they were six points behind League leaders Wolverhampton Wanderers with 14 games to go. They also held the Charity Shield and had just advanced into their second successive European Cup semi-finals. The team had not been beaten for 11 matches. The crash not only derailed their title ambitions that year but also destroyed the nucleus of what promised to be one amongst the best generations of players in English football history. It took 10 years for the club to recover, with Busby rebuilding the team and winning the European Cup in 1968 with a new generation of "Babes


THE ONES THAT CAME BACK!

From the Midfield to the Touchline.                                                      by Neil M Goswami.   The FA Cup fi...