Monday, March 16, 2015

3 Reasons (Although there were 11) for Spurs Conquest

1.  Speed of Play

With Daley Blind at left back and Michael Carrick treading passes from the middle of the field, the dynamic play of United past came back to life! In Carrick, Herrera and Mata, United have 3 players with passing vision to give Rooney and company something to run for. The first goal was a classic passing flow that culminated with Fellaini’s goal.

While Blind has been one of United’s most consistent performers, the accusatory finger has sometimes been pointed in his direction by those complaining of lack of speed in United’s game. On the other hand, his playing left back adds reliability and creates opportunities coming out of defence. His lack of speed is balanced by his keen positional sense and having a hard working winger like Young makes this a potent combination worth exploring.    

It has been some time since the Old Trafford faithful have been entertained and the victims come in the familiar shape of Spurs who are close to conceding their challenge for the top 4.   

2.  Familiarity Breeds Security

Last week I mooted the idea of reverting to Jones and Smalling at the heart of defence. Despite their recent calamities and Jones’ contriving to almost score via an own goal early on, these two young-ish men have played together at club and national level before. In as much as they still need work, there was a sense of familiarity at the back, not to mention physical strength that will certainly come in handy against Liverpool this weekend.

This same familiarity showed in the way Carrick fitted back seamlessly into the team and conducted a lesson in passing that cannot be lost on United’s new boys.

There was familiarity too in the way that Rooney has been powering through opposition defences and scoring goals worth every penny paid to England’s  and United’s top striker.  

3.  Something  to Fight For

By the time United took to the pitch, it was clear that a win would take them within 2 points of their City rivals. Less importantly was Mourinho dropping another 2 points as Chelsea stumbles towards the finishing line. If we win all our remaining games, 2nd place is a certainty, the title – still almost too far to conceive. Before I am accused of being overly bias, because my lens are definitely tinged with red, let’s consider what a 9 game winning streak looks like. A win at Chelsea will pull us within 5 points of the Blues. Given Mourinho still has games against Arsenal and Liverpool, the optimist in me refuses to lie down and die quietly.   

I don’t know for sure what Rooney said in the dressing room before the Spurs game. And even if I were a fly on that wall, I don’t speak scouse. But I am sure of one thing – there is something to fight for and the rewards will vindicate this team. People will remember this as the season we rebounded from the loss of Alex Ferguson, the birth of Van United.


Or we could fail and it would be back to the transfer market for the Glazers…

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

The LVG Philosophy: Square Peg, Round Holes… For Now

In a game that frequently gets associated with shape and form, I find it ironic that Louis Van Gaal’s problems at my beloved Manchester United may boil down to fundamental mismatches. Unlike the less illustrious and somewhat ill-fortunate David Moyes, it has been rightfully pointed out that Van Gaal brings with him a resume that can only be described as success-full. Coupled with his march to the semis of the World Cup with a lesser talented Dutch national team, compared to their previous compatriots, I can only surmise that Manchester United are due better days ahead.

Van Gaal’s tactics are based on players having the fitness levels and more importantly, embracing a philosophy that places the team above the individual. This approach favours intelligent (thoughtful not instinctual) passing and retention of the ball. It depends on players understanding their roles in relation to each moving part of the team that ensures that the plays in motion are never short of numbers, whether in defence or attack. Admittedly this is easy enough to understand, but harder perhaps to realise.

In this Manchester United squad, or even most top English clubs for that matter, this approach may need more time to piece together, probably more time than is usually available before the soccer critics turn pens into sharp piercing weapons to wound and sometimes kill. I venture to say, it is made even harder with this current crop of players at Carrington and United’s insatiable thirst for success.

Grey Matter-s

Ever since the Euro ban of English clubs and their subsequent return, continental clubs have often used the “long ball approach” as a derisory tag on England’s best teams. While English clubs have had some success and temporary dominance of the continental contests in the past, the gulf in class is evident when it comes to the national team. Most English players are by and large, fast and strong but simply not smart footballers. I do not know enough to comment about the structure of football training in the UK, but looking at the way the Germans, Italians and the Dutch play the game over the past 2 decades, it is no wonder why British national teams have found success elusive.

Unlike the Class of 92, a glorious exception, our current United players like Smalling, Evans, Jones, Valencia, even Fellaini offer little in terms of footballing smarts. While it may work when teaching pets new tricks, we are talking about footballing tactics here and it is little wonder that the main culprits are also to be blamed for United’s porous defensive displays. Block headed players cannot be made to understand well rounded plays and until LVG can pound those flat edges into something he can work with, I fear our hopes of finishing top four are, sticking with the headline imagery, stuck.

Grey Matters Too

Van Gaal has been credited with the development of young players like Xavi Hernández, Andrés Iniesta and Bayern stalwarts like Thomas Müller and Bastian Schweinsteiger in the past, demonstrating the same with greenhorns like Memphis Depay and Jordy Clasie. This United team however has players like Jonny Evans (27), Chris Smalling (25) and Antonio Valencia (29) who may well be old dogs being taught new tricks. Even Phil Jones at 23 years should be at a higher level of development than currently at display. In the case of Young and Valencia, playing them out of position has been “hit (albeit Young needs more consistency) and miss” rather than vindication for the Dutch master.

Last night’s game demonstrated the weakness of using Valencia as a right back rather than his natural position on the wing further upfront. While he had a small hand in the equaliser, I would suggest that the Ecuadorian was responsible for both and not just the second goal. In the first instance, his weak intervention by showing Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain his back opened wide the already useless backline and allowed for the final pass that led to Monreal’s goal.   
I am tempted to suggest that Angel Di Maria may fall in the same category, but he is too intelligent, although not last night I may add, and skilful player to write-off quite so easily as his opening games suggest.

Unless these players experience a near miraculous illumination, the solution lies in promoting the teenagers within the squad or opening the coffers for another off-season splash. Without the lure of Champions League football, United will be a less attractive proposition and that would mean paying above market prices to ease the conscience somewhat.

Our Colours Are Red, Not Grey

If Van Gaal didn’t know it when he signed, he should realise by now that Manchester United not just about winning. The colours of the team reflect the vibrant and romantic past of the club. This is perhaps one of the reasons the Special One was deemed not special enough. In order to restructure United’s shape of play, Van Gaal has had to stymie the styles of incredible talents like Ander Herrera, Radamel Falcao and to an extent, even Di Maria. The collective spirit is squeezing the creative freedom that these players thrive on and this is manifest in the pedestrian pace of football on display.
I would argue that this was a calculated risk and the reason I say this is the lack of gloating despite the mid-season unbeaten run. Van Gaal realises that top four is a temporary reprieve and failure to secure Champions League qualification will see the colour of red on the dissatisfied fuming faces of United fans.

With 10 games to go, half of those games are against contenders for top 4 with must-win games beginning with Spurs and followed quickly by Liverpool in quick succession. Given this scenario, why note revert to what United players know best? The fact of the matter is that those pegs are square and Van Gaal needs to find another game plan to make this work. Even if this mean strengthening the spine with some brawn if not brains, removing the need for unproductive possession and freeing the wingers to tear up the edges of the pitch. Even if it means dealing with Juan Mata’s lack of pace given his knack of creating and scoring goals. And even if it means eating some humble pie and admitting that the Van Gaal Philosophy needs time and most certainly new, suitable personnel.
Now doesn’t that sound like a square hole if there is such a thing?


My preferred United first team against Spurs (4-2-3-1): De Gea, Shaw, Blind, Smalling, Jones, Carrick, Herrera, Young, Mata, Januzaj, Rooney   - with Smalling detailed to shackle Kane, Shaw and Jones to deal with their speedy wingers and Blind with support from Carrick to provide leadership at the back. I’d give Young and Januzaj license to run with Falcao as the option if the former fails to fire.

Wednesday, April 03, 2013

Parliament Dissolved - Paves the Way for GE 13

Our voices were muffled. Now time to make it heard at the polling booths.

Parliament has been dissolved. Now supposing this is not a liquid meltdown of an old building, Malaysians will head to the voting stations soon and the hope is, we will vote in a government that is fair and just. One that recognizes that it is the government of the people, by the people for the people.

On my part, I have had enough of the corruption and abuse of authority displayed by Barisan Nasional, especially UMNO.