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Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 10:49 am
by ant london
Certainly more positive than the views we've had back from our man at Carrington and others who have watched the youngsters of late.....

http://www.spanishfootball.info/2012/02 ... o-victory/

Analysis: Manchester City’s Denis Suárez in Spain U18′s Copa Atlántico victory
Published on February 6, 2012 by David Cartlidge · No Comments


After watching Denis Suárez in the recent Copa Atlántico tournament I felt inclined to note down a few observations.

I’ve followed Suárez since his Celta Vigo days, specifically with the Juvenil team, so have taken a continued interest in his development. The midfielder has stated in interviews playing alongside David Silva in training has brought his game on, and that he’s learning every single day how to improve both his decision making with the ball, and running off it. Judging by his performance in the tournament based in the Canary Islands, he’s an efficient learner.

Here is an assessment of his performance at the tournament:

Vs. Denmark

Suárez was operating here, in quite advanced areas throughout. Raúl de Tomas was the central striker, and it was the Manchester City player who was closest to him throughout. I found this strange because on a few occasions only, have I seen him operate as advanced. He often picked the pall up 25/30 yards from goal, making short passes to the wide players – he had a particularly good understanding with Atlético Madrid’s highly rated Javi Manquillo, cutting in from wide areas. The neat interchanges are key in the Spanish game at youth level, to learn the prestige of possession. Suárez rarely misplaced a pass, even when under pressure he contorted his body well and manoeuvred out of a potentially dangerous situation, again distributing the ball neatly. Off the ball his movement was intelligent too, sometimes moving into an area with his back to goal turning 180 degrees and lifting his head up – again moving the ball into channels, or to De Tomas. Everything went through Suárez, and there can’t have been a single move that didn’t involve him within the build-up. It was a solid display to begin the tournament with.

Vs. Canary Islands

Here, Suárez was situated in a deeper area, where I’ve been more used to seeing him, both at Celta and while with the Spanish youth set up. I imagine, given what occurred in the first game, Coach Julen Lopetegui decided he needed to create more space for Suárez to dictate within. It worked too, as for much of the game he remained unmarked, and despite picking the ball up from deeper zones, he carried the ball in a much more purposeful way compared to the first. Again, he maintained to distribute the ball into wider areas when getting into the final third, though he seemed to be playing on a more individual level without Manquillo, who was rested. The relationship between the two really was that significant in the opening game. Suárez’s body movement continued to amaze, and just when it seemed he was being closed down a subtle drop of the shoulder took him away from any oncoming opponent. He crowned a dominating display, with a goal. Receiving the ball inside the penalty area he showed fine control, before evading a challenge and slotting into the bottom corner. With the game closing out, Suárez found time for a party trick too; he made himself some space in central midfield, and a 40 yard pass from the full back was plucked out of the air, and brought under control. The crowd, and commentators on Marca TV, duly let out a huge gasp.

Vs. Russia

This was probably Suárez’s weakest game of the tournament, though it speaks volumes despite this he managed to provide the key moment within the 90 minutes. He reverted to the role he played in the opener against Denmark, with Coach Lopetegui perhaps being of the mindset he needed more definition within attacking areas. Spain needed to win the game to take the trophy – a loss, or draw, wasn’t enough. Russia pressed up high on Spain in the first half, and were probably the better side. It squeezed Suárez, and Spain, much deeper than they would’ve liked. Without him dropping deep the distribution on the counter attack wasn’t precise enough, and unusually for a Spanish side, they were out hustled by a determined Russian side. A late substitution saw Spain take the lead, and after that the game opened up more. Suarez began to find space to create within, and he was feeding balls into the frontline often. The decisive moment then came, as Spain put both hands on the trophy. Russia failed to clear their lines, and with two body feints, Suárez opened himself up a yard of space, and drilled the ball home. It was a fantastic strike, especially given the small area to work in.

Conclusion:

Suárez had a fantastic tournament, and there has been clear development within his game. He seems a more confident individual, and obviously has a clearer view of the ability harnessed. In fact, from what I gathered, he was one of the stronger personalities within the dressing room too, and along with Manquillo and Óliver Torres (another outstanding Atlético Madrid prospect), he will no doubt lead this next generation of Spanish talent on to success. If I had to give him a mark, it would be 9/10. City have a gem.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:08 am
by lets all have a disco
Sounds really posotive i hope we have him on a long deal as those rag twats sniff around our youth setup with envy.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:21 am
by Douglas Higginbottom
Shame we havent been able to watch these games (have we?) I think Suarez is a very interesting player.Clearly very talented but for me at the moment still a boy. I am sure it is 100% true that training with the first team and especially Silva will( or should) do wonders for him.

I recall seeing him earlier this season at the swamp in an academy game and he was the star man and lead the team to a good win.Equally I have seen him in other games,like the NextGen games,where he has flattered to deceive.He can look very good on the ball but actually deliver nothing of consequence but is always likely to produce a moment of class.

In training I get the feeling he has been given specific roles to play in games which are not just about getting on the ball and being creative.They might only be 8 or 9 a side games but he has at times played in a wide role where the tracking back has been as much a part of the game as getting forward and trying to create.All useful experience.The last game I saw him play was at Bury against weak opposition.Again he looked a composed clever player and travelled well with the ball but somehow just didnt get it right with the final ball and surprisingly seemed unwilling to shoot.

I said still a boy at the start.He comes across as a very shy lad ( like Silva?) and very quiet in games.He doesnt demand the ball and seems to be looking for the killer pass rather than score himself (like Silva?). Will he become like Silva? Maybe and City should certainly be the ones to find out rather than letting him go and maybe flourish elsewhere.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:22 am
by Benjay
I would have given this guy a go in the Carling cup. He is very highly rated. When Mancini was fielding a weakish bench I was disappointed not to see him on it.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:54 am
by Foreverinbluedreams
Benjay wrote:I would have given this guy a go in the Carling cup. He is very highly rated. When Mancini was fielding a weakish bench I was disappointed not to see him on it.


Are you talking about the semi final?

He was on the bench for the Brum, Wolves and Arsenal games. He got 25 minutes against Wolves.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:00 pm
by david yearsley
Watched the Russia game on Marca Tv - if that was his worst game then he must have been shit hot in the others. The Ruskie kids were kicking lumps out of him and one or two others

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:43 pm
by dazby
If any of the current crop are going to break through then it HAS to be Suarez.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:59 pm
by Niall Quinns Discopants
Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Shame we havent been able to watch these games (have we?) I think Suarez is a very interesting player.Clearly very talented but for me at the moment still a boy. I am sure it is 100% true that training with the first team and especially Silva will( or should) do wonders for him.

I recall seeing him earlier this season at the swamp in an academy game and he was the star man and lead the team to a good win.Equally I have seen him in other games,like the NextGen games,where he has flattered to deceive.He can look very good on the ball but actually deliver nothing of consequence but is always likely to produce a moment of class.

In training I get the feeling he has been given specific roles to play in games which are not just about getting on the ball and being creative.They might only be 8 or 9 a side games but he has at times played in a wide role where the tracking back has been as much a part of the game as getting forward and trying to create.All useful experience.The last game I saw him play was at Bury against weak opposition.Again he looked a composed clever player and travelled well with the ball but somehow just didnt get it right with the final ball and surprisingly seemed unwilling to shoot.

I said still a boy at the start.He comes across as a very shy lad ( like Silva?) and very quiet in games.He doesnt demand the ball and seems to be looking for the killer pass rather than score himself (like Silva?). Will he become like Silva? Maybe and City should certainly be the ones to find out rather than letting him go and maybe flourish elsewhere.


If anything, that sounds to me like we have finally learned to use Academy games and training sessions honing individual skills of players. That sounds like he has been asked to play lot of different roles and obviously they are trying to better him.

Academy games should be approached how Dutch do it. I mean who gives a shit whether we win or loss against someone like Bury in Manchester Senior Cup? Just as long as every player has learned something new as an individual and part of a team.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 4:15 pm
by DoomMerchant
Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:
...should be approached how Dutch do it.


get high. sell our pussies. A simple but effective recipe for almost any situation in life it seems. Universal truths cross cultural boundaries.

also, i have a dream, etc.

cheers

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 6:31 pm
by bobby brows
dazby wrote:If any of the current crop are going to break through then it HAS to be Suarez.


Karim Rekik seems to be ahead of Bridge, Nedum and Veseli in the defensive pecking order

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 7:45 pm
by phips
bobby brows wrote:
dazby wrote:If any of the current crop are going to break through then it HAS to be Suarez.


Karim Rekik seems to be ahead of Bridge, Nedum and Veseli in the defensive pecking order

I sure hope so. The first one isnt even at City right now and the other 2 arent even City players anymore.



I wonder if Suarez's coach at City can harness his talent and put him in positions to flourish, like it sounds like his Spain coach does/did.

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2012 1:19 pm
by john@staustell
Really Suárez and Rekik should be getting some game time right now. They are good enough and it would bring them on no end. That said you can totally understand Mancini not wanting to take the risk right now on any youngster, with every moment of every game critical.

Still, if we get 12 points ahead with 3 to play maybe we can fit them in?? :-)

Re: Interesting piece re Denis Suarez

PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2012 1:44 pm
by twosips
I'm not too concerned about game time. They're both 17 (if not younger?)...they have plenty of time. If they start getting the odd substitue appearance when we're three/four nil up with fifteen minutes to go then that'd be good though. I expect they'll both be starting lots of League cup games next season, as well as getting run outs in earlier premiership games next season.

If its a case though of we're three nil up with fifteen minutes to go now though, and considering the title race is so close, and Bobby wants to bring on some experience to sure things up then its a no brainer. Sorry kids!