Ted Hughes wrote:I don't agree that Suarez always took the easy option. Imo he was very 'Silva like' in his play & wouild have had an assist to his credit if AJ hadn't cocked it up. Whether he can be the same level as Silva is another matter but I recon he'll try to play the same way. I think he'll be very very very good.
Razak looks like he has the required physical & technical requirements. Now he has to show he has the intelligence to match; he was caught twice in possession near our box. If he could learn to defend & keep the ball like DeJong, he'd be a much better player than DeJong as he has much more in other areas.
Scapuzzi showed he was very neat, tidy & Sharp & had a few tricks but so would any Italian or Spanish U21forward. Whether he can be good enough to get a shirt in City's 1st team is another matter. For that he has to be special. Very good performance as a fill in though. Encouraging.
Rekik didn't get chance to show anything but he has something about him which makes me think he'll be a player.
Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Suarez.I keep having to remind myself that he is only 17. Watching him play in the under 18's derby at the swamp recently was a pleasure.He wasnt brilliant but showed enough class in bits that showed fantastic quality. He runs really well with the ball and has that great ability to weight his passes,especially short ones which can kill defences.He does tend to have his head down a little too much and miss passes but that I am sure will come. The comparison with Silva might might be putting pressure on him unnecessarily but there are some siimilarities.Great that he was involved last night for a few minutes and more opportunities need to be found.He is only 17.
Slim wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:I don't agree that Suarez always took the easy option. Imo he was very 'Silva like' in his play & wouild have had an assist to his credit if AJ hadn't cocked it up. Whether he can be the same level as Silva is another matter but I recon he'll try to play the same way. I think he'll be very very very good.
Razak looks like he has the required physical & technical requirements. Now he has to show he has the intelligence to match; he was caught twice in possession near our box. If he could learn to defend & keep the ball like DeJong, he'd be a much better player than DeJong as he has much more in other areas.
Scapuzzi showed he was very neat, tidy & Sharp & had a few tricks but so would any Italian or Spanish U21forward. Whether he can be good enough to get a shirt in City's 1st team is another matter. For that he has to be special. Very good performance as a fill in though. Encouraging.
Rekik didn't get chance to show anything but he has something about him which makes me think he'll be a player.
Find the word "always" in my post.
Slim wrote:Yes I did.
What's your answer now smartarse?
Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Suarez.I keep having to remind myself that he is only 17. Watching him play in the under 18's derby at the swamp recently was a pleasure.He wasnt brilliant but showed enough class in bits that showed fantastic quality. He runs really well with the ball and has that great ability to weight his passes,especially short ones which can kill defences.He does tend to have his head down a little too much and miss passes but that I am sure will come. The comparison with Silva might might be putting pressure on him unnecessarily but there are some siimilarities.Great that he was involved last night for a few minutes and more opportunities need to be found.He is only 17.
Actually that's one of thardest things to coach out of player even in his tender age. It's just so natural thing to look to your feet first and then look for openings. For that reason alone I would say he will struggle to make it in very very top.
Don't want to sound harsh but that's the way it is. Same thing with first touch. Just so instinctive thing that you can slightly improve it but player who has poor first touch, even in his teens, will struggle to make it to very top. It's possible but not very likely to overcome these problems.
john@staustell wrote:Avalon wrote:Suarez looked quite good and that dummy by Scapuzzi was quite nifty too and he is not afraid to take on his man.
I'm not sure about Rekik, the kid's only 16 and England has a legacy when it comes to hot prospects and them not making it. I still believe he would have been better off staying at Feyenoord. In two years time, he would have been a regular for them.
Yes but most 'hot prospects' are merely media myths, or at the least look out of place when first thrown into a first team match. This boy looks sheer, utter class and how you can doubt that is beyond me. He has the air of a 26-yr old player in the body of a 16 year old. And all the more unusual for being a CB as well. And a left CB at that.
If he had been left in the kids squad I would agree a little that he should stay in Holland, but Mancini knows what he has got here. By the time he is 18 he will have Jolene's spot.
Ted Hughes wrote:Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Suarez.I keep having to remind myself that he is only 17. Watching him play in the under 18's derby at the swamp recently was a pleasure.He wasnt brilliant but showed enough class in bits that showed fantastic quality. He runs really well with the ball and has that great ability to weight his passes,especially short ones which can kill defences.He does tend to have his head down a little too much and miss passes but that I am sure will come. The comparison with Silva might might be putting pressure on him unnecessarily but there are some siimilarities.Great that he was involved last night for a few minutes and more opportunities need to be found.He is only 17.
Actually that's one of thardest things to coach out of player even in his tender age. It's just so natural thing to look to your feet first and then look for openings. For that reason alone I would say he will struggle to make it in very very top.
Don't want to sound harsh but that's the way it is. Same thing with first touch. Just so instinctive thing that you can slightly improve it but player who has poor first touch, even in his teens, will struggle to make it to very top. It's possible but not very likely to overcome these problems.
Even now there are rare occasions when Silva misses a simple pass or makes the odd wrong decision though. It's the number of right ones he makes that counts. He was missing quite a lot of them when he 1st came over.
Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Douglas Higginbottom wrote:Suarez.I keep having to remind myself that he is only 17. Watching him play in the under 18's derby at the swamp recently was a pleasure.He wasnt brilliant but showed enough class in bits that showed fantastic quality. He runs really well with the ball and has that great ability to weight his passes,especially short ones which can kill defences.He does tend to have his head down a little too much and miss passes but that I am sure will come. The comparison with Silva might might be putting pressure on him unnecessarily but there are some siimilarities.Great that he was involved last night for a few minutes and more opportunities need to be found.He is only 17.
Actually that's one of thardest things to coach out of player even in his tender age. It's just so natural thing to look to your feet first and then look for openings. For that reason alone I would say he will struggle to make it in very very top.
Don't want to sound harsh but that's the way it is. Same thing with first touch. Just so instinctive thing that you can slightly improve it but player who has poor first touch, even in his teens, will struggle to make it to very top. It's possible but not very likely to overcome these problems.
Even now there are rare occasions when Silva misses a simple pass or makes the odd wrong decision though. It's the number of right ones he makes that counts. He was missing quite a lot of them when he 1st came over.
I didn't mean decision making though. That will improve for most players all throughout their career. I meant habit of staring at your feet which accroding to Dougie who sees him train almost every day Suarez has. It's just something you do instinctively. Check that ball is really in your feet before scanning down the pitch. You tell player not to do it, player might know he shouldn't do it, yet in game situation he WILL do it and lose that precious extra half a second at which stage the gap in defence has already closed. You can't afford that in high paced league like Premier League.
shortagain wrote:Slim wrote:Yes I did.
What's your answer now smartarse?
Did he play like he plays now or did he develop his skills as he got older. I'm sure you will be able to tell us having watched him as a youngster then
Slim wrote:shortagain wrote:Slim wrote:Yes I did.
What's your answer now smartarse?
Did he play like he plays now or did he develop his skills as he got older. I'm sure you will be able to tell us having watched him as a youngster then
Well you missed the point completely.
It's not about skills, it's about mindset. David Silva no matter whether he plays the defence shredder or a simple lay off pass, he is always looking, Suarez wasn't taking a touch, having a look around and then deciding. A lot of the time he made the decision to lay the ball back before it even arrived.
I am not saying he won't develop that, and certainly with the players and staff around him he has every chance, but with the mental side of the game it's a brave prediction to say one way or the other.
Ted Hughes wrote:Slim wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:I don't agree that Suarez always took the easy option. Imo he was very 'Silva like' in his play & wouild have had an assist to his credit if AJ hadn't cocked it up. Whether he can be the same level as Silva is another matter but I recon he'll try to play the same way. I think he'll be very very very good.
Razak looks like he has the required physical & technical requirements. Now he has to show he has the intelligence to match; he was caught twice in possession near our box. If he could learn to defend & keep the ball like DeJong, he'd be a much better player than DeJong as he has much more in other areas.
Scapuzzi showed he was very neat, tidy & Sharp & had a few tricks but so would any Italian or Spanish U21forward. Whether he can be good enough to get a shirt in City's 1st team is another matter. For that he has to be special. Very good performance as a fill in though. Encouraging.
Rekik didn't get chance to show anything but he has something about him which makes me think he'll be a player.
Find the word "always" in my post.
'...even when he had time he always took the easy option too often of laying the ball back to de Jong or Razak.'
Presumably he was only adventurous when he didn't have the time ?
brite blu sky wrote:
had to fix that as it was one of the poorest posts I've read on here in a while, kind of thing waynesrightfoot would come out with after clearly not concentrating in watching a player in a game.
Ted Hughes wrote:Slim wrote:shortagain wrote:Slim wrote:Yes I did.
What's your answer now smartarse?
Did he play like he plays now or did he develop his skills as he got older. I'm sure you will be able to tell us having watched him as a youngster then
Well you missed the point completely.
It's not about skills, it's about mindset. David Silva no matter whether he plays the defence shredder or a simple lay off pass, he is always looking, Suarez wasn't taking a touch, having a look around and then deciding. A lot of the time he made the decision to lay the ball back before it even arrived.
I am not saying he won't develop that, and certainly with the players and staff around him he has every chance, but with the mental side of the game it's a brave prediction to say one way or the other.
If you come on as sub in the 1st team though, I think you want to get a few simple touches rather than give the ball away. I thought it was just the case of him getting a feel for it before trying anything. I would have liked to get him on earlier.
Slim wrote:And no you dolt, I am not saying he should be adventurous when under pressure, I am saying that he should make a simple pass when under pressure, but when he isn't he should want that ball at his feet and be looking forward. I realise he may not have wanted to fuck up, but in that situation where we are coasting to victory, he had an opportunity to show what he can really do and I think he sold himself short.
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