Ted Hughes wrote:Foreverinbluedreams wrote:
Both are to blame imo. Barry should be attacking that space however if you look at the set up before the ball comes in we have three players standing up three of theirs, when the ball is played the two players at the back post stay with the men they appear to be marking whereas Yaya just let's his man run off him. No matter what system we are using for corners Yaya allowing that to happen is inexcusable, it's a complete lack of concentration.
Yaya ALWAYS allows that to happen, so why the fucking hell is he still being given that job ?
Barry is also at fault for both goals & he has previous in these situations. In the end though, the whole system & set up is an absolute fucking joke & that is the fault of Bob & whichever coaches influenced it.
This is not because of zonal marking, man for man marking, Europe, or any other excuse, it is piss poor execution of a piss poor plan. The players & the manager should be fucking ashamed; it doesn't get worse than that, at any level.
I agree about Yaya. In fact I agree with your assertion in general that the defensive side of Yaya's game is weak as he has that tendency to switch off.
Here's an extract from an article that I think is spot on.
"Set-pieces
Ajax went ahead with two simple goals from corners, an area Manchester City have struggled from this season. As is customary, zonal defending got the majority of the blame, but the situation was more complex, as City were playing a ‘mixed’ system – part-zonal, part-man marking. In fact, it’s extremely rare to see a side that defends entirely man-for-man – certain zones are generally occupied anyway, particularly at the near post (almost by necessity, as the defending side always have a surplus of players in the box).
Anyway, the goals were actually conceded because of poor man-marking – Toure simply let de Jong go free for both goals. That said, the second concession was also a poor goal to concede from a zonal perspective – the position de Jong headed the ball from was the ‘first’ zone a side is supposed to concentrate on defending. Barry was there, but very deep and close to the post. Some sides (England under Fabio Capello, for example) defend with two men in that position, which brings more security.
Either way, City had eight versus four in the box for the corners – to concede two such cheap goals was criminal."
http://www.zonalmarking.net/2012/11/07/ ... #more-9228