Bridge'srightfoot wrote:Why are we so bloody bad at this!? The amount of times we get in behind defences and the final ball or pull back is just shocking.
One thing the Rags are annoyingly good at. Just head up and pick out your man. We waste so many of these chances.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:Look at Rooneys second goal against us. So simple,, so effective. Rafael didn't do anything special, just head up and picked out his man. We'd fuck that situation up 9/10 times.
BobbyJ1956 wrote:It's one of the simplest things to do in football, one of the hardest to defend against (attackers running onto the ball, defenders having to turn to find it), and one of the most exciting to watch. Which of these is the reason City don't do it?
BobbyJ1956 wrote:It's one of the simplest things to do in football, one of the hardest to defend against (attackers running onto the ball, defenders having to turn to find it), and one of the most exciting to watch. Which of these is the reason City don't do it?
john68 wrote:BobbyJ1956 wrote:It's one of the simplest things to do in football, one of the hardest to defend against (attackers running onto the ball, defenders having to turn to find it), and one of the most exciting to watch. Which of these is the reason City don't do it?
Possibly because when there are 10 defenders in the area, most stood in the 6yd box, it becomes a lottery.
Put it behind the defenders and most on here will consider it too close to the keeper to be effective. Put it further away from the line and the accusation of feeding the defenders springs to mind.
Wanna buy a raffle ticket?
john68 wrote:BobbyJ1956 wrote:It's one of the simplest things to do in football, one of the hardest to defend against (attackers running onto the ball, defenders having to turn to find it), and one of the most exciting to watch. Which of these is the reason City don't do it?
Possibly because when there are 10 defenders in the area, most stood in the 6yd box, it becomes a lottery.
Put it behind the defenders and most on here will consider it too close to the keeper to be effective. Put it further away from the line and the accusation of feeding the defenders springs to mind.
Wanna buy a raffle ticket?
Ted Hughes wrote:john68 wrote:BobbyJ1956 wrote:It's one of the simplest things to do in football, one of the hardest to defend against (attackers running onto the ball, defenders having to turn to find it), and one of the most exciting to watch. Which of these is the reason City don't do it?
Possibly because when there are 10 defenders in the area, most stood in the 6yd box, it becomes a lottery.
Put it behind the defenders and most on here will consider it too close to the keeper to be effective. Put it further away from the line and the accusation of feeding the defenders springs to mind.
Wanna buy a raffle ticket?
And yet Ferguson has managed to win 12 Premier League titles & 2 Champions Leagues, mainly by getting his players to do exactly that.
I guess he must just buy lots of tickets ? Perhaps it's time we bought a few as, if you don't buy a ticket, you don't win the raffle.
Never, in all the football I have watched, has that applied more to team more than City, both with crossing & shooting. (apart of course from Arsenal & we have seen what has happened to them )
Sideshow Bob wrote:AJ was pretty good at this until bob had him neutered. zabba is the only one who tries it now.
NZBlue wrote:I think the main difference is the way teams set up against us and them.
United play a game of percentages which works in England as the majority of managers are tactically inept but no longer works against well managed teams on the contenient. The majority (Probably 90%+) of their goals come from crosses into the box. When you watch them, especially when they are behind, they just pepper the box with crosses from the byline, from deep by their fullbacks or edge of the box from the likes of Carrick/Scholes they put so many in that one is bound to fall kindly or the opposition defence switch off like Newcastle did at the weekend.....Rarely at Old Trafford a team holds out like Spurs did.
Added to this that teams think the rags are beatable which creates a more expansive game.....Newcastle and Reading have both put 3 past them this season for crying out loud.
By contrast our style of play means we have the majority of the possesion with fluid passing and movement (granted the latter two have not been evident so far this season) again we suffer from the tactical failings of managers in England who deem the only way to defend against this is by 'parking the bus'. Added to this we have Mancini's reluctance to change things up and throw a wide player on till it is generally too late. His decision to bring Sinclair on against Reading changed the game; although his contribution wasn't great the threat of a wide player with the pace to run at and get behind the fullback to whip in a cross had an effect on Reading as they had something new to worry about, this didn't happen against Sunerland and we paid the price.
NZBlue wrote:I think the main difference is the way teams set up against us and them.
United play a game of percentages which works in England as the majority of managers are tactically inept but no longer works against well managed teams on the contenient. The majority (Probably 90%+) of their goals come from crosses into the box. When you watch them, especially when they are behind, they just pepper the box with crosses from the byline, from deep by their fullbacks or edge of the box from the likes of Carrick/Scholes they put so many in that one is bound to fall kindly or the opposition defence switch off like Newcastle did at the weekend.....Rarely at Old Trafford a team holds out like Spurs did.
Added to this that teams think the rags are beatable which creates a more expansive game.....Newcastle and Reading have both put 3 past them this season for crying out loud.
By contrast our style of play means we have the majority of the possesion with fluid passing and movement (granted the latter two have not been evident so far this season) again we suffer from the tactical failings of managers in England who deem the only way to defend against this is by 'parking the bus'. Added to this we have Mancini's reluctance to change things up and throw a wide player on till it is generally too late. His decision to bring Sinclair on against Reading changed the game; although his contribution wasn't great the threat of a wide player with the pace to run at and get behind the fullback to whip in a cross had an effect on Reading as they had something new to worry about, this didn't happen against Sunerland and we paid the price.
Ted Hughes wrote:john68 wrote:BobbyJ1956 wrote:It's one of the simplest things to do in football, one of the hardest to defend against (attackers running onto the ball, defenders having to turn to find it), and one of the most exciting to watch. Which of these is the reason City don't do it?
Possibly because when there are 10 defenders in the area, most stood in the 6yd box, it becomes a lottery.
Put it behind the defenders and most on here will consider it too close to the keeper to be effective. Put it further away from the line and the accusation of feeding the defenders springs to mind.
Wanna buy a raffle ticket?
And yet Ferguson has managed to win 12 Premier League titles & 2 Champions Leagues, mainly by getting his players to do exactly that.
I guess he must just buy lots of tickets ? Perhaps it's time we bought a few as, if you don't buy a ticket, you don't win the raffle.
Never, in all the football I have watched, has that applied more to team more than City, both with crossing & shooting. (apart of course from Arsenal & we have seen what has happened to them )
Im_Spartacus wrote:NZBlue wrote:I think the main difference is the way teams set up against us and them.
United play a game of percentages which works in England as the majority of managers are tactically inept but no longer works against well managed teams on the contenient. The majority (Probably 90%+) of their goals come from crosses into the box. When you watch them, especially when they are behind, they just pepper the box with crosses from the byline, from deep by their fullbacks or edge of the box from the likes of Carrick/Scholes they put so many in that one is bound to fall kindly or the opposition defence switch off like Newcastle did at the weekend.....Rarely at Old Trafford a team holds out like Spurs did.
Added to this that teams think the rags are beatable which creates a more expansive game.....Newcastle and Reading have both put 3 past them this season for crying out loud.
By contrast our style of play means we have the majority of the possesion with fluid passing and movement (granted the latter two have not been evident so far this season) again we suffer from the tactical failings of managers in England who deem the only way to defend against this is by 'parking the bus'. Added to this we have Mancini's reluctance to change things up and throw a wide player on till it is generally too late. His decision to bring Sinclair on against Reading changed the game; although his contribution wasn't great the threat of a wide player with the pace to run at and get behind the fullback to whip in a cross had an effect on Reading as they had something new to worry about, this didn't happen against Sunerland and we paid the price.
Close......the main issue is not the peppering of the box with crosses, it is the pace they get to the point they cross or play the killer ball behind the defence eg, when they do it, there may be 3 defenders in the box facing goal.
When we move forwards, we drag play back until by the time we hit a cross in, its against 8 or 9 defenders in the box.
That is the key difference, but other than that, you are bang on.
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