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Thread: Anyone ITK on what Zinny and White were fighting about?

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  1. #1
    Quote Originally Posted by PSRB View Post
    Conceding the goal, White blaming Zinny, apparently. That said, they were bloody unlucky, 99% of the time that ball doesn't land in the perfect place for the striker.
    Eddie left the guy with ages to play the pass, Zinchenko reacts far too slowly to the ball and the centre backs are stood on top of each other, again.

    But yeah, also a tad unlucky. Just shows though.... we can control an entire game and still find a way of allowing a sloppy goal.

    I thought Saliba looked a bit iffy all night. He made two or three mistakes that are totally unlike him.

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by Peter View Post
    Eddie left the guy with ages to play the pass, Zinchenko reacts far too slowly to the ball and the centre backs are stood on top of each other, again.

    But yeah, also a tad unlucky. Just shows though.... we can control an entire game and still find a way of allowing a sloppy goal.

    I thought Saliba looked a bit iffy all night. He made two or three mistakes that are totally unlike him.
    Defenders, see. Reckless, feckless, erratic fellows those
    "Plenty of strikers can score goals," he said, gesturing to the famous old stands casting shadows around us.

    "But a lot have found it difficult wearing the number 9 shirt for The Arsenal."

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by redgunamo View Post
    Defenders, see. Reckless, feckless, erratic fellows those
    I turned it off when they scored and went for a bath. I was confident we wouldn't blow it again but didn't want to watch it

    There is a difference between seeing out a game and dropping back down through the gears. We got too casual in the last 10 minutes.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Peter View Post
    I turned it off when they scored and went for a bath. I was confident we wouldn't blow it again but didn't want to watch it

    There is a difference between seeing out a game and dropping back down through the gears. We got too casual in the last 10 minutes.
    I always do this - well, not the bath part because I'm a man

    We're up by one, getting tense in time added on, turn it off and do something else with the thought process being 'if we blow this now I don't want to see it'.

    Life is easier this way

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by WES View Post
    I always do this - well, not the bath part because I'm a man

    We're up by one, getting tense in time added on, turn it off and do something else with the thought process being 'if we blow this now I don't want to see it'.

    Life is easier this way
    It was far less stressful. I did wait for the VAR check as I have fallen foul of that before

  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by Peter View Post
    It was far less stressful. I did wait for the VAR check as I have fallen foul of that before
    Odd one that, looked like a penalty in real time but definitely not on VAR

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by PSRB View Post
    Odd one that, looked like a penalty in real time but definitely not on VAR
    I meant the VAR check on the goal. Was there another one?

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Peter View Post
    I turned it off when they scored and went for a bath. I was confident we wouldn't blow it again but didn't want to watch it

    There is a difference between seeing out a game and dropping back down through the gears. We got too casual in the last 10 minutes.
    Apologies for going on about Pep all the time but back in his Bayern days he admitted motivating your players when they know they're so far ahead of their opposition, so dominant that it's ridiculous, was his toughest challenge.

    He said players naturally switch off and take a step back when they believe the game is won. Getting them to keep playing forward as a team and as individuals; pushing for more goals, more assists, to be even better than last season was practically impossible, in the short term. It requires a complete change of mindset and given the traditional, essential, ebb and flow of the game, it's essentially ANTI-football.

    But it was really the only way to be sure, defenders being what they are and defending, indeed Football Fortune being what it is.
    "Plenty of strikers can score goals," he said, gesturing to the famous old stands casting shadows around us.

    "But a lot have found it difficult wearing the number 9 shirt for The Arsenal."

  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by redgunamo View Post
    Apologies for going on about Pep all the time but back in his Bayern days he admitted motivating your players when they know they're so far ahead of their opposition, so dominant that it's ridiculous, was his toughest challenge.

    He said players naturally switch off and take a step back when they believe the game is won. Getting them to keep playing forward as a team and as individuals; pushing for more goals, more assists, to be even better than last season was practically impossible, in the short term. It requires a complete change of mindset and given the traditional, essential, ebb and flow of the game, it's essentially ANTI-football.

    But it was really the only way to be sure, defenders being what they are and defending, indeed Football Fortune being what it is.
    I think there is a way to slow a game down and control it, but it isn't by slowing down yourselves.

    Gary Neville (sorry!) actually made a great point about this in a game I was watching last year. He said that 'calm down' is a dangerous message in football, and when you want to take the sting out of the game you actually need to increase your movement, increase your intensity.

    We started to stand around with our foot on the ball from about 80 minutes. All very well, but the clever way to do that is to move the ball quickly to players in space. Slowing down spreads across the team and concentration tends to drop with the intensity.

    We are still learning.

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Peter View Post
    I think there is a way to slow a game down and control it, but it isn't by slowing down yourselves.

    Gary Neville (sorry!) actually made a great point about this in a game I was watching last year. He said that 'calm down' is a dangerous message in football, and when you want to take the sting out of the game you actually need to increase your movement, increase your intensity.

    We started to stand around with our foot on the ball from about 80 minutes. All very well, but the clever way to do that is to move the ball quickly to players in space. Slowing down spreads across the team and concentration tends to drop with the intensity.

    We are still learning.
    Creatures of habit, footballers are.
    "Plenty of strikers can score goals," he said, gesturing to the famous old stands casting shadows around us.

    "But a lot have found it difficult wearing the number 9 shirt for The Arsenal."

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