Wednesday, 23 January 08, 12:54 AM
The biggest story to come to England in the last few weeks has been the return of the “Messiah” Kevin Keegan as manager of Newcastle United just weeks after the firing of Sam Allardyce. Big Sam grew increasingly under fire at the Toon for what many supporters in the Northeast called a Neanderthaloid brand of football, especially after being compared to the high-flying sides Keegan himself led 12 years ago, and he was unwilling or unable to change his approach. Although he employed dietitians, and psychologists, used scientific training methods and ran a tight ship defensively, Sam was a squarish man, who preferred a squarish style, and couldn’t adapt to the culture of the club, or the expectations of the Toon Army.
What does this have to do with Serie A or La Liga? Well, if anyone followed the dour side that Fabio Capello ran out to the Santiago Bernabeu last year, no one was surprised that he was fired despite his winning the Primera Liga title. His replacement, Berndt Schuster, whose plucky, serviceable Getafe side was amongst the defensive leaders in La Liga last year, was inexplicably hired by the Meringues to deliver a more attractive, attacking philosophy. The press, the socios, and even club leadership are now more than a bit disappointed that rather than Joga Bonito, the club are winning with that same plucky, defensive style Schuster used to good effect at Getafe. Imagine that.
At Valencia, Quique Sanchez-Flores also drew a great deal of criticism for his boring brand of football, and his successor Ronald Koeman continues his misguided legacy, but it’s nothing new; there’s been an ongoing problem there at the Mestalla since before the time of Hector Cuper. In Italy, land of Catenaccio, there are still a few sides that play in the classic style of Il Grande Inter coach Helenio Herrera. While his old club Inter do tend to grind out wins without excelling, city neighbors Milan have also played tentatively, lacking offensive punch due primarily to injury and an uncharacteristic lack of quality in attack. Just look at the fate of one of the most successful managers in recent history: Jose Mourinho. He was essentially fired, because he wouldn’t bend to the pressure of entertaining the masses. His Liverpool rival, Rafa Benitez, is coming under similar fire. Finally, even with a “Golden Generation” of English talent, Steve McClaren was not able to qualify the English national team for Euro 2008 because he unable or unwilling to take the reigns off his squad against the minnows of European Football.
There’s a disconnect here. The clubs and the supporters groups are calling for one brand of football, football as spectacle, and the managers are teaching another brand entirely. They make excuses, that the modern game can’t be played openly anymore, that a team needs to be strong at the back and wait for an opponent’s mistake on the counter. They feel the pressure of results, the economic realities of relegation, so they play not to lose, handicapping their chances before a fan has even sat down for the match. You can guess which side I fall on.
Whether it’s by choice, or by necessity, it is rarely in a club’s best interest to grind out a 1-0 victory. A slight lead in a match allows a slim hope of belief in the opponent, the small mistakes get magnified, and all it takes is a faulty decision, under the duress and fatigue late in the game, to allow an opponent a late equalizer or worse yet a decisive goal. Worse than his oft criticized rotational policy, it is in this manner that Benitez’s negative tendencies that have hurt Liverpool most. They play a match close in the first half and wait to attack on the counter in the second, and have suffered disappointing results against inferior clubs, whereas a similar club with a similar talent pool like Arsenal, that play to their own strengths and exploit weaknesses in their opponent, are within a hair’s breath of a much more talented Manchester United side at the top of the table.
Close your eyes and think about which sides play beautiful, attacking football. Roma play 6 midfielders essentially, but they are bombs away from essentially all parts of the field. They are unpredictable, mercurial and when on their game, no side in Serie A can match the waves of offensive talent that they can throw at you. Barcelona, under Frank Ryjkaard, have some of the best attacking talent in La Liga. They have unprecedented skill on the ball, the dribbling skills of Messi, the powerful shot of Eto’o, the silky smooth runs of Henry and no one is more deadly on set pieces than Ronaldinho. In England, there is a reason why Arsenal and Manchester United have dominated the Premiership over its existence. It’s not just because they have more money and buy the best talent. The primary reason is that they play with confidence that their skill players can play better than your skill players and they will punish you for it. Other sides that play beautifully? Werder Bremen, Lyon, Sevilla, and Spurs are all taking the bait.
Do these clubs necessarily have more talent, and thus can afford to take more risks? Certainly if you’re comparing them to a recently promoted side like Derby, Almeria or Genoa, but a club like Valencia with top door quality should not be playing a mixture of 4-3-3 and 4-5-1 with the wingers tracking back. Neither should Liverpool, or Real Madrid, or especially one of the richest clubs in the world: Chelsea.
Is there a ground-shift happening as we speak? I hope so. With some managers playing two defensive midfielders and a man up front against non-league sides and drawing 0-0, I look at the re-appointment of Kevin Keegan as Newcastle United manager as a return to what Ruud Gullit called “Sexy Football”. Frankly, it’s about time.
Saturday, 06 October 07, 08:29 PM
Covering La
Liga from far away as we've been doing for the past 6 months like we have on forza futbol, we tend to see things antiseptically, second hand or translated and repackaged to fit another culture or
another way of seeing things, whether it's to reach the ex-pat Spaniard, the curious Brit or the nonsensical American like myself. Sure, I speak the language and I can read the websites that As or
Marca provides as a service, but it has never seemed to fit together, it has never seemed to make sense, until you come here like I did and you cover the league first hand, you read the ragsheets,
you talk to the people on the street, and you sit in the seats and see the competition for yourself.
FC Barcelona.
Barcelona is a city of monuments, the AgBar Tower which looks like a blaugrana cucumber in the night sky, the Sagrada FamiliaMonday, 16 July 07, 10:50 PM
Wednesday, 04 July 07, 02:17 PM
Tuesday, 03 July 07, 09:52 AM
Forza Futbol podcast week 12 is now available for your listening pleasure!
Special Edition - Vamos La Liga - our Yearend Review of the Spanish League
We review the Highs and Lows on a Team by Team basis.
At last! We roll out the red carpet and dish out our Best and Worst Awards!
Team of the Season - Best and Worst
Player of the season - Best and Worst
Best and Worst Signing or Transfer
Coach of the year - Best and Worst
Best and Worst Game
Best Goal
Best and Worst Rumor
Best and Worst Italian player playing abroad
Best and Worst Hair
Best and Worst Kit
Who's Hot and Who's Not
Top 11 of the Season
We also briefly highlight some Copa America games.
You can listen to Forza Futbol on myspace, itunes, or podbean.com. Check out our Facebook page or Oleole.com page.
Email us your comments at forza.futbol@yahoo.com
Wednesday, 27 June 07, 05:35 PM
In this episode we discuss-
o Copa Del Rey Final - Sevilla v Getafe - who gets the final bit of silverware in La Liga?
o In Focus - The Power of Money in the Champions League
o Serie A and La Liga- transfer rumors, news and gossip section
o Gold Cup round up
o Up Close and Personal with Forza - Mando will enlighten us how he got into the beautiful game.
Listen to us on our myspace page or at podbean.com. Subscribe to us on itunes. Check out our facebook or oleole.com page. We would love for you to comment and give us your feedback. Email us at
forza.futbol@yahoo.com
Adios y grazie**
Tuesday, 19 June 07, 04:20 PM
FORZA FUTBOL PODCAST WEEK 10 IS AVAILABLE FOR LISTEN!
In this episode we discuss-
La Liga Final Round 38-
We review the final round and crown the campeones of La Liga. (Real Madrid v Mallorca, Nastic v Barcelona, Sevilla v Villarreal). We also review the relegation games and who is going down to
Segunda. (Athletic Bilbao v Levante, Valencia v Real Sociedad, Celta Vigo v Getafe, Racing Santander v Real Betis)
Serie A and La Liga - It's silly season and it's getting sillier and sillier!
Gold Cup round up - quartefinals update and who will match up in the Semis. Is a US v Mexico final destiny?
Up Close and Personal with Forza - we find out how Hannah got into the beautiful game.
You can listen to us on myspace, subscribe to Itunes or download the podcast on Podbean.com.
Be our friend on myspace, check out our forzafutbol page on oleole.com, or our facebook page!
Send us your feedback and comments at forza.futbol@yahoo.com.
We want to hear from you!
Tuesday, 12 June 07, 10:33 PM
In this episode we discuss-
La Liga Round 37 - the title race is on -Real Zaragoza v Real Madrid, Barcelona v Espanyol, Mallorca v Sevilla, best of the rest, and as the relegation battle turns...
Internationals round up (España v Liechenstein, Lithuania v Italia and England v Estonia)
Serie A and La Liga- transfer rumors, news and gossip aka silly season gone wild!
You can listen to us on myspace, subscribe to Itunes or download the podcast on Podbean.com.
Be our friend on myspace, check out our forzafutbol page on oleole.com, or our facebook page!
Send us your feedback and comments at forza.futbol@yahoo.com. Comment on itunes and tell your friends about our weekly podcast!
Gracias y ciao*
Wednesday, 30 May 07, 10:58 AM
Tuesday, 29 May 07, 02:23 PM
On Real Madrid 2.0: The Trickle down Theory