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View from the Kop

A Culture Shift Has Certainly Taken Place

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Defence without defenders

Possession football is a luxurious way to defend that only the best teams can afford to do. Barcelona has become so good at it that they are regularly playing their midfielders in defence. Granted it is through necessity and not choice but they are faring pretty well. I’m not saying that similar tactics will be employed here by choice but the option to have ‘ball-playing’ defenders over ‘defensive’ defenders is definitely on the up in our game. Players like Vermaelen, David Luiz, Sebastian Coates and others are the beginning of a new generation of defenders. No more do we have our back lines modeled on burly, brutish men regimentally playing the offside trap as they scythe down players and relentlessly put their head on the line. That player still exists but the advantages of players like Pique and Dani Alves have been more than highlighted by Barcelona. Arguably Dani Alves only plays as a defender against the best teams. The rest of the time he is somewhere next to Messi on the wing. I’m not saying that Barcelona have patented the attacking or ball playing defenders. Just that their use of them has highlighted the importance of the roles of those players. Role that we are seeing more and more of in British football.

Natural progression or Barcelona impersonators?

There are two arguments that could be touted: a) that these and other changes are just the natural progression of football and Barcelona was simply slightly ahead of the curve; b) we have simply seen how good Barcelona are and thought: ‘I want to play like that’. Either way I think it is perfectly plausible to say that Barcelona have inadvertently changed the way we play football in this country. Of course the idea of a 4-3-3 existed before Barcelona as did the Dutch ‘total football’ but Barcelona have now honed it until it seems idiotic to play any other way. After Inter Milan beat Barcelona to reach the Champions League final a few years ago everyone was saying: ‘that’s the way to beat Barcelona’. Now, with Mourinho having failed to really emulate that feat since, people are starting to realize that you need to play in a similar way. Arsenal’s victory at the Emirates last season is testament to the fact that, even with much lesser players, Barcelona can be beaten at their own game. And that their tactics are pretty useful for beating others too. Nobody in our League has come close to perfecting it yet. But they style and formation they play is more likely to start getting taught in our academies. Even the FA Head of Elite Development Gareth Southgate has proposed that we switch the way we train our youth teams to the same style that Barcelona’s La Masia uses. The Cultural Revolution is in full effect.

The article was written by Hamish Mackay for FootballFancast.com. Make sure to check out the latest news, blogs and podcasts at FFC – ed.

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  • Barcelona- everytime with the same Skill of showing their professinalism – physically , mentally and the main important of scoring more and more goals with good quality as possible that’s come the Regularity of whole squad in training practice and introduce it on the pitch as well as they control and contribute in each area also with less mistakes and it’s become very easy to win for me Barcelona is not the team that’s we all thoughts about they only attribute their success as complete proffessional players where missing in others that’s all as for Liverpool we can say not yet but still on construtive only they have to scores more and more goals YNWA

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