Ronaldo roars in sparkling World Cup display as tactical trends start to develop

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Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal scores his team’s third goal during the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia group B match between Portugal and Spain at Fisht Stadium on June 15, 2018 in Sochi, Russia. (June 14, 2018 – Source: Stu Forster/Getty Images Europe)

Increasingly, words to describe Cristiano Ronaldo are decreasing. The man demands that moments be defined by him. He is the epitome of the colossal game player and in the biggest game of the World Cup so far, he was colossus.

In three previous World Cups, Ronaldo had scored three goals. He doubled that tally with his hat-trick against Spain. From the first minute to the last, he buzzed.

Most poignant was that free kick in the dying minutes. The ritualistic preparation to take large strides, heaving breaths and focused concentration. The Spanish wall jumping, with Sergio Busquets arching his neck, hoping to prolong it in Mr. Fantastic fashion so as to prevent the ball from going past. Unsuccessfully. David De Gea unsighted. The ball nestling in the back of the net. The point saved.

The World Cup a stage…

And Spain also played their part. Shenanigans that surrounded the sacking of their manager, Julen Lopetegui, did not rock this team in the manner expected. The genius of Ronaldo aside, Spain made mistakes unrelated to the wills of a man on the touchline.

Jose Nacho’s inexperience in dangling a foot at the trickery of Ronaldo, and the blunder commonly not associated with De Gea mean that even Lopetegui would not have been in a position to stop Portugal’s goals.

Instead, Spain showed character and resilience, coming back twice from behind and the build up to the goal that gave them a 3-2 lead was as delicious as Nacho’s wallop on the half-volley. In the midst of all that, Spain played some sumptuous football and had the luxury of bringing dynamism from their bench.

This Spanish side will go some distance in this tournament, although the whole distance still seems a journey too far.

Earlier in the day….

Late goals are all that separated North African teams from their opponents.

Egypt played well in the absence of Mohamed Salah, but rarely got to trouble Fernando Muslera’s goal. The Uruguyans were solidly led by a central defensive pairing that has spent the whole season keeping clean sheets at Atletico Madrid.

Disappointingly for Uruguay was that Edinson Cavani and Luis Suarez did not look at their threatening best. It adds all the more to Ronaldo’s magic the fact that the Real Madrid man showed up for his country, while the two failed to do so for Uruguay.

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Jose Gimenez of Uruguay scores his team’s first goal during the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia group A match between Egypt and Uruguay at Ekaterinburg Arena on June 15, 2018 in Yekaterinburg, Russia. (June 14, 2018 – Source: Matthias Hangst/Getty Images Europe)

Also disappointing was that the group of youthful talent — Nahitan Nandez, Matias Vecino and Giorgian de Arrascaeta — went missing for huge parts of the game and the remedy saw the wise old Oscar Tabarez call on experience from the bench in the form of Carlos Sanchez and Cristian Rodriguez.

In the end though, it was Jose Gimenez who towered above Ahmed Hegazy (and interestingly, in front of his captain, Diego Godin) to make Salah slump in his chair on the bench.

Morocco on the other hand flattered to deceive with an impressive start that fizzled out. Hakim Ziyech showed in patches why he is a talent, Amine Harit was lively but the Atlas Lions were characterised by poor finishing.

For Iran, the decision making was not that crisp even though as the game wore on they retreated to a defensive capsule. The own goal at the end was probably not deserved, but if you do not concede, you cannot lose.

Limping off the park

The injury counter is accumulating. So far, we have seen Alan Dzagoev (Russia), Tarek Hamed (Egypt), Nordin Amrabat (Morocco), Omid Ebrahimi and Alireza Jahanbakhksh (both Iran) leave the field due to injury. Salah did not even get to play, the reasons why known. After a long season, it seems the physical boundaries are being stretched.

Tactics Corner

  • 4-4-2

Uruguay and Portugal both played a 4-4-2 with differing levels of success.

Uruguay’s was outnumbered by the numbers in Egypt’s midfield. Hamed was especially lively for the Pharaohs alongside a sitting Mohamed Elneny with Abdallah El-Said supporting them in the midfield. This posed a problem for Uruguay who’d started with Vecino and Rodrigo Bentancur in the center of the park (Nandez and de Arrascaeta were wide). This left Cavani and Suarez isolated from the rest of the team.

When the changes were made, it was notbale how Sanchez moved in field to support his two holders and add to the numerical battle.

Portugal could probably have faced the same dilemma, but instead had Ronaldo peeling off from his center forward position and dropping in to help in midfield. In as much as Spain dominated the ball, they lacked space in dangerous areas.

  • Full backs

The World Cup is lacking genuine playmakers in the traditional number 10 role (Mesut Ozil, James Rodriguez and Phillipe Coutinho are a dying breed).

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Ahmed Fathi of Egypt and Martin Caceres of Uruguay battle for the ball during the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia group A match between Egypt and Uruguay at Ekaterinburg Arena on June 15, 2018 in Yekaterinburg, Russia. (June 14, 2018 – Source: Matthias Hangst/Getty Images Europe)

It therefore seems as if full backs will play a significant role. Wingers will probably tuck in to overload in midfield meaning full backs will have space out wide. The crossing however must be better if goals are to be scored in this way.

  • Set-piece goals

Four World Cup games, six set-piece goals (seven, if you count Ronaldo’s penalty a set-piece). This will also be a trend, armoured with the fact that the sort of defensive coordination drilling required to defend set-pieces is lacking at international level. National team oaches do not have that much time with their players as club facilitators do.

Germany: The Best team in the World

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Apt that in the World Cup that Spain fell, Germany rose to replace them. Indeed, there was no other national team worthy of the prize of world champions.

For nearly half a decade, no two national teams have been run so well. To an extent, both countries epitomise Continue reading “Germany: The Best team in the World”

Spain exit football’s throne

Their dominance is now but just a memory as World Cup exit heralds the end of an era


 

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Tick, tock, went the clock as Spain’s time came to a stop. Dominance lasts long, but never longer than the natural order of things. At some point, everything — whether good or bad, special or mediocre, extraordinary or not, revolutionary or evolutionary — comes to an end. For Spain, this is it!

And what a ride it was. Since mid-2008, no national team has so dominated international football. It could be that in terms of success, this generation of players is the greatest group ever in football history. Three major international tournaments were conquered with style, identity and philosophy.

The whole world watched in awe. For six years, there was no answer to that passing game — those fluid motions, those probing punches that asphyxiated opponents into submission. Football technique rose to a whole new level and Continue reading “Spain exit football’s throne”

Could Spain pass their way into history again?

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For some, tiki-taka is dead, while for others, it is merely evolving. Whichever side of that argument you lay, there is no denying that Vicente Del Bosque has questions to answer coming into the World Cup. The world champions and double European champions are in a state of transition. Some players are ageing, some new ones are showing promise and in between is a period where the sheer surprise and awe of that passing philosophyContinue reading “Could Spain pass their way into history again?”

World Cup Winning Managers

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The dilemma had been that while it had worked at Euro 2008, it was in danger of being found out at World Cup 2010. That dread turned into reality as Switzerland allowed Spain to tiki-taka but caught them on the break.

Vicente Del Bosque thus had to change. What he did however was to take the passing philosophy to the extreme. More midfielders were added, more passes were encouraged. Patience became the virtue as Continue reading “World Cup Winning Managers”

Is Universality the Newest Tactical Trend in Football? Part I

Carlos Alberto Perreira's bold prophecy of football moving towards universality may be coming true.
Carlos Alberto Perreira’s bold prophecy of football moving towards universality may be coming true.

Man’s mind, once stretched by a new idea, never regains its original dimensions. The words of Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. hold true when it comes to football’s ever evolutionary tactics.

It was Carlos Alberto Perreira whom once predicted that football tactics were evolving into a state where there would merely be four defenders and six creative players allowed to Continue reading “Is Universality the Newest Tactical Trend in Football? Part I”

Brazil v Spain: The dream final?

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Sometimes, we abruptly wake up from a beautiful dream and try impossibly to get back to it. No matter how vivid our imagination may be, it never manages to conjure the same dream.

That is exactly how Sunday’s FIFA Confederations Cup Final will be like.

It is the dream final. It is the final everyone wanted (outside of Italy, Uruguay, Japan, Nigeria, Mexico and Tahiti). It is however the dream final that has come four years late. Or at the least, three.

Football has this tendency to conjure big games. The greatest teams with theContinue reading “Brazil v Spain: The dream final?”

The questions of Spain’s dominance

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Campeones … but for how long?

Whenever Xavi Hernandez and Andres Iniesta retreat to their personal homes, they probably look in amazement at their personal trophy hauls and medal collections. There, right before their eyes lay gold medals for every competitive football competition in which they have ever participated in for Barcelona and Spain at senior level.

Apart, of course, for the FIFA Confederations Cup.

It is that trophy which in these period of dominance, Xavi and Iniesta personally, and Spain collectively, has not acquired. Their only possible outing four years ago in South Africa ended with the surprisingly less Continue reading “The questions of Spain’s dominance”

The Great Spaniards

“Spain are a step above everyone else.”

Daniele De Rossi

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Tarcisio Burgnich had no doubt in his mind.

“I told myself before the game, ‘he’s made of skin and bones just like everyone else’ — but I was wrong.”

Italy had just been on the end of the best performance from an international team. The Azteca Stadium had been left buzzing. The 1970 FIFA World Cup final had ended 4-1 to Brazil. The Italian catenaccio system had just been crushed.Continue reading “The Great Spaniards”