Barca's defensive dominance against Napoli:
[visual THREAD]
Barca looked far superior out of possession in comparison to their previous big games yesterday, particularly in the first half because of:
• High press
• Counter-pressing
• High defensive line
In this short thread, I've highlighted multiple instances where their pressing worked to perfection in winning the ball back, closing all the outlets for Napoli to build up and compressing the space required to defend in the middle. Let's examine how it worked: 👇
Counter-press case 1:
• Pass played to Frenkie about to result in loss of possession in zone b5
• Alba, Pedri and Busi positioned close to be able to press and cut passing lanes
• Overload created by numerical superiority, Alba intercepts, possession won back in b4 #Barca
High press case 1:
Napoli attempt to play out of the back, but Barca press high up aggressively. Although there is overall superiority for Napoli (6v5), the passing angles are restricted because of cover shadows forcing them to go long. Busi presses all the way outside the box
High defensive line case 1:
Barca played very brave with the line almost 45-50m from their goal. Although it costed them once with the Ter Stegen penalty, the reward was being able to control the space in the middle with their counter-press to deny Napoli space to attack
Counter-press case 2:
• Demme receives a pass beating the first line of press
• Frenkie and Busi press towards him instead of staying back behind their markers. Their cover shadows close passing lanes
• Traore also presses from behind isolating Demme forcing a turnover
High press case 2:
• As Di Lorenzo receives the pass, Toress presses with Ruiz in his cover shadow, Auba splits the CBs closing the option to go around
• Busi presses Ruiz from behind and Traore shifts to cover Zielinkski
• Possession won in a5 by Busi through 3v1 superiority
High line case 2:
• Barca press man-oriented in a4, b4, a5 and b5 which forces the RB Di Lorenzo to pass back
• Aubameyang splits the field with his angled run forcing the CB to go long as the only option
• Pique holds the line 2m from the halfway line keeping Osimhen off
High press case 3:
• Napoli now have numerical superiority in a5 but no positional superiority since all players are in front of Barca's press
• In an attempt to switch sides, pass is played back to the CB
• The backpass triggers Barca's high press with Auba splitting the CBs
High press case 3 (contd..):
• Barca create a 4v4 overload in a5 while the players behind close their markers and hold a high line
• Busi intercepts the pass from Koulibaly and Frenkie wins possession in a5
• Ferran and Pedri can now attack the space in b5 to transition
Counter-press case 3:
• Barca press from all directions keeping distances short, Dest has jumped up to close the marker on his side
• In the zone of mutual help, they create a 5v2 numerical superiority
• Traore wins the ball and Barca are in a good position to transition
All these instances were just from the first half. The high defensive line was high-risk high-reward strategy. At the cost of a penalty they were able to restrict and control the spaces further up the field. Can't say it's a fullproof strategy but it's surely the Barca identity.
Playing in a 4-2-4 with a flat back-4, and wingers requiring to hold the width against KSA's high line, Argentina were outnumbered in the centre with only Paredes and De Paul.
If one of the forwards came short to receive, he was man-marked aggressively.
De Paul wasn't exactly the mid to crack the KSA block by receiving in pockets and opening up passing lanes between the lines. Only Paredes could be trusted with playmaking in front of the defence, and in the 2-half after KSA's lead and Paredes' substitution, ARG ran out of ideas.
• Using Pedraza more attackingly than defensively
• Moreno and Lo Celso playing between the lines
• Foyth staying back for security to construct as a back-three
Villarreal held a compact structure to deny spaces in the centre while keeping the block high to win back possession higher up
Even when Juventus shifted out wide to try and play around the structure, Villarreal's 4-4-2 would shuffle across as a unit to create a man-oriented overload to try and win the ball back high up in the opponent's half
It relies on the brain's ability to perceive similar patterns of play and situations through experience while correctly adapting to new circumstances that may arise. The skill of predicting what is going to happen gets better through experience.
B for Body.
Body oriented correctly while receiving the ball, playing and in duels makes a big difference to the individual's game and of the team. It buys you time. The 'sword and shield' principle: At any moment, you can either deal with the ball or the pressure, not both.
Interesting perspective by Toni Kroos on the quality of football in different tiers of the pyramid: 'In the long period of pro career, I believe everyone plays where they belong.' (source: Einfach Mal Luppen Podcast)
'The top tier is easier than the lower leagues for some players because the quality of football is much higher, provided they keep up with the intensity and tempo.'
'90% of the game in lower leagues are duels rather than football, and it only gets more physical as you go lower.'
There's a problem with the traditional model of viewing a game of football as four distinct phases of open play - Attack, Defence and Transitions - and set pieces. Instead of looking at a team as a set of 11 players, we view it as one being. I elaborate on some details around it:
The traditional model of breaking down the game into four phases, primarily two - one with the ball, and one without the ball - and the two transitions between them, assumes that the team behaves as a whole in any instant independant of it's individual players.
But each individual player goes through his/her own phase depending on their positioning, the part of the pitch, the profile of the player (attack/defence minded). Thus at any moment, you have a number of players in a particular phase, and you average the team's phase from them.
🧵How Barca's switch to 3-4-3 solved the problem of the 4-3-3 against Alaves:
The 1st half was lacklustre and Alaves' disciplined defence controlled spaces both centrally and in wide areas effectively without the ball. How did Xavi's formation switch win the game?
Mendilibar's sides are known for their pressing, and Alaves put up a defensive masterclass in the first half. They set up in a compact 4-4-1-1 shape denying space between the lines with wide midfielders tucking in narrow and the defensive line holding a midblock. #AlavesBarca
Their pressing structure managed to dominate the central spaces and Barca looked out of ideas even in possession. The front 2 create a 2v2 and Busi is closely marked. Pedri is also outnumbered in the inside channel and the wide wingers are marked 1v1. Dest is the only free man.