People really don't get how good Eddie Nketiah is.
You have to understand it. Physically, he is one of the best in the game.
On the same list as your Osimhens, Inaki Williams, Aubas and Vardys. That alone gives him an UNBELIEVABLE platform as a striker.
(An All-timer thread)
It means he will get goals that no one else normally gets. On the counter, in his movements, in the press, he will be first to get to the ball. And he will sustain that threat for 90 minutes.
Look at how well and powerful he runs here. The striding...
This is him duelling with Thiago Silva, N'golo Kanté and Malang Sarr. He is AT HOME against such physical opponents. It's nothing for him.
Now that we have established his physical level and how it can give him a platform to win duels, get on the end of loose balls, chase lost causes and turn them into goals, dominate the channels... It is time to look at the most important skill for a striker: movement.
Movement refers to a player's ability to find space to receive and execute on the pitch. It is the number 1 requirement for a striker to have, both in transition and settled play.
Listen to Pep tell you all about it. It's what makes strikers strikers.
Here is an illustration from brilliant mind @CoachMunkvold of what this movement is.
Movement is not just about making sure the ball comes to you, it is also about occupying the best spot in relation to where the rest of your team is, even if the ball doesn't come to you.
This is what Antonio Rudiger exemplifies here. It's about giving yourself the best probability in terms of what's happening around you.
If a striker is especially good at movement and can get to the balls due to his physical capacities, it changes the way you play as a team.
One major reason why a striker has to be physically good is that it affects their ability to get to balls and create finishing instances.
The box is crowded and there's no time. You have to be physically incredible in a way to be able to take advantage of the balls that come in.
Most strikers, for instance, can be in the same position that Halaand is in but are unable to take advantage of a ball that comes in.
Most strikers wouldn't score this goal. Halaand's incredible physical capacities make it possible.
This goal required both incredible speed and strength.
Some strikers are pacy, some are strong, some are very tall... These physical attributes allow them to create shooting situations in different instances.
Halaand is all of them. His Dortmund goal can be replicated by Cavani and Lewandowski but only Lukaku replicates Brighton's.
These physical attributes also allow you to win fouls in and around the box. But, importantly, they reduce the margin of error your teammates have when passing the ball to you.
If you have enough pace, you can reach overhit passes. If you have enough height...
Eddie Nketiah is not just an incredible runner, he has incredible strength against contact and an amazing ability to accurately time his jump for aerial balls.
He is no Halaand but his physical attributes give him elite capacities.
On his debut as an 18-year-old in a game Arsenal were losing 2-1 when he came in, this is what he did:
Look at his movement in the box for the first goal and how crowded he was in the second goal.
His movement is absolutely exceptional. That is how he always appears to score out of nothing.
“One of the most important things for a good cross is don’t try to put it on somebody’s head. Put it in the space, because the striker has sometimes more time than you think.”
— Thomas Muller.
It's all about space and the exploitation of it for strikers
One extra thing about Nketiah as a striker is that he is instinctive. He knows how to finish in the box. It doesn't matter what kind of situation you give him, he will find a shooting solution.
Just get him the ball.
He is going to squeeze it in. It doesn't matter. He doesn't care for ugly goals.
This is simply what he has done all his career. He is that guy.
And for those who think he's a pure poacher...
Last season, he was genuinely one of the best forwards in the league every single time he stepped out on the pitch for Arsenal.
This is the STYLE & OUTPUT of a world-class forward.
Eddie Nketiah is a product of Cobham and Hale End. That is as elite as it gets. These are two of the best academies in the world and Eddie was considered talented enough to be in both of them.
This is the equivalent of playing for Real Madrid and Bayern Munich in youth football.
Eddie has never played a lot of senior minutes in his career before now. He's always had to work and wait, work and wait for his chance to come.
He has not had the luxury of developing by playing. Everything he can do now comes from the training ground.
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Classic Martin Odegaard. Show for the ball, make it stick between the lines, connect the thirds, dictate our attack.
He's now shooting more aggressively, which adds a whole new dimension to him. His profile is necessary for how we want to sustain pressure and possession.
“Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”
— John 15:13 (KJV)
In celebrating Christmas, we must remember the purpose for it: the birth of man's saviour, the appearance of God in the flesh for the salvation of men.
“For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.”
— Isaiah 9:6 (KJV)
God descended so that mankind could ascend with him.
Man needed a powerful saviour who could destroy his enemies (death, sin, the law). Man needed a righteous and a blameless saviour—someone without sin, someone who could justifiably stand and stand well.
If we let Chelsea take Rafael Leao, I tell you what, we are going to regret it.
Unavoidable. You don't let your rival take a nuclear level player. You will pay for it, eventually.
Declan Rice and Rafael Leao are two players we can barely even afford one of to land at Chelsea.
People don't get it yet. Arsenal are going to pay. Leao will kill us in many games against them. He also represents exactly what is needed for them. And he is a CL-winning calibre winger like Vinicius Junior. We are going to pay if that kind of talent lands at Chelsea.
One of Declan Rice or Rafael Leao may unavoidably go to Chelsea, but both must NOT. They will OVERTAKE our project if that happens.
It seems like you don't get it. They will OVERTAKE us with those players at their club. Players in positions of need for us. It MUST NOT HAPPEN.
The number 10 WAS an aristocratic position. Only a few were fit to play it. The common man and the common team suffered. But the rich enjoyed their glamour.
Nowadays, we remember the No. 10 only through the eyes of the rich and not the eyes of the poor.
Thank God for LIBERTY.
FREE AT LAST, FREE AT LAST, THANK GOD ALMIGHTY WE ARE FREE AT LAST!
A traditional old fashioned 10 needed to have these to be most effective:
—a creative passing range (Laudrup, Ronaldinho as opposed to a Muller)
—pausa (Riquelme as opposed to Bruno)
—raumdeter qualities in terms of finding space (Muller/KDB as opposed to Hazard)...
Liverpool have a starting LCM in Thiago Alcantara. It would make no sense to me to invest 50-80 million on another starter in the same position who wouldn't play elsewhere for Liverpool.
Rather get a project midfielder with a high floor and ceiling to deputise.
Lokonga has the exact qualities required to play Thiago's role physically and technically. He can also slot into Fabinho's role. His only issue is a lack of defensive intensity and positional know-how off-ball, but nothing that won't be fixed in a short period.
If he doesn't grow, well, he'd still be good enough for a squad role and the value cost wouldn't stop Liverpool from getting a starter once Thiago is done.
If he grows well, you literally have the next Partey. A 6 and 8 of the highest quality in the game. That seems smart to me.
I've got my eye on Tudor Mendel-Idowu. Very interesting prospect. Premier League level talent at first glance. The question is: at what level for Chelsea?
I think his big edge could be mental. And that's not easy to assess. We will see. I'd definitely pick him over Omari.
He has the legs of a space eater, of an incredible ball carrier. Not really that much of a burst but maybe he's not that type of winger. His strides will also restrict him in smaller spaces unless he learns small steps. Might do well to study CHO tapes and mould his game to his.
Definitely an outside winger. But despite a great physical base, he doesn't have a serious burst. That would make him less of the 1v1 player people think he is.
But he's got quick feet and is wily, so he can always create separation if not totally beat his man at EPL level.