Part of what makes Saka different to/better than most more explosive wingers is because his brain is that of a midfielder's.
He may get past his man a bit less but each ball reception for him is an opportunity to create/continue offensive momentum rather than purely best his man
Basically, Saka makes the perfect decision each time he faces up his man. He's built to interpret the situation correctly, whether to come inside or slip someone in or slip someone out or shoot or cross or combine or take it past his man or find a man in zone 14 or pass it back.
He's basically a perfect little all-rounder with enough ability to do everything, the intelligence to see it and the swagger to execute it.
Take his decisive moment against France at the World Cup when he won the penalty vs the decisive moment against United at home last season.
One was a combine/carry through that Tchouameni fell for. The other was your typical Arjen Robben move. Then you've got his moment against Chelsea this season, too, a cut in and cross to the backpost.
The variety of plays he can develop is absolutely incredible.
If you think about it, the only winger who can match the variety of plays that Saka can develop is Mohammed Salah. From any range, into anywhere, through any means.
Meanwhile, people underrate both massively as wingers.
Look into the past and the wingers who can do the same are
vanishingly few.
Ribery, Neymar, Messi... maybe Robben/Mahrez... Who else?
Bukayo is up there with these legends with the variety of staple plays at his beck and call to affect a game. That is why their teams run the game through these players. They are essentially magicians.
Not to mention that when Saka gets past you 1v1, it is a more dangerous situation than when a Doku does. He is going to put it literally on a plate at a higher percentage.
Your ASMs, Martinellis, Comans, Dokus, Costas can be extremely erratic with their deliveries after the fact
Imagine Bukayo in these situations after the fact. There's no guarantee of a goal but it would look a lot more dangerous on average than these.
this affects how they carry & use the ball, execute & respond under pressure and learn new things & expand capacity/responsibility
think Messi and Salah evolutions
—Body: (compactness, balance, coordination)
this affects how they can receive and where they can receive it, the capacity to turn either way AFTER placing a foot on the ball with their back against the opposition (this is not the half-turn), what angles they can sell (the
more balanced their proportions and the more proportionately compact the overall profile, the better) mostly after receiving central.
this balanced proportioning & compactness suggests you can go either way & forces oppo to hesitate back to goal and facing forward on the carry
This goal is impossible without the second of hesitation Saka has on the ball, which also forces the defender to hesitate, and then which gives Saka the turn.
It needs pausa and a balanced body type to consistently execute. Sancho has both qualities, too
Brain gives Saka the inspiration to be patient on the ball, compactness gives him strength in case he is charged, his balance sells the illusion to go either way and the angle to exploit is created.
Ribery, Sancho, Messi... all of them can sink on the ball and turn.
These are some of the invisible qualities non explosive wingers have that do not catch the eyes of the average fan.
The ‘Magician’ profile is uninspiring because it isn't too flashy until they arrive on the pitch and consistently pull out results.
They are not understood.
Barcelona have produced the latest of them.
A winger with the brain, technical consistency and range to completely run an attack and produce an infinite number of scenarios to solve it.
Maybe you can stop Doku with Wan Bissaka, but God help you when it is Yamine Lamal.
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Let's do a little investigation of Arsenal's next squad priorities in midfield.
We have three No. 10s in the squad
Odegaard
ESR
Vieira
Only one proper CM in a 3
Rice
Another CM coming up in Patino (already a bonafide squad option or almost ready)
Another No. 10 coming up in Ethan Nwaneri (should arrive as a squad option next season)
And another CM coming up in Myles Lewis-Skelly (should arrive as a squad option after next season)
Kai Havertz is a functional CM option. Rotation option rather than first team level there.
The sensible thing to do is to sell one of the No. 10s and invest big in a CM to partner Declan Rice into the future.
But one is a home-grown player who is one of the best carriers in the league, has demonstrated strong chemistry with Saka, and demonstrably kills top teams.
I have been thinking about today's game for a while, how Arsenal can win and I've come to a realization that this is not a tactics-based game but one that is all about dynamism.
Put simply, the team with the most dynamism to find and break into spaces will have the upper hand.
Both teams are strong on setpieces, both teams largely play with the same principles and both teams largely have the same amount of technical quality to play through the press if there's a chance.
As for the press, in the Community Shield, Arsenal used a more conservative idea
than the ambitious m2m they've previously deployed.
This idea is precisely City's as well: allow the opponent to do a few actions in the first line and then collapse hard on them.
This game is largely a deadlock in many game winning aspects except one: dynamic quality.
Warren Zaire-Emery is very much a player of the future.
In an over-athleticized age with huge emphasis on compactness and the high press, second balls and duels, the French teenager is an example of the modern CM blueprint.
a master's profiling thread /🧵/
Broad horizontal body build with a strong core/ground power to help control
1. Bounces 2. Duelling territory
+
Body-to-ball coordination
+
Good control of the ball over a 5-yard radius and a dynamic ability on the ball to drive and manipulate.
Let's define those.
It's not fully established from my end but a broad upper body build with good ground power often correlates with a strong capacity to control bounces and loose balls.
Think of Moussa Dembele, Jude Bellingham, William Saliba when it comes to controlling these loose moments.
Pro scouts in almost all motion sports look at, infer and deduce biomechanical stuff all the time and most of them don't have a Masters Degree in it.
Truth is truth because it's repeatable and a keen eye can find patterns in complexity.
There is some truth is this tweet, though. Biomechanical stuff can be hugely variable and affectable. Most of what most who do any biomechanical stuff do is in loose, broadly structured frameworks. Including me. You can see the curiosity in my tweets.
I don't want Martin Odegaard starting again. Not because he plays bad or anything.
It is simply because I believe the team has evolved beyond most of what he offers as a floor-raiser. We need to go to the next level and I don't think he is the one to help us get there.
🧵/
He is basically a Brighton type midfielder. He's incredible at pockets play and letting the game flow through him. Added shots and goals to it to make him very special.
But we have a creative powerhouse like Trent/KDB/Bruno on the bench + an Odegaard-type winger in Saka.
Saka + Odegaard work incredibly well in tight spaces, especially with a overlappping option on the outside in White/Cedric. But it is not necessary superiority when you consider the advantages you can generate with a KDB type there instead. More overlaps with Saka inside more