Moncherry
Registered User
- Feb 5, 2010
- 5,856
- 1,066
James Rodriguez has been disappointing just because he hasn't scored yet? He's played one and a half games and was great in the second, providing two fantastic assists.
I second this, he's been a revelation for them in the games I've watched. Not only did I realise that Trippier is actually English (always thought he was French) in this World Cup, this has been his coming out party as well. He's always been good when I watched him in the EPL, but he's taken that next step - been England's best player (IMHO) after the forward positions'.Speaking of Colombia, Quintero has surprised me too.
And some fans wanting to expel Jang from the country.South Korea has flooded the highlights. Goalkeeper Jo with a great save against Mexico, and Son Heung-Min with a spectacular goal against Mexico.
And some fans wanting to expel Jang from the country.
You need sound defensive fullbacks for that system, though. I don't really trust Kimmich with that.Germany's defenders will always be that high if the opponent is that deep. This has been Germany for at least 5 years now and they won a World Cup with it, so I always wonder why people keep acting like it's the first time they see it. Germany simply will not keep players back who then have nothing to do during 99% of the match. That's been the philosophy ever since they switched to the possession football model.
Sweden set up 8 guys in two rows at the edge of their own box from pretty much the first minute of the match with 2 guys probing in front of that. Whether you agree with it or not, in that situation Germany's fullbacks will become quasi wingers who are expected to track back. Meanwhile the centre backs will push the ball up field and act as ball distributors and then hover behind play but still in the opponent's half so they're close enough to get involved.
The two DMs are basically expected to do the same , i.e. provide cover but be available for passes. And in an ideal scenario this works because the CBs and DMs should watch for and cover potential spaces where the opponents might play balls for their roving counter attackers. This requires extreme focus and athleticism. Kroos does not have it and can barely be expected to actually sprint for a ball rather than jog for it.
And of course, it's to some extent Loew's fault for hanging on to the fancy idea of Kroos as a DM, but at the same time Kroos agrees to play in that position and has some responsibility for doing the job he's been asked to do. Lack of alternative solutions means he's at no risk of being dropped (especially now after he scored) but it's the permanent achilles heel of the German team.
Definitely not. Nobody does that on purpose.Yeah, it's unfortunate. I feel sorry for him, because I saw him cry after both matches, and I think he didn't mean to cost his team.
We can easily go out against Denmark. We always play up and down based on our competition. Play great against Spain, Germany etc, lay an egg against Turkey, Portugal etc. You never know with this team. On the bright side, we do have a semi-decent manager these days, something we didn't have since early days of Bilić.Croatia. I think they can go far.
Seems like that "crucial" goal by Kroos didn't really matter!
Indeed. I was going to mention him, but I was too knackered to remember his name and too lazy to look it up. A real pleasure to watch.
I think Colombia would've pulled it off with ten men against Japan if they hadn't removed Quintero for James. Very reactionary substitution to try and get the star on even though he's not 100%, and Quintero looked terrific.
Germany.