Leicester (A) - Post-Match Thread

Encouraged by the fact that we didn't just cave against Leicester after not scoring in the first hour. Since the start of the 19-20 season I've lost count of how many away games we've had where we've crumbled and run out of ideas simply because we've not put our first few chances away. It even happened at Spurs a few weeks ago. It was getting to the point where we basically had to score in the first half if we wanted to stand a chance of coming away with three points.

I know he has his detractors already (ahem), but I think Grealish had a lot to do with how we always kept quietly simmering and ticking over on Saturday. He draws players towards him all the time and he has this great knack of being able to keep the ball protected while progressing forwards with it at his feet. The goal came from him drawing two otherwise unoccupied Leicester plays away from Cancelo, who fired the shot in that landed at Bernardo's feet in the end.

Watch the goal back. Albrighton and Tielemans are supposed to be watching Cancelo, but they both drop five yards to protect the space that they think Grealish is going to attack, behind Castagne. Grealish never makes it obvious that he's about to drop it back to Cancelo - by the time he does pass the ball, Albrighton and Tielemans are far too deep to block the shot. Raheem, much as I love him, and Mahrez, great as I think he's been since January, aren't so sneaky with the ball.

Bernardo obviously man of the match but was also quietly impressed with how well we contained Leicester all over the pitch. We rode our luck a bit with the header against the crossbar, but have a look at their pass map - their most frequent passing sequence was between Soyuncu and Schmeichel. The connection between Vardy and his supporting midfielders is non-existent and even Tielemans can't get the ball to Maddison. Save for a brief period right after half-time, we completely shut them down.

For comparison, look at our pass map. Grealish, Bernardo, Cancelo - they're constantly moving the ball between each other, keeping the ball ticking over, making sure we move the ball frequently and at high speeds. Pep will look at this and will be, in his own words, "so so happy". Everyone is exactly where they're supposed to be and the ball is moving more than the players. That's why we never looked out of ideas and, eventually, why we kept creating chances that eventually won us the game.
 
The TV company I watched it on (had Leon Osman on comms) held the camera on our end in the second half when we were singing “We’re Not Really Here” and the commentator (I forget who it was) said “the City fans have been in fine voice today and are making a huge noise in the away end as their team take this corner”.

At Spurs it was awful, it was like both the team and the fans weren’t ready for that game!
Seem to get more tourists in for the London games, in my experience, which makes for a poor atmosphere.
 
Encouraged by the fact that we didn't just cave against Leicester after not scoring in the first hour. Since the start of the 19-20 season I've lost count of how many away games we've had where we've crumbled and run out of ideas simply because we've not put our first few chances away. It even happened at Spurs a few weeks ago. It was getting to the point where we basically had to score in the first half if we wanted to stand a chance of coming away with three points.

I know he has his detractors already (ahem), but I think Grealish had a lot to do with how we always kept quietly simmering and ticking over on Saturday. He draws players towards him all the time and he has this great knack of being able to keep the ball protected while progressing forwards with it at his feet. The goal came from him drawing two otherwise unoccupied Leicester plays away from Cancelo, who fired the shot in that landed at Bernardo's feet in the end.

Watch the goal back. Albrighton and Tielemans are supposed to be watching Cancelo, but they both drop five yards to protect the space that they think Grealish is going to attack, behind Castagne. Grealish never makes it obvious that he's about to drop it back to Cancelo - by the time he does pass the ball, Albrighton and Tielemans are far too deep to block the shot. Raheem, much as I love him, and Mahrez, great as I think he's been since January, aren't so sneaky with the ball.

Bernardo obviously man of the match but was also quietly impressed with how well we contained Leicester all over the pitch. We rode our luck a bit with the header against the crossbar, but have a look at their pass map - their most frequent passing sequence was between Soyuncu and Schmeichel. The connection between Vardy and his supporting midfielders is non-existent and even Tielemans can't get the ball to Maddison. Save for a brief period right after half-time, we completely shut them down.

For comparison, look at our pass map. Grealish, Bernardo, Cancelo - they're constantly moving the ball between each other, keeping the ball ticking over, making sure we move the ball frequently and at high speeds. Pep will look at this and will be, in his own words, "so so happy". Everyone is exactly where they're supposed to be and the ball is moving more than the players. That's why we never looked out of ideas and, eventually, why we kept creating chances that eventually won us the game.

What does "most XGchain" mean on the graphic mate?
 
I'm all for players giving their shirts but it's much better if they individually pick someone to give it to like Grealish did rather than throw it into the crowd and cause a scuffle.

Did anyone see the woman with her hand bag telling Grealish to go away when he was approaching?

Think you're confusing her with their right back mate.
 
I wonder what answers the thick Leicester supporting twats would give to " why were you booing Grealish". I would be intrigued

From a Midlands rival club perhaps? I've given up trying to work out other teams fans as most are just as thick as shit jealous morons.
 
What does "most XGchain" mean on the graphic mate?
The most basic (if not too basic) way to describe it is by saying xGchain measures how involved you are in attacks that lead to shots over the course of a match. The higher your involvement in the attack and/or the higher the xG of the shot at the end of it, the higher your xGchain is.
 
Encouraged by the fact that we didn't just cave against Leicester after not scoring in the first hour. Since the start of the 19-20 season I've lost count of how many away games we've had where we've crumbled and run out of ideas simply because we've not put our first few chances away. It even happened at Spurs a few weeks ago. It was getting to the point where we basically had to score in the first half if we wanted to stand a chance of coming away with three points.

I know he has his detractors already (ahem), but I think Grealish had a lot to do with how we always kept quietly simmering and ticking over on Saturday. He draws players towards him all the time and he has this great knack of being able to keep the ball protected while progressing forwards with it at his feet. The goal came from him drawing two otherwise unoccupied Leicester plays away from Cancelo, who fired the shot in that landed at Bernardo's feet in the end.

Watch the goal back. Albrighton and Tielemans are supposed to be watching Cancelo, but they both drop five yards to protect the space that they think Grealish is going to attack, behind Castagne. Grealish never makes it obvious that he's about to drop it back to Cancelo - by the time he does pass the ball, Albrighton and Tielemans are far too deep to block the shot. Raheem, much as I love him, and Mahrez, great as I think he's been since January, aren't so sneaky with the ball.

Bernardo obviously man of the match but was also quietly impressed with how well we contained Leicester all over the pitch. We rode our luck a bit with the header against the crossbar, but have a look at their pass map - their most frequent passing sequence was between Soyuncu and Schmeichel. The connection between Vardy and his supporting midfielders is non-existent and even Tielemans can't get the ball to Maddison. Save for a brief period right after half-time, we completely shut them down.

For comparison, look at our pass map. Grealish, Bernardo, Cancelo - they're constantly moving the ball between each other, keeping the ball ticking over, making sure we move the ball frequently and at high speeds. Pep will look at this and will be, in his own words, "so so happy". Everyone is exactly where they're supposed to be and the ball is moving more than the players. That's why we never looked out of ideas and, eventually, why we kept creating chances that eventually won us the game.
I wonder how the map would look if KDB was on the right instead of Jesus. (I like Jesus out wide but just wondering if having two of our best players out wide would even out the attacking patterns.)
 

Don't have an account? Register now and see fewer ads!

SIGN UP
Back
Top
  AdBlock Detected
Bluemoon relies on advertising to pay our hosting fees. Please support the site by disabling your ad blocking software to help keep the forum sustainable. Thanks.