Thaksinssoldier
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 28 Jun 2009
- Messages
- 10,416
Him and baines are holding the line oviedo and that random CB are ball watching
Not even close man.
There's plenty of examples of him cocking up, just accept it. He is utter gash.
Him and baines are holding the line oviedo and that random CB are ball watching
Folks bend over backwards to see errors where they don't exist when it comes to Stones. I've stopped discussing it and agree to disagree. If we get him we can resume discussions then.Him and baines are holding the line oviedo and that random CB are ball watching
I agree with you, at that price tag people are going to worry. They start nit picking every aspect of a players gameFolks bend over backwards to see errors where they don't exist when it comes to Stones. I've stopped discussing it and agree to disagree. If we get him we can resume discussions then.
Pause it at 2:12
Can you explain to me how that's a line please
Those types of lapses can be ironed out of his game through drills imo.I am more interested in the 1st goal , he moves out of position as he sees a run into the box and that costs the goal as Vardy ghosts into his position. A good defender will hold until he can judge the direction of the cross/pass. Of course Oviedo should do better but Stones created the space , he fell for a very simple tactic of a runner dragging him out of position.
Some may find my analysis harsh but these are the margins at the top level. As soon as Stones moves towards the runner watch Vardy.
Those types of lapses can be ironed out of his game through drills imo.
The latest "great hope for England" no thank you. He's proved this season he's not good enough. People always point out he's a ball playing CB but miss out the fact he's shite at it! A poor mans Ashley Williams in that respect.
Yep. Your analysis is both harsh and wrong. But it sure mirrors the kind of analysis TV heads like to give once they have reputation clouding their judgement.I am more interested in the 1st goal , he moves out of position as he sees a run into the box and that costs the goal as Vardy ghosts into his position. A good defender will hold until he can judge the direction of the cross/pass. Of course Oviedo should do better but Stones created the space , he fell for a very simple tactic of a runner dragging him out of position.
Some may find my analysis harsh but these are the margins at the top level. As soon as Stones moves towards the runner watch Vardy.
And what about the second rag goal in the last minute of a semi final, where he completely loses the plot? That one was called "not being able to defend".
Far too many cracks for this egg to boil.
That was jagielkas fault
Not to mention he was there best player in the second half
You really are in denial on his current ability aren't you.
Dont get me wrong, in 3 years he could mature into a phenom, but today and at the price we'd pay I think he's more relevant to the transfer list of teams lower than Everton rather than above them. I honestly think anything over 20 mil would be a waste. At least when we gambled on Raheem we had seen him in a title chasing team, seen him play in elite European competition etc. We've seen nothing of Stones yet to suggest he's up to the challenge.
Actually, if you rewind the video on Martial's goal, it's easy to see that the error was on the midfielder who was tracking Martial and for some absurd reason stopped following him once he passed it off originally.That was jagielkas fault
Not to mention he was there best player in the second half
Actually, if you rewind the video on Martial's goal, it's easy to see that the error was on the midfielder who was tracking Martial and for some absurd reason stopped following him once he passed it off originally.
Funny enough, Sanchez goal against us was quite similar. Fernandihno was the tracker, I think he got a bit banged up and couldn't stay with Sanchez or perhaps he was just tired. Either way, everyone ond their mother recognized the error laid strictly with Dihno. No one thought Mangala or Ota were somehow at fault.
Yet, these same people watch a similar sequence, with a midfielder failing to stay with his mark, but the conclude the "error prone Stones" must be at fault, seeing as he was closest to Martial when he slipped through.
This would be the equivalent of blaming Mangala or Ota (seeing as Mangala was tangled with the player who passed off to Sanchez) for Arsenal's 2nd goal. But no one did that. This suggests people can actually read errors correctly. But are often influenced (Consciously or otherwise) by the reputation bias.
This is not to suggest Stones haven't been culpable for any goals, but rather he is no more error prone than your averagely good CB.
Again I'll repeat, he is less error prone than any of our CBs, or at the least, no more prone to errors of judgment or action.
His biggest flaw is having a reputation of being Error Prone.
Pause it at 2:12
Can you explain to me how that's a line please
Don't get me wrong, I think the price is over the top. Virgil at Southampton is as good or better, and wouldn't cost 50 million.I hope to God you are actually right buddy, because I don't rate him at all and I do think this one is a done deal and there'll be a lot of cash on the table.
Yep. Your analysis is both harsh and wrong. But it sure mirrors the kind of analysis TV heads like to give once they have reputation clouding their judgement.
There was no 'hold and judge the ball' requirement. That's just BS analysis. Pay close attention. Once the throw-in occurred (even before) you could see Everton players jumping into a 'man' defense. Some guy even ran towards the guy throwing the ball, coz that was gonna be his man once play resumed.
Stone's man was attempting a run to the front post, and Stones correctly began to follow. The cross was sent to the back post where another player (Vardy) was cutting towards, and Oveido was late in his follow.
The way people have been judging Stones on this thread, kinda suggests it's always a CBs fault when a goal is given up. Seeing as CBs play in the Center, with any goal, you could always claim "they should have been in that space."
This by the way, is the "Stones Error" on 90% of goals people accuse him of costing his team. Which to me is nothing but "reputation analysis."
Whether Stones becomes great or not I don't know, but he clearly has the tools, temperament and Ball skills that a the building blocks of greatness. Whats for sure though is that this wouldn't be based on the TV commentary type of "analysis by reputation" that has now become the norm.here.