I think credit should also go to Kolarov himself. He started preseason top fit (unlike other players) with an attitude to make all us fans eat their words, and has never looked back since. However it really is not that big a surprise as Pep seems only interested in the players' capacity on the ball and his versitallity. And Kolarov is that kind of player, although he received justified critics last season (the scapegoat thing was a bit overdone). Not sure if it's just Pep's manmanagement. It's Pep learing the player to brighten his horizon with Kolarov clever enough to understand and perform like Pep wants it.
We 've made some wild guesses about players leaving of not being a Pep kind of player. Hart out, Kolarov to stay? That bet would have made me a fortune if it was just on Blue Moon.
I concurMight encourage them to pick up his books and that can only be a good thing.
I think credit should also go to Kolarov himself. He started preseason top fit (unlike other players) with an attitude to make all us fans eat their words, and has never looked back since. However it really is not that big a surprise as Pep seems only interested in the players' capacity on the ball and his versitallity. And Kolarov is that kind of player, although he received justified critics last season (the scapegoat thing was a bit overdone). Not sure if it's just Pep's manmanagement. It's Pep learing the player to brighten his horizon with Kolarov clever enough to understand and perform like Pep wants it.
We 've made some wild guesses about players leaving of not being a Pep kind of player. Hart out, Kolarov to stay? That bet would have made me a fortune if it was just on Blue Moon.
Early days but there is so much to love and admire under Pep. Big thing for me is how often we are winning the ball back in the opposition half after losing it. Last 1/2 years we'd lose possession, have players trudge back into position and go from there, but by then the opposition team have advanced on our defence. This season, we lose it (which doesn't seem to be often!), but we snap away at them very quickly with Dinho, Silva, Kev, Sergio etc all happy to muck in, and more often than not we win the ball back in a comfortable position (half way or so) or in a dangerous position like their defensive 3rd. Instead of losing the ball and being on the back foot, we lose the ball but can, in the blink of an eye, be back in control of the game and start another attack.
I love how we nearly always have an option; if Stones or whoever gets closed down, they'll generally have at least 2/3 decent pass options on, including going back to a ball playing keeper. If the opposition don't press then we can simply advance into midfield under no pressure whatsoever. Must be tough for other teams to gauge when to press and when to drop off, as we can combat either tactic under Pep.
Think it's gonna be the dippers and Chelsea who will give us the best games this season, but no fear whatsoever with Guardiola at the helm.
Pep Confidential chapter 8 said:The afternoon training session focuses on pressing, too. The defenders and one midfielder start things off, working together at the back, and the forwards try to get the ball from them using fast, aggressive pressing.
Neuer’s skilled footwork stands out and Mandžukić’s Eto’o-style aggression also impresses. The coach shouts his instructions to his players as he directs their efforts.
‘It’s four-second pressing only. I don’t want to see Ribéry chasing his winger the length of the pitch. He needs to make it into the centre and stay put. What I need is for them all to press together for just a few seconds. That way they’ll get the ball back high up the pitch.’
At the end of the session, Pep sits down on the bench in the heat of the afternoon and shares his ideas: ‘We need intense, precise work. If all we were interested in was one-on-one man marking, all this effort wouldn’t be necessary. I could just sit back and that would be enough. But we are aiming at a very specific style of play and must therefore work extremely hard to perfect every single move.’
There is no middle ground. If the players want to play his brand of football, they will have to give it all they’ve got. ‘We have to train with the maximum intensity. It’s just like the rondos: you do them with 100% effort or you don’t do them at all. If the players don’t like them then they’re welcome to go mountain running, but in that case we’ll never achieve our potential.’
Zonal defending rather than man marking; four-second pressing with the nearest player in position to press the man who’s about to receive the ball; moving calmly into the middle to create and use space; working in a co-ordinated way. Pep breaks down his fundamental ideas about the game for me.
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That's an apt comparison, taking into account the huge baggage Maureen brings everywhere with him and it's incurable habit of turning vicious.
That cough in the press conferences is worrying me now
The last thing we need is him leaving because of ill health
This bedding in period where Pep has to figure out the league........... when does it start?
That's an apt comparison, taking into account the huge baggage Maureen brings everywhere with him and it's incurable habit of turning vicious.
For those who have asked "what will happen if/when Pep leaves": the expected goals map from the last Bayern home game. The signs of decline are already there.