Sunday 16 September 2012


SOUTHAMPTON vs. MANCHESTER UNITED

02-SEP-2012 BARCLAYS PREMIER LEAGUE

ST.MARY’S


Robin Van Persie got Manchester United out of trouble with 2 late goals after a fine Southampton performance gave them a 2-1 lead.

Nigel Atkins brought Jamie Ward-Prowse back into midfield for Guily Do Prado and Rickie Lambert played the lone striker role with Adam Lallana and Jason Puncheon on the flanks.

Manchester United’s defensive problems eased with the return to fitness of Rio Ferdinand and this allowed Michael Carrick to move back into midfield alongside Tom Cleverly. Danny Welbeck replaced the injured Ashley Young on the left hand side.  

Formation Match Up

Southampton’s 4-3-3/4-1-4-1 system allowed them to match up against United’s 4-2-3-1. Playing with a defensive midfielder really blunted the threat of Shinji Kagawa. Kagawa has been impressive in his first 2 United matches, but because Southampton matched United man for man in midfield they were able to restrict his influence in the game. Against Everton and Fulham Kagawa had space between the lines because both team played with 2 central midfielders, Southampton had an extra man in midfield with Schnerdalin sitting the deepest and denying Kagawa space when he received the ball. This allowed Ward-Prowse and Steven Davis to play up against Cleverly and Carrick. Southampton were positive and pressed the ball early to disrupt United rhythm. Rickie Lambert’s opening goal was a perfect example of this working, Cleverly played a ball short into Kagawa, Schnerdalin was aggressive, nicked the ball from him and this started the build up to the goal.   

United’s Left Flank

Playing Danny Welbeck from the left was a problem defensively for United. It simply did not work because his natural movement off the ball will be to move in-field; this unbalanced the side because Antonio Valencia held the width on the right hand side. When United had the ball most of their play was bottled necked down the right because they had no one to switch play to down the left from midfield. From the defensive point of view in the transition, Welbeck’s narrow positioning meant there was plenty of space in-front of Patrice Evra down the right hand side and Nathaniel Clyne did not hesitate to get forward and ‘over-load’ Evra with Jason Puncheon.


 Danny Welbeck’s narrow positioning allows space for Nathaniel Clyne to ‘overload’ the right-hand side. 

Crosses Into The Box

Southampton counter-attacked well, breaking into the space behind United’s full-backs to expose the lack of pace and sharpness United had in central defence. They also played direct into Rickie Lambert who was clever at winning free-kicks in the duels with Nemanja Vidic and Rio Ferdinand, but Southampton looked most dangerous and scored both their goals when they put crosses into the box. Both Evra and Rafael are small full-backs and when the ball was in a wide position the players in the box would pull to the far post to try and expose the full-backs in the air when the cross came into the box. Lambert did this for Southampton’s 1st goal when he out jumped Rafael and Schnerdalin did the same to Evra (who slipped) to give Southampton a 2-1 lead. The body position of both full-backs for the goals did not help, both were closed facing the ball and Ferguson may consider playing Phil Jones or Chris Smalling at full-back against teams who provide a similar threat. United have now conceded 4 goals from crosses into the box, a worrying trend given the nature of the Premier League.

2nd Half Subs

The key to turning the game United’s way was the substitutions both managers made. Nani came on for the ineffective Shinji Kagawa, which gave United more width and balance from both flanks. Paul Scholes replaced Tom Cleverly and now United had the ability to switch the ball from side-to-side and attack down both flanks. Chicarito replaced Danny Welbeck and his runs in-behind the Southampton defence helped stretch them. Perhaps it was Atkins substitutions that made the biggest difference. He replaced his front 3 who were causing United problems on the counter-attack and did not freshen up his midfield that tired, dropped deeper and allowed Paul Scholes and Michael Carrick space to control the game and make key passes. United built up enough pressure to get 2 late goals both from corners to win the game. The first from a second phase and the second when Van Persie exploited Southampton’s zonal marking heading in direct from Nani’s cross.  

Conclusion

Southampton deserved most of the credit despite losing the game. United were unbalanced, looked vulnerable to balls in the box, Ferdinand and Vidic lacked sharpness and Southampton restricted United in the midfield zone. What swung the game United’s way were the changes both managers made from the bench and Van Persie taking his chances in open play when they came.            

MANCHESTER UNITED vs FULHAM

25-AUG-2012 BARCLAYS PREMIER LEAGUE

OLD TRAFFORD


Sir Alex Ferguson handed home debuts to Shinji Kagawa and Robin Van Persie. Rafael replaced Nani who did not even make the bench, Anderson came in for Paul Scholes and Ashley Young replaced Danny Welbeck, Wayne Rooney was dropped to the bench allowing Van Persie to start.

Martin Jol played Matthew Briggs at left-back in the place of the injured John Arne Riise, the rest of the team remained unchanged from the side that beat Norwich City 5-0 the previous weekend.

Early Goals

Fulham took an early lead from a well-worked set-play in just the 3rd minute of the game. With United set to defend a cross, Ruiz pulled the ball back for Damien Duff who lost Ashley Young and converted from 10 yards out. It took United just 7 minutes to equalise; Patrice Evra’s shallow cross from the left touchline was beautifully diverted into the goal on the half volley by Robin Van Persie.

United Control

Fulham played with a 4-4-2 shape without possession and retreated behind the ball allowing United to retain possession in front of them under little pressure. They kept their defensive lines compact denying space for United to work the ball through them centrally. United’s approach without the ball was different, they looked to win the ball back early, pressing Fulham high up the pitch forced Fulham to play long balls forward and when United won the ball created opportunities to counter attack  with Fulham’s defensive lines disorganised. Fulham really struggled to keep possession in the 1st-half, United dominated 69.4%-30.6%. Is this high tempo pressing game a new approach from United who traditionally have been a team that retreats and recovers their shape before trying to win possession back or was it simply a reflection of the energetic team Sir Alex fielded?

The Flanks

With Fulham compact through the centre of the pitch, United’s most creative area was from the flanks, particularly down the right hand side. United worked the ball from side to side and both full-backs Patrice Evra and Rafael made good overlapping runs to support Ashley Young and Antonio Valencia. Ashley Young on the left did not have a particularly productive game despite getting into good position’s he had no successful dribbles and only produced 6 crosses, Valencia on the right carried a much bigger threat producing 14 crosses and linked very well with Rafael. Valencia would often dribble the ball infield dragging Briggs narrow which would then create space for Rafael to make runs forward or for Shinji Kagawa to move into from his central position. Perhaps United targeted the right flank more often because the young and inexperienced Matthew Briggs was playing for Fulham at left back. United went in at half-time 3-1 up after Kagawa finished a rebound from Tom Cleverly’s shot after a corner was cleared and when Rafael headed home at the back post from Ashley Young cross in the second phase of another corner.

2nd Half

United continued to probe and move the ball from side to side in front of Fulham and still produced lots of crosses and good wing-play on the flanks, but Fulham grew into the game after Martin Jol made a tactical switch in the 62nd minute. He took off Alexander Kacaniklic and put on Steve Sidwell, moving Damien Duff to the left and Bryan Ruiz to the right, creating a narrow 4-5-1 formation. This system did 3 things, it gave Fulham more control of possession because they had more men in the central area, it allowed Moussa Dembele more freedom to move forward and create things further up the pitch and it also encouraged the full-backs to make overlapping runs which forced United wide men to recover and track the runs deep, this meant when United did win the ball back their wingers would be in a deeper position in transition and less of threat. Matthew Briggs put in the cross from the left which was put into his goal by Vidic after a mix up with David De Gea to make it 3-2.  United’s pressing also dropped off a little but the possession stats in the 2nd half show Fulham were in the game more with United only just edging it 52.1%-47.9%, a significant shift from the 1st half.

Moussa Dembele

He was Fulham’s and perhaps the game’s best player. He has been converted into a central midfielder and he seems to have grown into the role very well. He can break play up (he made 8 tackles more than any other player), he can beat a player (he made 9 successful dribbles more than any other player) he can pass (3 key passes, 96% passing accuracy, better than any other player), he is strong, he is quick and he could be available on a free transfer at the end of the season. Fulham will do well to keep him.

Fulham’s system helps them regain control of the game, by getting extra players into the central midfield zone.

Robin Van Persie

He scored a wonderful goal that really show cased his brilliant finishing ability in the penalty box. His movement off the ball is good too, he can drop deep to link up with the midfield and wingers and he can make well timed runs in-behind the opposition centre-backs. If United keep control of games they will make chances for him and he will score plenty of goals.

Conclusion

For 60 minutes, United were very good, they played at a good tempo, pressing Fulham early, moving the ball quickly side to side and they carried a good threat down the flanks, particularly the right. They controlled the game and deserved their lead, but Martin Jol tactical change in the 2nd half swung the game Fulham’s way and United lost their grip by conceding a silly goal from a harmless cross. This meant the game became a bit nervier than it really should have been given United dominance for 2 thirds of the match.