

Why can't we be more German

by Sarah Star » 03 Jul 2010 17:06
by sandman » 03 Jul 2010 17:06
by SLAMMED » 03 Jul 2010 17:07
by The Surgeon of Crowthorne » 03 Jul 2010 17:07
PEARCEYThe Surgeon of Crowthorne I really like this German side -no outstanding stars but excellent technique pratically to a man.
Now 3-0
No outstanding starsBastian Schweinsteiger has been sensational in the past two matches.
This German side didn't get anywhere enough credit for the way they dispatched England. Now they have hammered England playing attacking football. Great credit to them. Schweinsteiger, Lahm and Podoloski have been brilliant today. They are the team to beat now.
by Kitsondinho » 03 Jul 2010 17:09
by Archie's penalty » 03 Jul 2010 17:09
by Flyingkiwi » 03 Jul 2010 17:09
by frimmers3 » 03 Jul 2010 17:11
by SLAMMED » 03 Jul 2010 17:13
Flyingkiwi Actually, it makes you feel a bit better about England's lame effort (embarrasment that it was).
by PEARCEY » 03 Jul 2010 17:14
frimmers3 "No outstanding stars Bastian Schweinsteiger has been sensational in the past two matches.
This German side didn't get anywhere enough credit for the way they dispatched England. Now they have hammered England playing attacking football. Great credit to them. Schweinsteiger, Lahm and Podoloski have been brilliant today. They are the team to beat now."
how come germany are allowed to play the same team twice?
by Starfish » 03 Jul 2010 17:18
by Row Z Royal » 03 Jul 2010 17:19
Row Z Royal But I think Argentina are more likely to win.
by frimmers3 » 03 Jul 2010 17:20
PEARCEYfrimmers3 "No outstanding stars Bastian Schweinsteiger has been sensational in the past two matches.
This German side didn't get anywhere enough credit for the way they dispatched England. Now they have hammered England playing attacking football. Great credit to them. Schweinsteiger, Lahm and Podoloski have been brilliant today. They are the team to beat now."
how come germany are allowed to play the same team twice?
You know I meant Argentina frimmers...really you did.
by PEARCEY » 03 Jul 2010 17:22
by sandman » 03 Jul 2010 17:23
by RoyalChicagoFC » 03 Jul 2010 17:35
Sarah Star Why can't we be more German
by Sarah Star » 03 Jul 2010 18:08
by sam1 » 03 Jul 2010 18:56
sandman Very poor from Argentina and from the BBC commentator who thought that Oscar winning actress Charlize Theron was a wag.
by Baines » 03 Jul 2010 20:34
Easy goals
The first goal came early on from a Schweinsteiger free-kick that wasn’t defended properly, and Mueller headed in from close range. Germany dominated the rest of the half, and there was little sign of any tactical changes from Maradona and Bilardo. The one thing they did was to switch di Maria and Rodriguez, but that just gives a chance to use the phrase ‘rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic’ more appropriately than ever. Argentina’s shape was awful, just lacking any cohesion whatsoever, and offered no variation in build-up play.
There’s little point in describing the three second-half goals in detail, because they were all exactly the same. Overload Argentina in their right-back zone, shift a centre-back out of position to open up space in the defence, cross for a player on the edge of the six-yard box to score. Podolski for Klose, Schweinsteiger for Freidrich, Ozil for Klose. It didn’t matter who the German players were, they all had the determination to get into attacking zones, they all had the intelligence to look up and play a simple square ball, they all had the technical quality to play the crosses and finishes to perfection.
Simplicity the key
And in a sense, it was the most beautifully simple display of football you’ll ever see, both in terms of the tactical plan and the performance on the pitch. There was no bold strategic shock from Joachim Loew, there were no 30-yard thunderbolts to remember for years. It was just pass and move, fluidity and good teamwork, and the basic plan to get the ball into wide areas, then play the ball across the box. The similarity of the three second half goals is so strong it borders on the ridiculous – the only surprise is that they all came from the side of the pitch that Lahm wasn’t on.
The final twenty minutes saw Argentina try and fit Messi, Tevez, Higuain, Pastore and Aguero into the same team. There was so little element of ‘tactics’ to it that it barely deserves talking about, it was just ‘throw on your best attackers’. Juan Veron would have been appropriate to play some key passes and let Messi work further up the pitch, but it wouldn’t have altered Germany’s cruise to victory.
by sandman » 03 Jul 2010 20:42
sandman The only problem I can see with Germany is that their game is based so much on counter attack that if they play Spain they might struggle to get the ball to counter attack.
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