Ferdinand and Vidic in action for United |
'The best defence is a good offence' is an infamous adage
that has been used in the military field for some time in order to pre-occupy
the opposition and, in due course, harm them. And while it is easy to relate the
term to board games such as Risk, applying it to football can easily be
justified.
When it comes to the beautiful game, out-scoring your
opponents was always the philosophy of former Argentina World Cup winner and
Tottenham manager Ossie Ardiles and it is barely a shock when he was fired from
his role. The prospect of a game containing goals, goals and more goals may
excite the fans but be a nightmare for the owners, which is why the Argentine
was given the boot in 94 and managed a monumental 14 clubs in 19-years.
The basis of playing a game where ‘you outscore your
opponents’ is a platform for disaster. The fact that remains is that a solid
back-four is the foundation of a winning team. And perhaps, more importantly, a
recognised and consistent central-defensive partnership. Great teams in the
past have been reliant on the on a formidable duo commanding the defence and
ensuring the goalkeeper behind them is rarely tested.
From Gerard Pique and Carles Puyol of today’s triumphant
Spain and Barcelona sides, to Alessandro Costacurta and Franco Baresi of the
excellent 1989 AC Milan team while who can forget Jackie Charlton and Bobby
Moore in 1966, the foundation of any great side is based on the two players
that can lead the back-line to success.
In today’s modern game, it is important to have two
defenders of completely different physical attributes. In the past, the two
centre-backs were required to be the bruisers of the team, along with one or
both of the centre-midfielders, but since then, only one of the two is seen as
the man to put his head in where it shouldn’t, physically rough up the
opposition front-men and, of course, commandeer the back-line as if it was
their last game.
Now, at least one of the defenders has to be a ball
playing one in order for the back-four to be considered a success. The
accomplishment of Nemanja Vidic and Rio Ferdinand, from 2006, with Manchester
United has to be the foundation for the cotemporary defensive partnership. Serbian
Vidic was considered the half of the duo that will repel every attack with
minimal ease ensuring anything thrown towards the United 18-yard box was easily
dealt with.
Meanwhile, Ferdinand is the one who can play the ball out
without having to hoof it 70-yards up-field. The player who can start an attack
from the back while the England man’s adaption and positional sense was, on his
heyday, second to none. Many clubs have since followed the blueprint laid out
by Sir Alex Ferguson and adopted his defensive approach to their respective
teams.
Chelsea, for example, will play John Terry alongside
David Luiz due to their contrasting abilities, Liverpool the same with Martin
Skrtel and Daniel Agger. Across Europe, the aforementioned duo of Pique and
Puyol works for Barca, Borussia Dortmund currently pair Neven Subotic and Mats
Hummels together and AC Milan rely on Alessandro Nesta and Thiago Silva to shut
out the attacks.
The perfect formulaic solution is one who heads the long
balls away paired with a team-mate who can read the game and has enough pace to
recover should one or the other make a mistake. Two ‘warrior’ defenders don’t
work together, I reference to the 5-1 humbling Manchester City gave Tottenham
back in August and who started for Spurs? Michael Dawson and Younes Kaboul. Two
defenders who can’t read the game well but can certainly win an aerial threat
or two. However, it isn’t ideal when one of the duo can’t read the game as well
as, say, teammates Ledley King and William Gallas can.
If you needed anymore proof that two of the same
defenders don’t work in the modern game of football, that Premiership encounter
is more than enough evidence. Furthermore, when it came to Inter Milan at the
beginning of the season under Gian Piero Gasperini, of whom tried to implement
a 3-4-3 with the Nerazzuri, it perhaps stood a better chance of success if
Inter if the centre-backs weren’t as particular ‘wooden’ as they are. Walter
Samuel, Lucio and Andrea Ranocchia aren’t three defenders that are going to
outpace the likes of Robinho, Bojan Krkic and Edinson Cavani.
When opponents lump the ball in the air, fair enough the
trio would be able to deal with the danger effortlessly but, against teams who
enjoy the pass and move game, the trio were struggling. Now, under Claudio
Ranieri, the Italian has re-instilled a consistent back-four, of which Samuel
and Lucio were accustomed to and worked extremely well under Jose Mourinho and
it is no surprise they currently find themselves back in fifth after a
shambolic start to the season. With the game ever changing, players becoming
fitter and faster by the season, a need for the right balance in the back-four
has never been more essential.
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