Jonathan Wilson: Barca teaches Real a master class

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Greatness is not measured in medals alone but in style. "Great clubs," Arrigo Sacchi said, "have had one thing in common throughout history, regardless of era and tactics. They owned the pitch and they owned the ball. That means when you have the ball, you dictate play and when you are defending, you control the space."

There can hardly have been any doubt about the greatness of Pep Guardiola's Barcelona, but beating Real Madrid 5-0 confirmed its place in the pantheon. Perhaps the score line didn't quite have the impact of the 6-2 victory in the Bernabeu the season before last, but as a performance this was at least the equal of that game, not least because this was against Jose Mourinho's Madrid and Mourinho's teams simply do not get hammered; no side he has managed has ever lost by a four-goal margin, never mind five.

And this was a hammering; it could have been far more than 5-0.
Ricardo Carvalho twice could have been sent off before Sergio Ramos finally was, Barca by no means took all its chances, and for much of the second half Barca was content to pass the ball around and soak up the oles of the crowd. It had almost three-quarters of possession, but unlike against Mourinho's Internazionale in the Champions League semifinal last season when it had 84 percent, it looked persistently dangerous.

Perhaps Mourinho was influenced by memories of that semifinal, for Madrid seemed happy enough to allow Barca possession as though it believed holding its shape, as Inter had, would be enough. In the first quarter of the game, there was an odd deference about Madrid, barely a tackle made, although that soon changed as tempers began to fray. Inter held out; Madrid never looked like doing so.

In part, that is down to personnel. Last season, Inter began with Cristian Chivu, more usually a fullback, on the left side of the 4-2-3-1, and after Thiago Motta had been sent off, Samue Eto'o played almost as an auxiliary right-back. Cristiano Ronaldo and Angel di Maria are not the sort of players, either by ability or inclination, to offer that sort of defensive support, and the result was that Barcelona's fullbacks, Dani Alves and Eric Abidal, constantly stormed past them to become an extra man in midfield.

Likewise, with Lassana Diarra omitted, and Xabi Alonso and Sami Khedira starting as the holding midfield duo, Madrid lacked a central ball-winner to unsettle Xavi and Andres Iniesta. Diarra's arrival at halftime in place of the ineffective Mesut Ozil was almost an admission from Mourinho that he'd got it wrong.

That's why Madrid was not as effective at stifling Barca as Inter had been, but this was a different, cannier, Barca. Its front three is always fluid, but here there seemed a conscious policy of attempting to drag Madrid's two center backs, Pepe and Ricardo Carvalho, apart and then exploit the gap with low through-balls from deep. In a sense that is natural function of Messi's positioning. His nominal role may have been on the right, but he spent much of the game dropping deep into central areas. That allowed Pedro to switch to the right and Villa to pull left, stretching the back four across the full width of the pitch.
In that first 20 minutes, Villa twice almost exploited that space only to drift fractionally offside, and twice only last-gasp stretching blocks prevented the ball finding runners. An awareness of that issue made Madrid tentative, and when that happened, the basics went.

It is rarely one haymaker that ends a fight; rather it is a repeated series of blows that dazes an opponent. Just how badly Madrid was wobbling was apparent after 10 minutes, the defense en masse following Messi to the left, opening space for Iniesta to pick out Xavi's run.
He may have been fortunate the ball bounced up for him, but his finish was deft and intuitive: 1-0, and Madrid already looked exhausted.

Eight minutes later came the second. Barcelona mesmerized Madrid with a move of 21 passes, waiting and waiting for an opening, which came as Villa, simply by holding his position, found space in the left as Madrid was dragged the other way. Xavi picked him out, he cut into the box, and although his cross was half-blocked, Pedro stabbed in. This was brilliant, intuitive football. It wasn't just that the technique and touch were superb, but the movement and understanding: eight of the starting 11 had come through Barca's academy and perhaps such a style is only possible among players who have grown up together with a shared philosophy.

It had been billed as Cristiano Ronaldo against Messi, but Ronaldo was barely involved. To an extent that was not his fault, for his side scarcely had the ball, but when he did feature he cut a pitiable, petulant figure. His main involvement was to shove Pep Guardiola, which at least irritated Barca enough to check its flow for the final quarter-hour of the first half.
It returned, though, at halftime. Diarra's involvement as Madrid switched to 4-3-3 was negligible, undermined by a shambolic offside trap that seemed to reflect Madrid's state of mind. Again the runners created space and Villa and Xavi had already had efforts blocked in the second half when, after 55 minutes, Villa ran on to a Messi pass to sweep in the third.

With Messi in this sort of form, attempting any sort of offside trap becomes all but impossible because the weighting of his passing is so good that he is able to place the ball into the smallest of spaces. He had plenty of room to lay in Villa for the fourth, but the pass was so finely calibrated that Villa didn't have to break stride before hitting a first-time finish. After that, the sense was Barcelona could have scored almost as many more as it wanted, but preferred to assert its mastery by making Madrid chase the ball, settling for just one more, Bojan crossing for Jeffren to score.

This was an indelible night, one that, whatever happens in the rest of the season, will echo through football history. Ronald Koeman, the sweeper in Barcelona's dream team that, under Johan Cruyff's leadership won four straight Liga titles and a European Cup, admitted that Guardiola's side has "a little more" than the side in which he played; praise in Catalonia comes no higher than that.


Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20.../barca.real.tactical/index.html#ixzz16lSYrUWc
 
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Real Madrid and Mourinho were destroyed by Barcelona. It was a joy to watch the best team with the ball is also the best team without the ball. They defend high up and as a team hunting in packs so when they win the ball (notice they very rarely tackle but instead intecept the ball) they are at the oppositions throats. It is great to watch a team of so many world stars play as one and without any ego that you see by much lesser players/teams which is a massive credit to Pep.

As for Mourinho, there will be a lot of people questioning his tactics, but the experts have the power of hindsight. What shocked me most is that Mourinho greatest quality is identfying a weakness and correcting it insantly. When he was at Chelsea playing at Newcastle I remember him making a tactical subsitution after only about 30min. So seeing that his Madrid team werent playing as a team and midfield not protecting the defence it surprised me he didnt change things more quickly

Anyway i wasnt born to see Brazil 1970, but are Barcelona the greatest team ever, please consider how many of their great players are home grown
.
 
Barcelona are just so good with the ball. I think sometimes they try to play the ball out of tight areas a little too often, but by god when they do pull it off, they are awesome to watch.

The fact that they have the top three players( atleast for me) playing for them doesn't hurt. Xavi,Iniesta and Messi are all better than Ronaldo and (of course Rooney). I would probably put Pique in there too.

The newer lads like Busquets and Pedro( his composure is great) have such positional sense, it converts them rom above average players to very good players.
 
mourinho was tactically outclassed by pep, so that's why pep going to man utd is the best for our club. after about a few years there will be scholes, beckham mark 2s
 
mourinho was tactically outclassed by pep, so that's why pep going to man utd is the best for our club. after about a few years there will be scholes, beckham mark 2s

hahahah, mourinho outclassed ??? not a chance ... players didn't do what he wanted ... pep is one big joke ! he's in charge of Barca only because of his playing career ... There are three,four managers in this world who can tactically outclass Mourinho,if they are lucky ...they are Hiddink, Sir Alex, Wenger and Don Fabio ...
 
hahahah, mourinho outclassed ??? not a chance ... players didn't do what he wanted ... pep is one big joke ! he's in charge of Barca only because of his playing career ... There are three,four managers in this world who can tactically outclass Mourinho,if they are lucky ...they are Hiddink, Sir Alex, Wenger and Don Fabio ...

as much as i love Arsene, i wouldnt call him a tactical genius
 
Wenger just doesnt have the spirit, hes old thats why.

Other then that, It wasnt because of pep guardilos tactics, it was because real madrid dint play like how they play all season they just werent up for the game.
They looked dull from minute 1.

And im sure mourinho is going to analyze the match more then 10 times so that the next clasico , they can pick up and win .. but something is wrong.. mourinho dint even get up the whole match , neither did he shout/frustrate/kick random empty bottles. it was just meh
 
this post is going sideways so to bring it back:

what is more important to be top man manager like Pep or be top tactican like jose. OR are they the same ie to be able manipulate in order to achieve your target.
 
Madrid got destroyed, I wouldn't say Mourinho got beat tactically, but his team got ripped to shreds, very little the special one could do about it in all fairness. Despite this massive loss I can still see Madrid edging the title, Mourinho very rarely let's anybody get the better of him twice and can see him fighting back over the next 6 months. But congrats to Barca, amazing victory.

This is slightly off topic but could somebody kindly tell me why Pep would even consider leaving Barcelona, the best team in the world, in favour of Man United? I'm not trying to start an argument but some fans are delusional.
 
Madrid got destroyed, I wouldn't say Mourinho got beat tactically, but his team got ripped to shreds, very little the special one could do about it in all fairness. Despite this massive loss I can still see Madrid edging the title, Mourinho very rarely let's anybody get the better of him twice and can see him fighting back over the next 6 months. But congrats to Barca, amazing victory.

This is slightly off topic but could somebody kindly tell me why Pep would even consider leaving Barcelona, the best team in the world, in favour of Man United? I'm not trying to start an argument but some fans are delusional.

Your last point ,thats what im exactly wondering , why why would he leave barca?
 
i think, in my humble opinion that he does not like the politics of the elections for Barcelona chairman. Where chairman choses what players to buy (election promises) He much prefers the control the English manager seems to have. I think he is wrong as our Chairman meedle just as much as spanish ones do. Barcelona is best club in the world, and has the best youth policy as well
 
Barca are trying to cut the wage bill.....
There's talks of guardiola going to Chelsea Coz abramovich wants to replicate barca
 
Its not going to happen, the talk is occuring becuase Guardiola hasnt signed a contract, even though he always signs on a yearly rolling contract
 
Madrid got destroyed, I wouldn't say Mourinho got beat tactically, but his team got ripped to shreds, very little the special one could do about it in all fairness. Despite this massive loss I can still see Madrid edging the title, Mourinho very rarely let's anybody get the better of him twice and can see him fighting back over the next 6 months. But congrats to Barca, amazing victory.

This is slightly off topic but could somebody kindly tell me why Pep would even consider leaving Barcelona, the best team in the world, in favour of Man United? I'm not trying to start an argument but some fans are delusional.

He is unhappy apparently that Fab wasnt signed and that he still only gets a 12month rolling contract, i think he wants more control to be a proper manager, rather then just the coach he is now. Saying that, i would still rather want Jose anyway.
 
mourinho was tactically outclassed by pep, so that's why pep going to man utd is the best for our club. after about a few years there will be scholes, beckham mark 2s

Barcelona´s squad, is basically the team that won the World Cup as Spain. It just has better full backs (Abidal, Alves), and instead of Torres, they´ve got Messi (which is better imho)

hahahah, mourinho outclassed ??? not a chance ... players didn't do what he wanted ... pep is one big joke ! he's in charge of Barca only because of his playing career ... There are three,four managers in this world who can tactically outclass Mourinho,if they are lucky ...they are Hiddink, Sir Alex, Wenger and Don Fabio ...

Pep started training Barcelona B some 4-5 years ago, and has the DNA of Cruyff Dream Team in him. He just perfected and adjusted it to modern times. Dont forget, that Messi "exploited" his best seasons under Pep´s reign. The almost very same team played quite differently under Rijkaard (or maybe just less intensity).

No team is unbeatable, but mark my words, this Barcelona WILL write itself in the HISTORY books.
 
aha, Pep at United, dream on mancs :P
that being said, i'd love him at Anfield, exactly the kind of guy NESV want i think

*this isn't saying we're gunna get him...
 
this post is going sideways so to bring it back:

what is more important to be top man manager like Pep or be top tactican like jose. OR are they the same ie to be able manipulate in order to achieve your target.

Pep is man manager with Messi, Xavi, Iniesta and all other home players ... but what did Ibrahimović and Yaya Toure said ... they said that Pep never talks to them ... Jose is everything, he is manager who is loved by every player in his team ... After all, Marco Matterazzi cryed after Mourinho's last game ... Pep is average manager, but he is in charge of Barcelona because of his history .
 
Pep is man manager with Messi, Xavi, Iniesta and all other home players ... but what did Ibrahimović and Yaya Toure said ... they said that Pep never talks to them ... Jose is everything, he is manager who is loved by every player in his team ... After all, Marco Matterazzi cryed after Mourinho's last game ... Pep is average manager, but he is in charge of Barcelona because of his history .
nonsense, clearly pep is also loved. look at the reaction when he was pushed
 
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