But what does DS offer? Shots from long distance? Every time he gets the ball he shoots (doesn't even look around), and rarely hits the target. Yes, he scored some good goals last season, but he is not a team player (that's why I underlined 'team'). They were scored out of greediness. Point is, we do not have a striker we can rely on.
DS offers goals. He scored 11 of them last year, nearly double Torres' tally. Saying 'every time he gets the ball he shoots' is ridiculous given that last year he not attempted more passes per game than Torres, but also overall, and his pass success % was far higher too (81.6% compared to 71.4% respectively).
Still, even if we ignore the figures, what is terribly wrong with greediness in a striker? Some argue it's a good thing. Strikers like Owen, Fowler and even now Zlatan and Ronaldo were selfish players purely because they backed themselves to score, and they did. So long as he gets the goals, then it's a slightly moot point.
I'll give you one thing the statistics do show, and that's that Sturridge often doesn't play the final, key pass. That might be a lack of technique and vision (not sure, but I don't think so given he has played in the hole successfully for England U-21s) or, more likely, bad decision making. And the single most effective way to improve bad decision making? Game time.
And I completely agree with Mike:
So how come nobody's castigating Hazard for his selfishness? He's had 11 more starts than Sturridge, scored one more goal, and has taken 29 shots to Sturridge's 9 (all league stats). Yet I don't see anyone saying Hazard's unnecessarily selfish with his shooting, and his job isn't even to score goals.
Okay, so maybe that's too small a sample size. Let's look at an in-depth analysis of the two from last year in the league. Sturridge made 30 apps, Torres 32. Sturridge scored 11 goals to Torres' 6. Crucially, Sturridge took 93 shots to Torres' 66. So Sturridge took about a third more shots to score nearly twice the amount of goals, many of them off the bench. I really don't think that having your centre forward take another third's worth of shots to score twice as many goals is such a great sacrifice, actually. It pays off pretty **** well, in my books.
Quite besides that, Sturridge is only 23. Players continue to change so drastically even at that age: I'll use the example of a player I watched in detail, Ashley Young. When he signed for Villa at the age of 22, he was raw, though effective. Over the next two years, he matured and became a far better player, even as teams realised his threat and attempted to double mark him out of games. My point is that with a run of Premiership-standard games at a club that realised his potential, Young progressed fantastically as a player.
At the end of the day, Sturridge has done enough and the man playing in his position hasn't performed enough that he ****** well deserves a chance. Whether or not Chelsea are going to invest in January, he deserves a shot and it should be given to him now, so that he can either sink or swim.
EDIT: Somewhat zoomed by Alcaraz, but only because I spent the time writing this.
