RandyWanger
Je suis rôti de boeuf
Quellefuckingsurprise. Anyone who watches us knows we're poor in this area and have been for many years.
It does. Look at Gilmour's cross the other day for the equaliser. He put real whip on it, the defender doesn't have the thinking time he would have done if that's more of a stand it up into the area type ball.Delivery. 100% delivery. Pace and precision gets it done everyday. Seen enough of Ward-Prowse, TAA to know this to be true. We have decent headers of the ball at the club. Delivery… meh.
Cue missed penalty at the weekend!That said - we've not missed a penalty now for 18 months and have scored 9 in a row in the Premier League.
Nobody scores them all (Well, apart from Toney and Le Tissier pretty much nobody), so i'm sure we'll miss, but Pedro seems to be made of the right stuff. A confident lad I think he'll end up with a very impressive career penalty recordCue missed penalty at the weekend!
Does Pascal have the best record for reaching a teammate because of the number of times he and Solly stand in the corner together and tap it to each other, or is this crosses? Both defending and attacking set pieces need improvement. You do wonder how much time RDZ allows for practising them. Maybe our first tactic should be to give him an hour off a week to go for a smoke.
This is what I was thinking. We do seem to take a lot of short corners.
Agreed, Pascal's stats may be scewed by short corners, however he was second only to Kieran Trippier for xAG (Expected Assisted Goals) directly from corners last season. Trippier had an xAG of 4.8, Gross was second on 3.0. So he must be doing something right.
However, the short corners we persist with are in themselves a possible indication of a lack of competent set piece guidance.
Goals following corners made up 13.9% of all the goals scored in the Premier League last season.
But according to Opta only 32.6% of short corners led to a shot from that passage of play, and only 3.3% led to a goal.
Whereas for crosses that came directly into the box from a corner, those figures rise to 38.5% and 4.1%.
So unless the opposition has switched off and failed to cover the short corner, meaning we have a numerical advantage to exploit, why are we bothering with short corners?
That said - we've not missed a penalty now for 18 months and have scored 9 in a row in the Premier League.
On the other hand, we are third in the league and have scored the most goals. Not good enough - get Big Sam in now!We have the worst record for both attacking and defending set pieces this season
Oh no!!
Anyway...
I guess this doesn't account for the ball going all the way back to the last man/keeper and both teams effectively resetting?
I did deliberately say "...in the premier league" .I beg to differ.
I was at Charlton.
And the FA Cup semi final
When does a set piece stop being a set piece and start being open play? After the first header? Flick on plus shot? Rebound? Third or fourth pass on a short corner?
I ask mainly because, although we probably didn't score a set piece goal on Sunday we would not have equalised without the corner that proceeded it.
Whipped in with pace, with use of the in-step. Players need a ball they can attack. Not floated, not cut across ( Solly )Delivery. 100% delivery. Pace and precision gets it done everyday. Seen enough of Ward-Prowse, TAA to know this to be true. We have decent headers of the ball at the club. Delivery… meh.
HmmmmmmmmWe have one, Nick Stanley.
Were those the seasons where we scored 34, and 35 goals - in total in the PL ?Whipped in with pace, with use of the in-step. Players need a ball they can attack. Not floated, not cut across ( Solly )
We seem to have moved away from the ' heady ' days of Dunk/Duffy/Hemed/Murray when every set piece was greeted with a degree of anticipation. Now, it seems a surprise if we ever get anything. Igor's miss v Athens was the norm. Good ball in, perfectly positioned, mis-timed/mis-directed finish ( and that is being kind )