Andre Villas-Boas, at the outset of his coaching career at Chelsea FC, spoke with English daily Telegraph
about his footballing philosophy – the way he thinks football should be
played. What follows is a collection of his observations of FC
Barcelona’s football – their tactics, their players. The full interview
can be read here.
Villas-Boas begins with: “There
are more spaces in football than people think. Even if you play against
a low block team, you immediately get half of the pitch. And after
that, in attacking midfield, you can provoke the opponent with the ball,
provoke him to move forward or sideways and open up a space. But many
players can’t understand the game.
“They can’t think
about or read the game. Things have become too easy for football
players: high salaries, a good life, with a maximum of five hours work a
day and so they can’t concentrate, can’t think about the game.
Barcelona’s players are completely the opposite. Their players are
permanently thinking about the game, about their movement, about how to
provoke their opponent with the position of the ball.”
Talking
about the importance of ball circulation in the attacking organisation
of a top team, he cites the example of Barcelona’s game:
“Well,
it’s essential to every team. Every team want to score. That’s the
purpose of the game. Barcelona play horizontally only after a vertical
pass. See how the centre backs go out with ball, how they construct the
play. They open up (moving wider), so that the right or left-back can
join the midfield line.
“Guardiola has talked about it:
the centre backs provoke the opponent, invite them forward then, if the
opponent applies quick pressure the ball goes to the other central
defender, and this one makes a vertical pass. Not to the midfielders,
who have their back turned to the ball, but to those moving between
lines, Andres Iniesta or Lionel Messi, or even directly to the striker.
Then they play the second ball with short lay-offs, either to the
wingers who have cut inside or the midfielders, who now have the game in
front of them. They have an enormous capacity not to lose the ball, to
do things with an unbelievable precision.
“Another thing
about Barcelona, there is always a full-back who arrives earlier in the
attack, the other stays in position initially but then progressively
joins the attack, as the ball circulates on the other side of the pitch,
so he can be a surprise element. When you least expect he arrives. He
chooses the perfect timing for the overlap.”