FC Bayern München 2013–14

riki_mo
riki_mo
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Pristupio: 06.08.2006.
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20. travnja 2014. u 09:06

Tactical analysis: Bayern’s improvements and weaknesses in Braunschweig

By on 19 April, 2014
 

Arsenal Bayern analysisPep Guardiola finally fixed, on Saturday against Braunschweig, some of the tactical problems found in recent Bayern games. Yet, the team’s central midfield remained vulnerable and the passing game isn’t up to par.

Tactical points

Thankfully, Pep Guardiola abandoned his “full-backs in the middle” tactic from the start of the game. You can see Philipp Lahm and Jérôme Boateng working wide, near the lines early on. They didn’t hang around the middle of the pitch when attacking either.

wide full-backs

There was much less “let’s bunch up the middle and produce nothing”, too. Look at the average position of the players during the game. More classic formation.

wide

Another improvement is better use of the offside trap, an important tool to prevent attackers from becoming dangerous. In a very short time span, the defence used it smartly. On the following play, Dante goes reads the upcoming pass correctly and comes forward just in time.

Offside trap

You cheeky bugger

Here is a bittersweet play. You can see Bayern trying to shake off the tiki taka, attacking in more direct fashion. Running forward and preparing a pass for Franck Ribéry to go forward and score.

Before Ribéry

But it felt like Ribéry thought “yes, we have to walk the ball towards the goal”. In a clear shooting situation, he elects to pass to Robben on the right. The play gets broken up by a defender.

Ribéry

What were you thinking?

After Ribéry

Stopped

Tactical mistakes kept making their way into the Bayern game. Our central midfield remained weak. Here, you can see players late and disorganised, unable to prevent an attack by the worst team in the league.

midfield

So much space to work with in the middle

And then, the central defence doesn’t cover the attacker. Javi’s fault in this case.

Header

Close call

Part of the problem, in the last few games, has been Bastian Schweinsteiger’s play. Look at this. He is not in the right position to hold the midfield there, being besides a player instead of being behind him. The Braunschweing guy receives a pass, accelerates and goes past Schweini to create a scoring chance. This also is a problem.

Schweinsteiger

Wrong position

An important part of Bayern’s attacking tactics is having strong wings. I don’t think you need a long lecture to know it. Well, the team doesn’t have that, at the moment, on the left side. Franck Ribéry doesn’t want to “go into” one-on-one situations. He avoids them like the plague. This is a problem.

Ribéry

“I don’t wanna do this”

Braunschweig was playing rough football. One of the rare players who were ready for a fight was Pierre-Émile Hojbjerg. The French-Danish giant wasn’t intimidated, unlike his mates.

Hojbjerg

The element that bothered me the most, however, was the passing game. On numerous occasions, it felt like the players had no idea where their mates were going. On the following play, Ribéry sends the ball behind everyone, surprising even the Braunschweig players, who were happy to intercept.

Ribéry

Same thing a few minutes later. While we know Franck Ribéry for his magic dribbles, taking the ball in the crowd and threading it to another Red, he didn’t do that on Saturday. He rather went for the extra dose of tiki taka… sending the ball behind everyone for a turnover.

Ribéry

Aiming for someone specifically?

Didn’t I say, earlier, that using the wings was one of Bayern’s strengths? One more time, not properly used. Claudio Pizarro somehow thought that sending the ball directly to a Braunschweig player was the right move to make, while curling a pass forward to Ribéry would have been the thing to do.

Pizarro pass

Not trying to nutmeg, are you?

Thankfully, Bayern improved much in the second half. Attacking from wider positions than in previous games paid dividends.

Attack

Looking good

But then again, you have to take the bull by the horns when challenged. Robben refuses to do so a few seconds later.

Robben

About to go down instead of fighting

How Bayern scored

1:0 Pizarro. Great work from Mario Götze to create the chance. He shows patience and attracts more attention than he should from the defenders, to send the ball through to Pizarro. The latter’s finishing skills made this a nice goal.

Pizzaro goal

Fooled ya

2:0 Mandzukic. This is one of those execution goals. Amazing pass forward by Lukas Raeder, who places it perfectly for Mandzukic, who sprints forward, takes the ball to the left and puts it past Sippel.

Mandzukic goal

Fun to watch, but not very tactical!

Statistical points

My man of the match
Mario Götze. A great assist, 4 dribbles, 18 duels won, topping the team with 76 runs, also earning free kicks.
Dante
While not perfect, he improved. 4 tackles, 4 effective clearances and many plays where he intervened to prevent danger.
Pierre-Émile Hojbjerg
He gave a decent account of himself with two shots, one on target, 3 dribbles and trying to get a result the whole time.
Passing accuracy
Around 20% of passes were misplaced. Bastian Schweinsteiger and Jérôme Boateng were the worst, respectively with 25 and 21 that went to the wrong place.

How do we illustrate that? Two graphics from FourFourTwo. Passes to the attacking third were not very good this time, as shown below.

Passing

A rarity

Secondly, look at the passes from the left-back position. That was Jérôme Boateng. His long balls were unusually inaccurate today. A rare thing.

Boateng passing

Another rarity

Braunschweig fouling
How rough were they playing? 21 fouls called in total. Only two yellow cards, though.
Few crosses
Just four crosses on target, including just one from the left.
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riki_mo
riki_mo
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Pristupio: 06.08.2006.
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20. travnja 2014. u 09:51

Bayern Munich confident before Europe's clásico against Real Madrid

Pep Guardiola
Bayern Munich manager Pep Guardiola won nine and drew four of his matches against Real Madrid while at Barcelona. Photograph: Nigel Treblin/AFP/Getty Images

Pep Guardiola on one side, Real Madrid on the other. There should really be only one word for it. But in this special case, there are three. "The Clásico de Europa is back," wrote Marca after Bayern Munich were paired with the Spanish giants in the semi-final draw in Nyon. It is the 11th European Cup/Champions League tie between these clubs in 37 years, the sixth semi-final (the Germans have won four) and the results of this epic series have often come to define eras. Now, Guardiola's involvement adds a layer of intrigue that almost feels like an overkill: there's been enough history and histrionics between Die Königlichen (the royals, as Madrid are deferentially referred to in Germany) and the Kings of the Bundesliga without Barcelona coming into it as well.

Familiarity has, strangely enough, bred content in Bavaria. Carlo Ancelotti's side were widely regarded as the best opponents for the Reds before Luis Figo picked them out of the glass ball in Switzerland; the sense of excitement bordered on euphoria when Madrid were confirmed as the opponents. Thomas Müller was even asked whether the Spaniards represented "the dream draw". The German international tried to laugh off the suggestion ("I was under the impression they didn't do dream draws in the semi-final," he said) but the optimism among the supporters and the wider public was unprecedented. Madrid's meek 2-0 defeat in the second quarter-final leg against Borussia Dortmund, coupled with the view that their attacking game suited Bayern much more than the attritional style of the other two semi-finalists, Chelsea and Atlético, has made Madrid "appear like a footballing lightweight and rank outsider", Der Spiegel noted, with a degree of suspicion.

Bayern's improvement since their last meeting with Madrid, at the same stage in 2012, goes some way to explaining the holders' confidence. Then, they scraped through on penalties, only to lose to Chelsea in the Allianz Arena in the same cruel manner. The following year they won the treble in thrilling style, and they are on course to repeat that feat in the current season – as are Madrid – after winning the league in record time and advancing to the German Cup final in Berlin. Guardiola's excellent record against Madrid (he won nine and drew four out of 15 clásicos) is naturally considered an advantage, too, but more important than the results is perhaps the way they were achieved. Barcelona's 6-2 win at the Bernabéu in May 2009 was the harbinger of the team's domination and of Guardiola's rise to the very top. Legend has it that the young coach had watched hours and hours of Madrid videos before identifying a glaring gap in front of the back four. Lionel Messi was deployed as a "false 9". That night, two superstars were born.

The 43-year-old's ways of winning at Bayern might not have been as consistently beautiful as advertised but his obsessive attention to detail has seen him find a way in every single game that his team needed to win this season. Exploiting the opposition's defensive frailties has been his speciality. Madrid, the Dortmund games have shown, have quite a few.

The addition of this much-coveted manager to a squad full of quality in the summer has also freed Bayern from the inferiority complex they had developed during frequent meetings with Florentino Pérez's galácticos in the early 2000s. Uli Hoeness derided them as "a circus, a monkey theatre that has nothing do to with football," when Madrid signed David Beckham in 2003. His team saw themselves as the anti-galácticos, a bunch of good honest pros, brought together with financial prudence in mind. On the pitch, this ideological chasm used to be accompanied by plenty of bad blood and was often mirrored in the tactics: Bayern sought to negate the lack of superstars with intensely committed performances of robust defending and unashamed counter-attacking football.

The distaste for the Perez project might have been keenly felt at the time but Bayern's increased spending in the wake of their move to the Allianz Arena has since betrayed their underlying emotion as that of simple, raw envy. Whereas Hoeness had to be content with amassing the best of German talent, Madrid bought all the international ones. They were – and still are – the Bayern of Europe.

That the Reds have more often than not been able to overcome that deficit of individual class, especially at home – Madrid have one measly draw to show from 10 trips to Munich – has been a source of immense pride. The club revel in the status of the Spaniards' official bogey team. The merchandising department quickly rushed out a "Bestia Negra Reloaded" T-shirt a few days ago and the Basque midfielder Javier Martínez reported that his team-mates from the Spanish national team did not look forward to facing Bayern. "Of the three possible semi-final opponents, we like them least," admitted the former Madrid striker Emilio Butragueno. The ticket sales in the respective cities seem to confirm differing degrees of appetite. The Bernabéu was still not sold out five days ahead of the clash whereas in Munich, Bayern stopped taking orders for the 25,000 available non-season tickets when the number of requests topped 290,000 on 6 April.

Football, however, has a tendency to wreak havoc with assumptions. Paul Breitner's categorical verdict ("Bayern will go through if they play at their normal level," the former player for both clubs said) has started to sound a lot more negative in the wake of two Bundesliga defeats (at Augsburg and at home to Dortmund) that Guardiola blamed on himself.

The "if" is now the imperative word. The manager's honesty in declaring the league over has seen the "March champions" lose their focus and rhythm. "We have to get out of our comfort zone," said the sporting director, Matthias Sammer. There's also doubt over the availability of keeper Manuel Neuer, who is nursing a calf injury. Subsequently, the mood in Munich has shifted over the course of the last few days, away from cheerful buoyancy and towards a more realistic appraisal of the challenge ahead.

Guardiola has been trying to manage expectations after he had stressed his ambition to outdo Jupp Heynckes ("we have to win five trophies") this season. The point was made that Madrid might be more vulnerable in defence but were also best positioned to hurt Bayern at the other end.

"Together with Dortmund, they are the best counterattacking team in the world," he warned in perfect German last week. "If we don't control Gareth Bale and Cristiano Ronaldo – wir sind kaputt."

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riki_mo
riki_mo
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Pristupio: 06.08.2006.
Poruka: 36.861
20. travnja 2014. u 11:09

Pep slikovinica od jučer:

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Blm2UayIYAAgb2v.jpg

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BlmPiweIMAA1Mqs.jpg

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BlmPWVHIIAA0A-I.jpg

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BlmO5idIQAAziKI.jpg

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BlmPINJIIAAncbc.jpg



a do pobjede je trebalo i preskakati prepreke...

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BlmquFJIgAAsg01.jpg
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riki_mo
riki_mo
Većinski vlasnik Foruma
Pristupio: 06.08.2006.
Poruka: 36.861
20. travnja 2014. u 14:03


Slika s treninga, znači sve bi trebalo biti ok za srijedu:

slika



U trening proces vratili su se i Alaba i Contento...


https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BlqZ9YwCUAIazT5.jpg
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nido
nido
Mali dioničar
Pristupio: 19.05.2010.
Poruka: 8.600
20. travnja 2014. u 19:11
***Gianni Infantino, najpoznatija talijansko-švicarska verzija loto-djevojke - Saša Ibrulj----///Svanut ce taj dan...-///-***Cenosillicaphobia: Strah od prazne krigle piva ---"Mamicu pronevjeritelju, odlazi iz svetinje!!!"---
Anadolu Efes
Anadolu Efes
Mali dioničar
Pristupio: 08.04.2011.
Poruka: 9.330
20. travnja 2014. u 20:25
Šteta, baš bi legao Realu da pokrije Ronaldovo šetanje.. Decima bi bila sigurna k'o lova u švicarskoj banci..
Za Dinamo bez Mamica!!
Obrisan korisnik
Obrisan korisnik
Pristupio: 08.03.2011.
Poruka: 6.398
20. travnja 2014. u 21:16
ovo za 40 milijuna ne piše nigdje, izmišljotina na razini vijesti Modrića u Arsenalu
riki_mo
riki_mo
Većinski vlasnik Foruma
Pristupio: 06.08.2006.
Poruka: 36.861
21. travnja 2014. u 16:51

50m

Re: David Luiz / Bayern Bayern have been scouting him, but now main-priority is another left back. Badstuber back in summer after injury

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riki_mo
riki_mo
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Poruka: 36.861
21. travnja 2014. u 18:15

The Last time Guardiola went to the Bernabeu, he won 3 - 1 | The last time Guardiola played against Real Madrid he lost 2-1


Kroos "Guardiola has brought me fresh ideas, Personally I'm enjoying myself a lot because that approach fits the way I play"

Kroos "Guardiola has different ideas from other coaches,"

Kroos "We have flexible players and I enjoy that because it fits in with my own way of playing."

Kroos "When we lose the ball we're told to retrieve it in the following three to five seconds."

Kroos "That's the case for every player – you have to run the extra yards."

Alaba "I do whatever Guardiola demands of me. I am involved in more attacking situations down the wing and through the middle,"

Alaba "I have gained even more confidence on the ball. I do whatever the coach demands of me."
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riki_mo
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21. travnja 2014. u 18:17


Real Madrid Bayern tactical preview: how to beat the white machine

By on 21 April, 2014
 

Real Madrid Bayern tactical preview: FC Bayern faces its most dangerous opponent of the season on Wednesday when going to the Santiago Bernabeu for the first leg of its Champions League semi-final. Real is an equal that has a 50-50 chance of beating us.

If you are a regular reader of this blog, you already have gone through our first look at Real Madrid. With that already done, let’s focus on the tactics, exploring the ways of beating Los Blancos.

Real Madrid, a bigger beast than before

Injuries: Arbeloa, Jesé

Gone are the days when José “the special one” Mourinho would be there to force the Merengues to adopt a 4-2-3-1 that doesn’t fit them well. Having taken over last summer, Italian coach Carlo Ancelotti has converted the formation into a 4-3-3 that keeps everyone happy. It has superb balance, including a number of solid attacking players, being able to retain the ball against lesser sides, while preserving the best counterattack in the world.

Given Real’s squad situation and goalkeeping selections, we should see this lineup.

Real Madrid (4-3-3)

Casillas

Carvajal, Pepe, Ramos, Coentrao

Illarramendi, Alonso, Modric

Di Maria, Benzema, Bale

 

Let’s get a couple of things out of the way quickly. Ancelotti has been rotating his keepers, using Diego Lopez in La Liga, while keeping Iker Casillas for the Champions League and Copa del Rey games. We should therefore face San Iker.

Secondly, Cristiano Ronaldo is recovering from an injury. Should he play? If you are coaching Real, the answer is no. If it represents a risk, go with the attacking trident featuring Angel Di Maria, Karim Benzema and Gareth Bale. The three have blazing speed and play off each other marvelously. They have great balance. The risk is not worth it and Ronaldo tends to make the attack revolve around him. I would compare this to Bayern with only Franck Ribéry or Arjen Robben on the wings. You are better off with both or without both, instead of having just one. Because you depend too much on the sole star winger if he doesn’t have his counterpart on other side.

Real had other injuries this season. Defensive midfielder Sami Khedira has been on the sidelines for months. Marcelo is on the road to recovery, allowing the weaker Fabio Coentrao to start the games. Gareth Bale currently has the flu. But nothing says he will not play.

Burning counterattacks

Having faced a possessive and Pep-driven FC Barcelona for years, Real Madrid has been well-drilled by Mourinho. They have learned to defend with energy and pace, waiting for the mistake to launch the most dangerous counters in the world. With their high technical ability, they can also afford to do this against Bayern.

Real doesn’t park the bus, but it deploys smartly when it has time to regroup. One pattern I noticed recently has been the two banks of four, ready to take on the possession-based passing game.

defending

Not that easy to penetrate.

Ancelotti would be mad not to instruct his players to do the same against Bayern, waiting for the occasion to stop the ball carrier or break up a pass. Defenders such as Pepe and Sergio Ramos are aggressive. If Howard Webb keeps his cards in his pocket, they will use their physical style to take Bayern players off the ball.

Real’s defending also features some counterpressing after losing the ball. We know the method, which was used very effectively at Bayern last season.

counterpressing

Going no further

When they do gain the ball, the whites use a lightning transition game with one-touch long passes, to send a guy one-on-one with the keeper. Ball carrying by Luka Modric and fast passing by Xabi Alonso help to fuel them. They love wide positions, which allow them to run fast and spread the defence.

Real Madrid transition

Di Maria blazing past Barcelona’s defence to take a perfect Benzema pass.

Real Madrid transition

Benzema ready to strike

Real Madrid transition

Bale is not worth 100 millions, but he’s incredibly fast.

Gareth Bale

I mean, really fast

Press and they will break

While Madrid’s transition game is deadly, it can be prevented. The first and most obvious thing to do is not losing the ball stupidly. It would give them an incredible advantage.

Then, you have to put them under pressure. Borussia Dortmund recently showed the way in their Champions League tie, by taking away the first pass in the middle.

pressing

Hesitating

pressing

Rattled by the high line and losing the ball.

The best case scenario is to force them to send a long pass forward towards the flanks. This way, full-backs and pull back quickly, not allowing the Merengues to charge in the middle, especially against central defenders.

long ball

If you play your cards right, you will get a bonus such as a giveaway.

giveaway

Thank you

Great, you got the ball. Now, where to go with it. It is not a state secret that the man you should attack at Real Madrid is central defender Pepe. This guy is a nuclear accident waiting to happen. He makes so many mistakes when you take him on that it should be a joy for Ribéry, Robben and Mandzukic to ridicule him.

Pepe

Poor coverage in the area on set pieces.

Pepe

Late sliding tackles, taking everyone down.

Pepe

Not protecting his keeper

Pepe

Taking the man, not the ball.

Pepe

Failing to cover his man

Dribble and run at Pepe all day long. If you can avoid being injured by his nutty tackles, you will go past him and shoot on Casillas. His mates aren’t as terrible, but they often display weakness when challenged. Sergio also has mistakes in him.

Sergio Ramos

Man or ball?

Ramos

Lovely pass, Sergio.

In the same fashion, Alonso may be a great passer but you can also beat him. And when you do, he will go for the professional foul, conceding a free kick.

Alonso

At right-back, Daniel Carvajal is harder to beat and he may match Ribéry’s efforts. But his left-back counterpart Fabio Coentrao is only a makeshift solution. Arjen Robben should have fun against him.

Coentrao

Not attacking the ball.

Bayern, two minutes before midnight

Injuries: Thiago, Shaqiri, Starke

Unless FC Bayern turns things around, the writing is on the wall. I presently give a 50% chance to Madrid because the Bavarians have been poor for several weeks. They have to raise their game. A lot.

Pep has to accept that his tiki taka is not likely to work against Madrid, especially in its recently hesitant fashion. The coach has to favour more direct attacks because losing the ball before the last third of the pitch will expose Bayern to the fastest counters it has seen all year. Plus, Real’s technical ability will most probably rule out 80% possession. We have to accept that this game could have Bayern phases and Real phases.

The Bavarians have to fix their recent shortcomings in central midfield to stop the counter. Bastian Schweinsteiger must improve his play and Pep Guardiola has to start Javi Martinez alongside Basti, while Philipp Lahm should handle the right-back position. There is no way around it. Lahm cannot be put in the middle while Rafinha cannot be trusted against Bale on the flank. FCB needs to have its best players in the right positions!

Key battles should take place. Lahm has to contain Bale with his pace and superior defending skills. David Alaba will have his hands full with Di Maria, forcing him to be more focused than in recent games. With appropriate protection, Jérôme Boateng and Dante should do fine in central defence. But Pep has to provide it to them.

If Pep goes with Javi and Schweinsteiger as double six, they will take control of the midfield and have more physicality to offer than a Lahm-Schweini or Kroos-Schweini combination.

I also want to see Thomas Müller starting at playmaker. What the team needs right now is someone who can disrupt Real’s defence, not a Kroos who will try to make passes do all the work. With a Müller-Mandzukic combo at the heart of the attack, along with Ribéry and Robben on the flanks, FCB will have much more bite.

Mandzukic has to start at striker. His air game is much needed to beat Pepe and Ramos into submission. Well, they are physically strong enough to resist against almost anyone, but you must have a guy who can draw the fouls as striker.

Luigi’s and Müller’s defensive role also is important in this tie. As suggested above, choking Real’s first pass could be a decisive tactic. Both guys are much better at it than the other Bayern attackers.

Should we worry about central defence? Not if this game plan is applied by the team. Prevent danger in the middle, force the Bale-Benzema-Di Maria to work on the sides and contain them with Lahm’s and Alaba’s speed.

Manuel Neuer should start. He trained with the ball on Sunday and the preventive measures seem to have worked.

Can Bayern win this? I’m not sure. I predict a tie because I believe Pep will fail to adopt the right plan.

Possible lineup

FC Bayern (4-2-3-1)

Neuer

Lahm, Boateng, Dante, Alaba

Javi, Schweinsteiger

Robben, Müller, Ribéry

Mandzukic

Game details

Matchday: Champions League semi-final, first leg

Time: 23 April, 20:45 CET

Location: Santiago Bernabeu, Madrid

TV listings

On two yellow cards: Schweinsteiger, Mandzukic, Ramos, Illarramendi, Alonso

Referee: Howard Webb

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