Gutter Boy
Tim Sherwood
It looks like he turns it up in 'big' games.
He never has in the past. He's a textbook flat track bully usually.
It looks like he turns it up in 'big' games.
So CL isn't big games then because he's not turned up for those.It looks like he turns it up in 'big' games.
He is very fast. Often he will sprint upfield with great pace, skipping along from back to front and back again like Alistair Brownlee's brother.his mobility and ability to really press and track is not up to say the standard of Lamela/Son when they are on it and all the coaching in the world won't change that. It is just is what it is, he is fairly ...slow by comparison to the other players around him and quite often I feel that he is the weak link defensively once we have lost the ball.
He does cut off lanes, but I feel now that teams know he isn't going to tackle they have time to play round him. He needs to tackle occasionally to keep them 9n their toes.He is very fast. Often he will sprint upfield with great pace, skipping along from back to front and back again like Alistair Brownlee's brother.
He cuts off passing lanes rather than tackling. It is not as telegenic as Lamela's diving in. See Michael Carrick.
He usually wins furthest run' and 'most interceptions'.
Eriksen? Flat track bully? How utterly ridiculous.He never has in the past. He's a textbook flat track bully usually.
You can have a player who'll unlock a defence (whether it's by dribbling or passing), or you can have a grafter who presses like a maniac. To have one guy do both is the sign of a top top t'riffic player, e.g. Modric or Hazard (when on form). Our Christian's very much the former, but that's not to say he doesn't put the yards in. And his interception stats are very good.
Besides which, we'd be less "Spurs" without him. Audere est facere and all that. When we're playing well, I see Eriksen as a sort of attacking pivot, the glue that binds Kane, Alli and Lamela together.
I agree, but I'd point out that Eriksen actually is capable of doing both - he grafts extremely well and he can (when on form) unlock defenses. It's what makes him potentially WC for me - I've accepted that he won't ever be as devastatingly effectual for us as Ozil currently is for Arsenal, but that isn't because of any limitation of his either technically or tactically. In my view, Eriksen's right up there with Ozil on both counts. The difference is that Ozil, when not on the ball, just drifts around looking for space a lot of the time - it's what allows him to be a second or two ahead of play when compared to most players on the pitch. Eriksen grafts a hell of a lot harder off the ball, which reduces his time and space on the ball when he does get it. The bad news is that this means (necessarily) a reduction in attacking output relative to less defensively-inclined players - the good news is that this potentially makes Eriksen that rarest of things, a footballer who can both defend and create in equal measure. With Ozil, you're always going to have to accommodate him in your side to an extent - you make a tradeoff between the team's defensive solidity and its attacking intent, while hoping that Ozil's undoubted threat keeps teams pinned back and negates the somewhat looser press/defensive unit higher up the field that arises when he's out looking for space. Most managers would happily make that trade-off, of course (and Wenger seems to have settled on matching Ozil's less strenuous defensive efforts with Sanchez's relentless harrying/pressing high up) - but the really system-intensive ones, the Guardiolas, Bielsas, Klopps, (Pochettinos) and Mourinhos of this world, they might not.
But with Eriksen, if (if) he can become a bit more consistent with the creative aspect of his game, you're looking at a player every manager in the world would kill to have, without exceptions. He'll have no weaknesses in his game from a tactical standpoint - he'd fit a team that presses with discipline/sits back as easily as he'd fit one that just plays (a Redknapp side, for instance). And he'd be capable of creating, scoring and defending in equal measure - in the future, he could even be played deeper than he's currently being played and not look out of place. For me, those sorts of players are just *rarer* than the Ozil type of pure playmakers/forwards. And those sorts of players get their 'world class' tag not from their skill alone, but from the complete set of options they offer any manager, which completely (imo) nullifies their minor individual faults in productivity compared to the less involved #10s. They'll still score and assist a *lot*, but they'd also offer enough defensively that the team looks more solid for having them in than it would if they were out. And that makes them priceless.
Eriksen could be that sort of player. And I'm personally really happy to have him, because of this potential. As you've said, he's sort of like Modric in that regard - and I really do believe that he can become as good as Modric was, if given time. After all, Modric was 23 going on 24 when he signed for us, and prior to 2008 he'd spent his entire career in Croatia with Zagreb - by contrast, Eriksen's still only 24 now, and his history has involved playing for Ajax in the Eredivisie and the CL, and then in the PL, EL and CL for us - undoubtedly a harder challenge than what Modric had to face at the corresponding point in his career.
Excellent post, if a little, shall we say, expansive. It's about time we had someone eulogising our Christian.I agree, but I'd point out that Eriksen actually is capable of doing both - he grafts extremely well and he can (when on form) unlock defenses. It's what makes him potentially WC for me - I've accepted that he won't ever be as devastatingly effectual for us as Ozil currently is for Arsenal, but that isn't because of any limitation of his either technically or tactically. In my view, Eriksen's right up there with Ozil on both counts. The difference is that Ozil, when not on the ball, just drifts around looking for space a lot of the time - it's what allows him to be a second or two ahead of play when compared to most players on the pitch. Eriksen grafts a hell of a lot harder off the ball, which reduces his time and space on the ball when he does get it. The bad news is that this means (necessarily) a reduction in attacking output relative to less defensively-inclined players - the good news is that this potentially makes Eriksen that rarest of things, a footballer who can both defend and create in equal measure. With Ozil, you're always going to have to accommodate him in your side to an extent - you make a tradeoff between the team's defensive solidity and its attacking intent, while hoping that Ozil's undoubted threat keeps teams pinned back and negates the somewhat looser press/defensive unit higher up the field that arises when he's out looking for space. Most managers would happily make that trade-off, of course (and Wenger seems to have settled on matching Ozil's less strenuous defensive efforts with Sanchez's relentless harrying/pressing high up) - but the really system-intensive ones, the Guardiolas, Bielsas, Klopps, (Pochettinos) and Mourinhos of this world, they might not.
But with Eriksen, if (if) he can become a bit more consistent with the creative aspect of his game, you're looking at a player every manager in the world would kill to have, without exceptions. He'll have no weaknesses in his game from a tactical standpoint - he'd fit a team that presses with discipline/sits back as easily as he'd fit one that just plays (a Redknapp side, for instance). And he'd be capable of creating, scoring and defending in equal measure - in the future, he could even be played deeper than he's currently being played and not look out of place. For me, those sorts of players are just *rarer* than the Ozil type of pure playmakers/forwards. And those sorts of players get their 'world class' tag not from their skill alone, but from the complete set of options they offer any manager, which completely (imo) nullifies their minor individual faults in productivity compared to the less involved #10s. They'll still score and assist a *lot*, but they'd also offer enough defensively that the team looks more solid for having them in than it would if they were out. And that makes them priceless.
Eriksen could be that sort of player. And I'm personally really happy to have him, because of this potential. As you've said, he's sort of like Modric in that regard - and I really do believe that he can become as good as Modric was, if given time. After all, Modric was 23 going on 24 when he signed for us, and prior to 2008 he'd spent his entire career in Croatia with Zagreb - by contrast, Eriksen's still only 24 now, and his history has involved playing for Ajax in the Eredivisie and the CL, and then in the PL, EL and CL for us - undoubtedly a harder challenge than what Modric had to face at the corresponding point in his career.
I agree, but I'd point out that Eriksen actually is capable of doing both - he grafts extremely well and he can (when on form) unlock defenses. It's what makes him potentially WC for me - I've accepted that he won't ever be as devastatingly effectual for us as Ozil currently is for Arsenal, but that isn't because of any limitation of his either technically or tactically. In my view, Eriksen's right up there with Ozil on both counts. The difference is that Ozil, when not on the ball, just drifts around looking for space a lot of the time - it's what allows him to be a second or two ahead of play when compared to most players on the pitch. Eriksen grafts a hell of a lot harder off the ball, which reduces his time and space on the ball when he does get it. The bad news is that this means (necessarily) a reduction in attacking output relative to less defensively-inclined players - the good news is that this potentially makes Eriksen that rarest of things, a footballer who can both defend and create in equal measure. With Ozil, you're always going to have to accommodate him in your side to an extent - you make a tradeoff between the team's defensive solidity and its attacking intent, while hoping that Ozil's undoubted threat keeps teams pinned back and negates the somewhat looser press/defensive unit higher up the field that arises when he's out looking for space. Most managers would happily make that trade-off, of course (and Wenger seems to have settled on matching Ozil's less strenuous defensive efforts with Sanchez's relentless harrying/pressing high up) - but the really system-intensive ones, the Guardiolas, Bielsas, Klopps, (Pochettinos) and Mourinhos of this world, they might not.
But with Eriksen, if (if) he can become a bit more consistent with the creative aspect of his game, you're looking at a player every manager in the world would kill to have, without exceptions. He'll have no weaknesses in his game from a tactical standpoint - he'd fit a team that presses with discipline/sits back as easily as he'd fit one that just plays (a Redknapp side, for instance). And he'd be capable of creating, scoring and defending in equal measure - in the future, he could even be played deeper than he's currently being played and not look out of place. For me, those sorts of players are just *rarer* than the Ozil type of pure playmakers/forwards. And those sorts of players get their 'world class' tag not from their skill alone, but from the complete set of options they offer any manager, which completely (imo) nullifies their minor individual faults in productivity compared to the less involved #10s. They'll still score and assist a *lot*, but they'd also offer enough defensively that the team looks more solid for having them in than it would if they were out. And that makes them priceless.
Eriksen could be that sort of player. And I'm personally really happy to have him, because of this potential. As you've said, he's sort of like Modric in that regard - and I really do believe that he can become as good as Modric was, if given time. After all, Modric was 23 going on 24 when he signed for us, and prior to 2008 he'd spent his entire career in Croatia with Zagreb - by contrast, Eriksen's still only 24 now, and his history has involved playing for Ajax in the Eredivisie and the CL, and then in the PL, EL and CL for us - undoubtedly a harder challenge than what Modric had to face at the corresponding point in his career.
Sorry, but I just don't see that defensive side anymore. The game is passing him by.
And he's stopped following passes up, he plays a forward pass and stops. Used to be he would at least keep level and occasionally go past the ball. Not now.
Not sure if he's struggling with his role or confidence but it's not happening at all for him.
Poch needs to work the same magic he worked with the moose.
He's had games this season where he made more interceptions/recoveries than any other player in the league on the week-end ...
Eriksen, like Modric/Carrick/etc, are types of player you have to spend a lot of time watching them when someone else has the ball to fully grasp impact/influence on game.
He's had games this season where he made more interceptions/recoveries than any other player in the league on the week-end ...
Eriksen, like Modric/Carrick/etc, are types of player you have to spend a lot of time watching them when someone else has the ball to fully grasp impact/influence on game.
I thunk I know when you're traying to sway - and I very agree.Twice yesterday erisken ended up as our last man and then was the player instigating the attack
I thought he relished the freedom and looked much more like the okay we know he can be
Yep PLAYERI thunk I know when you're traying to sway - and I very agree.