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WAR!
……Barcelona rediscovered their style last week,
but do they have the substance to win at Old Trafford today?
By Sun News Publishing
Tuesday,
April 29, 2008
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Photo: Sun News Publishing
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It is the reason often given for why Americans will never
fall for football en masse. They struggle, the argument runs
to see the beauty in soccer’s goalless draws. Those
most influential Americans, the Glazers, may have appreciated
something of beauty in the 90 minutes Manchester United shared
with Barcelona at the Nou Camp last Wednesday night, but watching
as ever from a distance, they would be obliged to admit the
beauty had mainly been Barca’s.
Most United staff involved owned up to that.
“You have to say Barca had most of the possession,”
said Carlos Tevez, whose satisfaction at gaining a place in
the starting line-up would be weighed up against the requirement
that he’s ready to numb most of his attacking instincts.
Earlier on, Tevez would find himself making a challenge on
an accelerating Samuel Eto’o in his own penalty area
as effectively as the last United defender.
“The manager told me that I had to play a lot deeper,”
explained the Argentine striker, “and chase Yaya Toure.”
Toure needed monitoring and stood out even with Tevez on his
tail, but that would be true of each member of Barcelona’s
midfield, whose elegance at distributing the ball and at carrying
it forward reminded an anxious majority of the 95,000 at the
Nou Camp just why Barca have been the most pleasing-to-the-eye
of all the European Cup winners this side of the millennium.
The Real Madrid of six years ago may have had more individual
panache, Milan, more sustained success, but the club that
Frank Rijkaard took from non-starters in the Champions League
when he took over as head coach in 2003, and three seasons
later had them as its winners, have embraced most thoroughly
the idea that success can and should be built on having the
highest share of what happens in open play.
Sometimes, it can leave Barcelona looking as if they perversely
ignore the options that their competitors make more and more
their priority. Like height and muscle, only one member of
Barcelona’s front six last Wednesday stands over 6ft
or like set-pieces. Barca have not scored a goal from a direct
free kick since early November, a statistic that above all,
makes them remember what Ronaldinho, now discarded and waiting
to move on in the summer, used to be relied on to do even
if he was having a quiet day.
Barcelona have been obliged recently to wistfully remember
what they used to be, when they combined successive Spanish
League titles with the 2006 Champions League. In the first
leg against United, they exchanged possession so clearly and
pushed forward with far greater purpose than they had for
all of 2008. One obvious cause was the return to the starting
XI after six weeks out with an injury of the Portugal international,
Deco, a footballer always making himself available to be the
third point in any triangle of passes.
Lionel Messi also started his first European match since early
March, and his cute sombrero, as the Spanish call the trick,
where you lob the ball over an opponent’s head and collect
it before it hits the grass on the other side, against Patrice
Evra, would be the evening’s Olé moment. The
United left-back was always aware that, that particular duel
would be among the game’s most scrutinised and he felt
pleased with the outcome.
“It was a big test for me,” said Evra, “soaring
reputations,” he added, “were not to be held in
awe. Even if Messi had played very well and I had played a
bad game, I’m not going to say, ‘Yeah, it’s
because your name is Messi’. Against a player like that,
the only special thing you do is just concentrate more.”
United’s strategy of contentment worked. Barcelona’s
bewitching football brought no goals and ultimately an incomplete
replica of the championship-winning football that the survivors
of the 2006 team, Rafa Marquez, Xavi, Deco, Andres Iniesta
and Eto’o, would recall. “Our players realised
that Barcelona always get a lot of possession of the ball,”
noted Sir Alex Ferguson, the United manager, “because
the Nou Camp is a big pitch and they always have a spare man
in midfield, which makes it difficult for opposing teams.
On Wednesday, they played Iniesta wide left and they never
normally do that but they did it because he could come off
the line and make an extra midfield player and that’s
why Wayne (Rooney) was playing wide on the right. They weren’t
bothered about having extra width on the left because Eric
Abidal would have eventually got up there, so that was something
we had to contend with. It’s been a strength of theirs
over the years and it’s how they have operated. They
get a lot of possession.”
For all their momentum, the runs and movements of those in
the final 20 yards would create little discomfort for Edwin
van der Sar, most of them anticipated by a United defence
missing Nemanja Vidic because of illness and without their
first-choice right-back, Gary Neville.
United, the best and most potent team in English football,
had been reshaped in the expectation that the momentum would
be Barcelona’s. Wes Brown and Owen Hargreaves occupied
positions they have become less accustomed with, as did Tevez
and Rooney. Cristiano Ronaldo can also be said not to have
been quite himself. He missed a goalscoring opportunity from
a dead-ball, his penalty off target.
“At this stage of the competition and playing against
the players in the match, you’re not always going to
play your own way and you have to adapt,” explained
Michael Carrick. “I thought the lads were brilliant
in what we did. It will be a different game in the next leg
of course.”
Some lessons had been absorbed from last year’s defeat
in the semi-final against Milan, where the first leg at Old
Trafford featured five goals, three for United and two for
Milan that the Italians would build into a comfortable aggregate
advantage when they met again in Italy.
“It’s hard to compare, but the performance in
Barcelona showed a different side,” said Carrick. “It
showed that when we haven’t got a lot of the ball, we
can see the game out and defend really well as a team. We
always have that threat with the players that we’ve
got, but in the game, it didn’t really click in a lot
of ways going forward. Coming to places like this you can’t
expect your own way all the time.”
Quite how much booty United can claim from a 0–0 in
the first leg away is another matter. Their own precedents
are mildly discouraging. The last time United could call themselves
defending European champions, in 2000, they went to Spain
for a quarter-final first leg and pronounced themselves satisfied
with a 0–0 draw at Real Madrid. They lost the Old Trafford
follow-up 3–2. Another quarterfinal trip to Monaco two
years earlier, finished without score and a 1–1 in the
return leg would be enough for the French team to progress.
The superstitious will also note with apprehension that of
the eight times United have appeared in the last four of European
Cups, six have marked the end of the line. The away-goals
rule was decisive when Bayer Leverkusen finished United’s
journey in the last but one of those semis in 2002.
A more expensive United, a more recognisable United, there
had been few sneers in Spain about the cagey posture this
swashbuckling club took at the Nou Camp, is expected at Old
Trafford, but the away-goals rule can prey on the mind.
The optimism around Barcelona is nourished by the idea that
an initial strike from Eto’o or Messi, or perhaps, the
teenager, Bojan Krkic or from Thierry Henry, for whom an evening
back on an English pitch may awaken some of the goalscoring
instincts that have deserted him for much of his first season
in Spain would double United’s workload.
Despite their lean recent form, Barcelona did manage to score
four goals in total in their past two away matches in Europe,
but most of the optimism from within Barca comes from the
fluency of their football on Wednesday, the sight of old routines
recovered, the idea that the most globally watched match of
their season so far had recaptured some of what their club
likes to be famous for: its style. |