Thiago Alcantara

Trequartista

The good
He didn't say he cannot play as a winger. He just said that he isen't which is true because his primary position is LAM.

Hi best psoition for me is as a left midfielder in 4-4-2 formation
1-Left midfielder in 4-4-2
2-Left attacking midfielder in 4-3-3
3-Left winger in 4-4-3
4-Central midfielder in 4-3-3
 

Myrmecophile

Mr. Japes
Hi best psoition for me is as a left midfielder in 4-4-2 formation
1-Left midfielder in 4-4-2
2-Left attacking midfielder in 4-3-3
3-Left winger in 4-4-3
4-Central midfielder in 4-3-3
5mk65s.gif
 

jamrock

Senior Member
UEFA.com's team of reporters pick out ten players who caught the eye in Basse-Normandie over the past fortnight.

Jerson Cabral (midfielder, Netherlands)
One of the standout performers in a disappointing Netherlands campaign, the Feyenoord winger started the tournament on the left flank before switching to the right to good effect. Delivered a perfect cross for Steven Berghuis's winner against England and proved particularly adept at wrong-footing defenders by turning inside onto his stronger left foot.

Danilo (midfielder, Portugal)
Hugely impressive in Portugal's first two games, the SL Benfica teenager anchored the midfield impressively, showing maturity well beyond his years. Strong and athletic, he was the launching pad for many of his team's attacks and displayed excellent discipline to hold his position just in front of the back four, dropping into defence when required.

Mattia Destro (forward, Italy)
Scored eight times in qualifying but failed to find the net in the finals despite three shots in the first ten minutes of the opening game against Portugal. Lacked support but always dangerous, his stature and close control ensuring he was always paid particular attention by opponents.

Marco Djuricin (forward, Austria)
A livewire presence up front for Austria. Passed up five excellent chances in the final game against the Netherlands but showed his character when holding his nerve to convert the crucial late penalty to book his side's place in next year's FIFA U-20 World Cup.

Antoine Griezmann (forward, France)
A latecomer to Les Petits Bleus' squad, the Real Sociedad de Fútbol man's forays down the left flank caused many a problem for opposition defences, especially in the group stage against Austria when he scored twice and set up another goal.

Matthew James (midfielder, England)
One of the survivors of the team that reached last year's final. Wore the captain's armband this time round and led by example with a series of tireless and committed performances, keeping it simple and playing to England's strengths.

Gaël Kakuta (forward, France)
The Chelsea FC rising star lived up to his burgeoning reputation, a series of dribbles turning heads, and displayed his finishing skills at crucial times against the Netherlands and Croatia. He was one of only four France players to start every match of the tournament and set up the winning goal in the final for Alexandre Lacazette.

Filip Ozobić (midfielder, Croatia)
Flickered in the first two games but burst into life against Portugal, playing key roles in three of Croatia's five goals and scoring the fourth himself in a 5-0 triumph. Tricky and cunning, his slender build belied a toughness that made him the competition's most fouled player.

Daniel Pacheco (midfielder, Spain)
Finished as the tournament's top scorer with four goals after repeatedly cutting inside from the left to devastating effect. The Liverpool FC forward got both goals against Portugal on Matchday 2, another against Italy three days later and opened the scoring in the semi-final defeat of England.

Thiago Alcántara (midfielder, Spain)
A skillful defensive midfielder, Thiago excelled alongside FC Barcelona club-mate Oriol Romeu and was instrumental in most of Spain's bewitching build-up play. Also involved in one of the competition's most memorable moments, flicking a clever free-kick over the England wall for Sergio Canales to score the clinching third goal in the semi-final.

Tops after being coming 2nd on the list for the U-17 championship two years a go.
 
Last edited:

Co0ter

Senior Member
Have you watched the World Cup?

I did watch the World Cup. I saw a severely subpar Spanish side considering how unbelievable their team was. Every single player on the team is a superstar and I wasn't impressed all that much. I wanted Brasil to win, given I'm Brasilian but Spain was my obvious second choice since I loved all their players and half of Barca started in the squad. He played at left wing and we saw exactly why he wasn't good at it. How many times was he open to take a shot or score a goal and he either paniced/passed it or just held the trigger. We play with a scoring/pacey winger- he is not that, just like how he wasn't that for Spain either. He can play LW b/c he's an outstanding player but he is better elsewhere and someone could do much better. Sure he can assist goals sometimes from LW, but he can do that just as well or probably better from the midfield.
 

Trequartista

The good
I did watch the World Cup. I saw a severely subpar Spanish side considering how unbelievable their team was. Every single player on the team is a superstar and I wasn't impressed all that much. I wanted Brasil to win, given I'm Brasilian but Spain was my obvious second choice since I loved all their players and half of Barca started in the squad. He played at left wing and we saw exactly why he wasn't good at it. How many times was he open to take a shot or score a goal and he either paniced/passed it or just held the trigger. We play with a scoring/pacey winger- he is not that, just like how he wasn't that for Spain either. He can play LW b/c he's an outstanding player but he is better elsewhere and someone could do much better. Sure he can assist goals sometimes from LW, but he can do that just as well or probably better from the midfield.

HE is not a pacy strong winger but he provides another dimension for wingers and he did an awesome job,he was one of the best 3 spanish players at the WC,his prescence on the wing meant that Spain were the best team in ball retention because he usually cuts in,he is awesome on the left wing but I wont play any match with Messi and Iniesta on the wings because we will lack width on both wings.
P.S.:Stay on Toptic so that Bojan doesnt kick us.
 

Co0ter

Senior Member
I didn't catch the last game but saw the highlights (the online streams I found were horrible). I didn't see Thiago in the starting line-up or substituions on the official site. Is there a reason why he didn't play or is he hurt? I'd figure JDS and Thiago would be featured in every single game, along with a DM, since they are the closest to being called up.
 

10Rivaldo

Hoy, mañana y siempre traductor
He played in the U-19 Championship until just a few days ago, so he's probably getting rested.
 

Nani17

New member
Reading through the last few pages and it shall be interesting to see what happens when Xavi retires. I hope Thiago makes it as I've followed him for a few years now and he looks a talented player.
 

Moe

powered by;
he wont replace Xavi. If anything he will replace Iniesta. hopefully Fabregas/JDS can replace Xavi in a few years.
 

Home of Barca Fans

Top