jamrock
Senior Member
Is this meant to be sarcastic?
Nothing wrong with winning it via Rashford worldie.
Newcastle at home ain’t scrubs.
The point is the said control didn't lead to us creating many changes from organic play.
Is this meant to be sarcastic?
Nothing wrong with winning it via Rashford worldie.
Newcastle at home ain’t scrubs.
We were more or less equal to Madrid in both the league clasico's tbh and lost on fine details and a worldie from Bellingham.
Actually we were better than them in both league games in the overall game, but results are what matter and what will be remembered.
Complete nonsense and you dont understand what control of game provides clearly.The point is the said control didn't lead to us creating many changes from organic play.
At this moment I think they are.Isak Ekitike
Newcastle, the game where we scored on a cross and a long shot, two high risk/high reward actions? And then also conceded a goal while "controlling" the game.
What?
How does the way that the goals were scored diminish the control we had over the game? Makes no sense lol!
Also of course you are going to concede chances, even the greatest controlling midfield of all time in prime xavi/iniesta/busi were controlling games with 80%+ posession and still conceding chances and goals.
Because control is useless without scoring goals. The control we enjoyed was only meaningful by virtue of us defending a lead. And our two goals, as I pointed out, came about through aberrations from the strategy of control, from decisions you would normally not make if you were seeking to control the match.
Your second paragraph is exactly my point funnily enough. No matter how much control you have, you are always going to concede chances. Which is why I would prefer to score more goals instead of just passing it around.
"Well you can score goals AND control the match" you will reply now. Which leads me back to my first point. This doesn't fit the evidence. Our goals came through aberration from moderation, from high risk/high reward decisions.