Showing posts with label John Terry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Terry. Show all posts

Friday, 29 July 2011

Chelsea

With a new manager and plenty of fresh faces expected to roll into Stamford Bridge in the coming weeks, everyone concerned with this club has high hopes of another Premier League success. At the very least. Andre Villas Boas will have his work cut out though, fail to win a thing and just ask predecessor Carlo Ancelotti how that gruesome axe feels when it's horrendously wielded by Roman Abramovich. Chelsea will be hoping to start where they left off, with a tremendous finish to the season bringing them surging into second place.

Goalkeeper

Everyone knows who the number one is here, and next season will be no different. Petr Cech will keep his place between the sticks, hoping to put what have been increasingly frequent mistakes, by his standards, over the last few seasons to one side. New signing Thibaud Courtois has arrived and departed on loan already, so Ross Turnbull, remember him, will continue with deputy duties.

Defence

Typically very strong, and this season should be no different. With John Terry, Branislav Ivanovic and Alex they possess three big intimidating centre half's, which also couples as a terrific weapon at set pieces. New boy David Luiz, despite occasional erratic behaviour on the pitch, has already endeared himself to the fans and looks a great buy. With Ashley Cole and Jose Bosingwa they also have attacking wing backs, who can track back and forth up the touch line all day long.

Midfield

After a blistering start last season, the middle of the park seemed to go a bit stale. Frank Lampard failed to hit his trademark thunderbolts as often as usual, while his passing occasional went astray too. Ramires failed to live up to his fee, while some steel was lost, and will continue to be, due to Michael Essien's injury problems. Villas Boas could have a little work to do here, although the return of Yossi Benayoun will add much needed creativity.

Forwards

The debate continue to rage about Chelsea's front line, can a partnership be formed, who needs to leave and will they sign any one else. Mr Abramovich is certain to want a return on his £50m investment of Fernando Torres, and it is widely known he prefers a lone striker role. But with Didier Drogba, Nicolas Anelka, Saloman Kalou and the returning Daniel Sturridge to please is that possible? Well with support strikers it could certainly work, but putting a partner with the Spaniard up top would not.

Manager

Despite being just 33 years of age, Villas Boas already has a healthy reputation around Europe. Hence the reporter £13+ paid to secure his services from FC Porto, the highest ever for a manager. In his one season in charge of the Portuguesse giants he won four trophies, in the form of Supercup, Primeira Liga, Portuguesse Cup and Europa League (becoming the youngest manager to win a European competition). There is no reason he shouldn't succeed in London, but if he doesn't it could prove a very costly gamble.

Areas to Strengthen

At the back they remain as solid as ever, but it is at the other end where the problems could lie. The striker problem needs to be sorted whether that is with departures and arrivals, although there's no reason it can't be sorted internally. In Midfield a replacement for Essien needs to found, as it seems even if he does return he won't be at his best, injuries take their toll, or he won't return for too long. A bit more of a creative edge could also be sought.

Expectations

Abramovich covets the one trophy that has so far eluded him, and that is of course The Champions League. Many a manager have been sacked for failed to secure it, Avram Grant even went despite losing in the final...Due to a slip from Terry. A decent effort in that will need to be had, but that wont be enough. A Premier League title, or push for it, and domestic cup honours will also be sought.

Odds

11/4 (Sky Bet)

Players In

Thibaud Courtois £5m (Genk) Lucas Piazon £5+extras (Sao Paulo - will join in January) Oriol Romeu £4.5m (Chelsea) Romelu Lukaku £18m (Anderlecht) Raul Meireles £12m (Liverpool) Juan Mata £23.5m (Valencia)

Players Out

Michael Mancienne, Gokhan Tore, Slobodan Rajkovic and Jacopo Sala undisclosed (Hamburg) Jack Cork £750,000 (Southampton) Yuri Zhirkov undisclosed (Anzhi Makhachkala) Danny Philliskirk free (Sheffield United) Jan Sebek, Bobby Devyne, Anton Rodgers, Ben Sampayo, Carl Magnay, Michael Woods, Sam Hutchinson (all realeased) Fabio Borini free (Parma) Sam Walker loan (Northampton Town) Jeffrey Bruma Loan (Hamburg) Thibaud Courtois Loan (Atletico Madrid) Tomas Kalas loan (Vitesse Arnhem) Ben Gordon loan (Peterborough United) Ulises Davila loan (Vitesse Arnhem) Patrick van Aanholt loan (Wigan Athletic) Gael Kakuta loan (Bolton Wanderers) Yossi Benayoun loan (Arsenal)

Tuesday, 5 October 2010

Capello faces selection dilemma following squad announcement

Kevin Davies has hit the headlines following Fabio Capello's squad announcement for the upcoming game against Montenegro.

The 33-year-old Bolton striker will make his debut if he takes to the Wembley turf next Wednesday, with him vying for a spot along with Wayne Rooney, Peter Crouch and Darren Bent.

Davies' selection owes much to injuries to Jermain Defoe, Bobby Zamora and Gabriel Agbonlahor, although he has beaten Newcastle's Andy Carroll who was tipped to win a place.

Despite this though it is in the centre of defence where the Italian faces the biggest problem.

Manchester United and Chelsea stars Rio Ferdinand and John Terry are both recalled to the squad, and will be favourite to partner each other against the Europeans minnows.

However that would of course be extremely hard on Phil Jagielka, who has performed admirably whilst deputising for the Three Lions.

The Everton centre back would rightfully feel hard done by if dropped, with Capello also facing a big decision about whether to reinstate Ferdinand as captain.

Steven Gerrard has taken the armband in his absence, and a lot of debate enraging about Rio's return.

Many people are in favour of the Liverpool midfielder keeping the arm band, which would make the most sense for the side.

Surely Ferdinand has a lot more on his mind, e.g regaining fitness and a regular slot for both club and country again, rather than being burdened by captaincy.

Elsewhere Joe Hart will continue between the sticks, but we could see a new face in midfield.

Gareth Barry and Gerrard will surely get starts with Adam Johnson also a favourite, but the final place could be up for grabs.

Any one of Tom Huddlestone, Joe Cole, Aaron Lennon, Shaun Wright-Phillips, Jack Wilshire and Ashley Young could grab that final spot.

Despite the debate over personnel though it should be a fairly straight forward victory for England, with nothing else to be tolerated.

Thursday, 3 June 2010

England breakdown

Following the unsuccessful qualifying campaign for Euro 2008, England needed a major overhaul. And they got just that. Fabio Capello came in, and transformed an unconfident team into one that breezed through the group. One of the top points scorers was coupled with one the highest goal scorers in Wayne Rooney, with a 4-1 win in Croatia the main highlight. The usual height of expectation has already begun in England, just this time they may not disappoint.

Goalkeepers

Two experienced 'keepers are being pushed all the way by the new kid on the block. In recent months Robert Green has over taken David James, but Joe Hart's form while on loan at Birmingham has caused much debate about the 'trouble position' of the last few years. Capello's claims that he picks on form suggests that Hart will be the one given the gloves, although that policy seems to have gone out of the window with some selections in his 23 man squad. It is widely thought that Green is the one that will be trusted with the gloves in South Africa, as James' injury troubles seems to have cost him. However if it was down to the fans, the general consensus would show Hart to be the overwhelming favourite.

Defenders

In the two warm up friendlies there have been many problems highlighted, with one being the defence and what seems to be a lack of organisation. This is a rare problem for an Italian coach, although it is not new, clean sheets have been a rare phenomenon during Capello's reign. Pace seems to be the main problem in the center, with usual paring John Terry and Rio Ferdinand not blessed with great pace. Neither Matthew Upson nor utility man Jamie Carragher solve the problem, so it would be left to Ledley King if was needed. Although this problem could have solved itself, due to the injury to Ferdinand it looks like King will get the nod to step up. If Ashley Cole keeps himself fit there's no problem there, although Steven Warnock as deputy would be less inclined to bomb forward. Glen Johnson on the right still divides opinion with his attacking intentions, but he is the best we've got and in all honesty isn't anywhere near as bad a defender as is made out. With a bit of confidence the first choice of Johnson, Terry, Ferdinand and Cole is solid, and with Gareth Barry coming back it could be just the confidence that is needed to keep those all important clean sheets.

Midfield

Theo Walcott's omission has got many questioning Capello's selection, but I believe he has made the right choice. We have Aaron Lennon, Shaun Wright-Phillips and Joe Cole all naturally right footed, but capable of operating both wings. Pace alone doesn't make you a good footballer, and these three all offer something different which is well needed. The midfield could be the hardest position to guess, due to the sheer quality that lies throughout. Although if it goes with the usual decisions, it will no doubt be Lennon, Barry, Frank Lampard and Steven Gerrard. But I whole heartedly believe Michael Carrick, James Milner, Wright-Phillips or Cole could fill the breach if needs be. There is plenty of dynamism and creativity within the eight selected here, and it could be these players that make the difference both going forward and in defence.

Strikers

Darren Bent was the unlucky party to miss out up front, with, to almost everyone's dismay, Emile Heskey was chosen instead. However i don't believe this decision is as catastrophic as everyone is making out. It is well known that Wayne Rooney likes partnering Heskey in attack, due to the sheer amount of chance he makes due to his strength at holding the ball up. If this can be used in the right way Heskey could be key to success this summer. Jermain Defoe and Peter Crouch make up the four, with the Tottenham men showing this season that they are more than capable of having an impact in South Africa.. Although both were out scored in the Premier League by Darren Bent.

Key Man - Wayne Rooney

No one else could be given this title except the enigmatic Manchester United striker. With Cristiano Ronaldo gone he has shone for his club side in front of goal, and has taken that form onto the international stage with England. Injured when he went to the last World Cup he couldn't have the desired impact, and ended the tournament with that controversial red card against Portugal in the quarter-final. He is now determined to set the record straight and shown the world what he is capable of, with Capello's advice to be more selfish and stay up front ringing in his ears.

One to Watch - Joe Cole

Before the injury troubles that has blighted his last few years, Cole was a key member of the England squad. And now back to regular football he is reminding us all of why exactly that is. His tricky style of play makes him exciting to watch, and the knowledge that he is capable of doing the unexpected makes him difficult for defenders to handle. His impact in the friendly against Japan has hopefully set a precedent as to what we can expect this summer.

Manager - Fabio Capello

The Italian has won trophies where ever he has plied his trade, and he doesn't intent on stopping now. Although admitting this is his most difficult challenge, he has instilled a belief into the England squad that has been lacking for years. Similarly to 2006 this could be our best chance yet of emulating 1966, and more importantly the players also seem to think so.
Odds - 6/1

Prediction - A semi-final place at the least is all what would be considered an acceptable return.
Next Time
Tomorrow I will be looking at the rest of group C, Algeria, Slovenia and USA.