by Snowball »
12 Oct 2010 08:40
Reading's points-per-game without Gylfi is higher than Reading's ppg with Gylfi
and that difference has been increasing as games mount up.
FACT
Read into that whatever you want.
That Gylfi is a great player is without doubt,
so HOW could his removal make a team better
or his addition make a team worse?
SERIOUSLY, instead of wearing blinkers and going nah-nah-nah, try to answer the question.
1. At Reading we changed the way the side played to accommodate Gylfi.
We were a classic fast-moving 4-4-2 set-up and changed to 4-5-1 because, quite rightly,
Mac felt he had to find room for such a prodigious talent. Gylfi was weak defensively, ordinary
on the wing, but could score great individual goals, brilliant free-kicks, cheeky penalties
and was our lucky mascot. He also played some excellent assists. His goals perhaps covered
up those times he disappeared, and covered up the less-efficient set-up we had for the rest of the team.
2. How might Gylfi's addition be worsening Hoffenheim's results, despite the fact that Gylfi is a fantastic player?
NOTE the following are merely suggestions or ideas. They are not my beliefs.
(a) Well, he will not be "streets-better" than whoever he is replacing (unlike at Reading)
(b) His extras" like great goals and maybe some assists, may not compensate for his other (relative) weaknesses like "disappearing".
(c) Perhaps there's some disquiet, jealousy from players displaced. Who knows?
(d) Perhaps the team is being asked to play differently now and that doesn't suit the squad.
I am NOT saying, ANY of these things are the truth, but it is not always the case that 11 great players make a great team
or that adding one great player will automatically improve a team