'I ran out of steam'


Javagal Srinath: aggressive in his own way

Why did you retire from Tests so suddenly?
It was a question of body and mind. It had been on my mind for a while and I got enough signals from the body during the series in the West Indies. I really wasn’t prepared for that, and my body didn’t respond during the last two Tests. Like the team, I started the series well, but things fell away after the first two Tests. Also, I don’t think I was bowling upto to my expectations on a consistent basis. I was looking for a green patch or two to help me and to be honest, at this point in time, I don’t see myself in the Test squad on Indian wickets.I’ve always advocated that only the best fast bowlers should play and I had reached a stage where my body couldn’t do what my mind asked of it. I was running out of steam and I was depending on helpful wickets, regardless of the fact that I was still bowling a decent line and length. The results also played their part. Had we won in Jamaica, I might have changed my mind and played through the tour of England.Why did you want to carry on playing one-day cricket then?
A lot of wrong signals have been given by certain sections of our board. I love one-day cricket with its entertainment value and high intensity, but the real game is Test cricket. Having played so much cricket – and bowled so many overs in both forms of the game – it wasn’t possible to keep going without a break. I did ask the selectors to rest me for one or two one-day tournaments just so I could be fit for the Tests. The bowlers who are playing now will face the same problem soon enough, with so many matches being played.I still maintain that Test matches are special. You win one, you’ll cherish it for life; and if you lose, it might haunt you forever. In the one-day game, you can win today, lose tomorrow and then win again the day after. It’s not right for people to say that I pick and choose my matches. I took the break because my body needed it but when I’m not playing, I really miss the game. I don’t think it’s right to perform well below your best – but just about good enough – merely to keep your place in the side. In such a case, it’s better to take a break and come back refreshed.Disappointed to miss out on the one-day squad?
Not really. I expected these things to happen. A few people in the system haven’t understood me. After all, how many have bowled for the country as much as I have? Only someone who has done that can understand the plight of fast bowlers in this country.Wasn’t the English tour a big temptation for you, having done so well the last time?
You could say that, but the West Indies tour was very disappointing, especially after we started so well. If we had won in Jamaica, things might have been different. But by then I was tired, body and mind, and bitterly disappointed with my own performance.When you look back at your Test career, are you satisfied?
There are highs and lows.But do you feel you’ve underachieved?
To some extent, yes.You once said that you were a mediocre performer compared to someone like Glenn McGrath…
I don’t like to make excuses for myself. For example, I could say that I have played half my cricket on docile tracks that aren’t conducive to fast bowling. Even if it’s a good grassy pitch overseas, you still have to bowl well to take wickets. At the end of the day, it comes down to your own performances and how they’ve served the team, and in that aspect I don’t think I’m in the same bracket as Waqar [Younis], Wasim [Akram], McGrath and a few others.Your strike-rates and averages are much better at home…
I think one of the biggest problems when we go abroad has been the lack of a third seamer. The situation is getting better now. But over the last 10 years, how often have we had an effective third seamer? Why didn’t the third seamer deliver most of the time? We invariably got breakthroughs in most of the games but the third seamer failed because he had no experience at that level. Why is that? Because he can never find a place in the team when we play at home. I think the change has to come at the grassroots. We need to see pitches that allow you to play three seamers.One of the biggest criticisms directed at you down the years has been your comparative lack of aggression…
I respect those opinions but I’m aggressive in my own way. It’s just that my brand of aggression is not for the TV. I just take the ball and do my job.But could your body language have encouraged the opposition?
Body language doesn’t get you wickets. I don’t believe that aggression can get you wickets…Of late though, you had taken a different approach to your bowling, pitching the ball up a lot more…
Things were getting better, yes, but the results still weren’t there. I was trying my best to do that. You have to adapt as you go along and this was one of the changes that paid dividends. When you’re a young fast bowler, there’s always a tendency to pitch it a little short. It depends on the conditions too, to an extent. But sooner or later, a bowler realises that pitching the ball up is the key.Did you get the right advice in the early stages of your career?
Yes, I did. Kapil [Dev] was great and I used to speak to him all the time. Dennis Lillee was another great influence. The sad thing is that I didn’t get to play enough with Kapil.But did any of them tell you to pitch the ball up more?
Yes, they did but I used to get wickets even otherwise. Maybe if I had pitched it up more, I might have got more wickets. That is certainly one of my regrets.You once said that most Indian captains were batsmen, which was why you never got bowler-friendly pitches here. Can you elaborate on that?
That’s a matter for the captains and the team management. They need to realise that if we are to win consistently abroad, we need to produce pitches that give at least some encouragement to the fast bowlers.How disappointing was it for you to see a grassy pitch shaved off on the captain’s instructions?
This was one of the factors that contributed to my retirement. Earlier, I never used to think about how the wicket might play, whether it had grass or not. But with age catching up, you look at these things.Did your relationship with the captain have anything to do with the decision to retire?
A lot of people have been talking about my relationship with [Sourav] Ganguly. As such, there is no problem between us. Why would my decision be based on someone else’s actions or reactions? Ganguly and I go back a long time. I’m much senior to him and I know him very well.Expressing your emotions on the field doesn’t mean that we don’t get along well. People have read it wrong. As long as our expressions are directed towards winning the match, there is no problem.We are both very frank people who have known each other a long time. People just try too hard to read something into certain gestures.Any regrets when it comes to your batting?
It was disappointing, but with the amount of bowling I did, it was hard to concentrate with the bat. The injuries and the fractures didn’t help.Talking of injuries, how much did that shoulder injury in 1997 set you back?
Tremendously. That was a period when I was peaking and had I maintained that form for three or four years, I might have been a very different bowler. That pushed me back to square one and it took eight to nine months just to get back.Who complemented you best with the new ball?
Look, I don’t have any favourites. [Venkatesh] Prasad and I got the chance to bowl together for quite a long time; Zaheer [Khan] is a very good bowler. So is Ashish Nehra. He moves the ball well. Tinu Yohannan is one of the best athletes I have ever seen in Indian cricket.You were a young man when you first toured abroad. How did you think the touring experience can be made easier for rookies?
Long tours are always hard. I think fitness is key, and in that regard Andrew Leipus has done a fantastic job for us. The physiotherapy aspect is just as important. You need to get to the root cause of the injury and treat it…But from a mental aspect?
That’s all part and parcel of the game. When you go abroad, you have better conditions, better practice facilities and the best food. There is nothing to complain about. The only thing is, when you lose, your mental state can become quite fragile and you start doubting your own capabilities. The food, the travelling, the different culture, that shouldn’t really bother you. It’s for the seniors to buck up the young players if they’re going through a bad patch.Were the seniors very supportive when you were starting out?
Yes, and that’s still the case. The players take a great deal of interest in each other’s game and the youngsters get a lot of encouragement. Some of the youngsters – [Mohammad] Kaif, [Dinesh] Mongia and the fast bowlers to name just a few – have a great attitude and that helps.What does the future hold for Javagal Srinath?
I believe I just need to work hard and keep myself fit for the World Cup. I’ll make myself available and it’s up to the selectors to pick me. It’s only right that they groom players for the future but I’ll keep working and see how it goes. I really want to play the World Cup though.That would be the logical conclusion to your career…
Yes. I don’t see anything beyond that.

Re-match of last season's finals will provide edge in New Plymouth

Canterbury will need no special motivation for their State Shield opener against Central Districts in New Plymouth tomorrow.The two teams are the finalists from last year’s one-day competition and with Central Districts upsetting Canterbury there is every incentive to give the holders a reminder of who the real bosses are.On the occasion, Canterbury has to be favoured. With its internationals back in for the match it has a formidable look to it.Craig McMillan, Chris Cairns, Shane Bond and Chris Martin give the side a real edge, and CD without their mastermind captain from last year Jacob Oram will have a real battle to take this game out.Canterbury will also be looking to get a good start to the competition as they follow up with a game on Thursday in Auckland, so maximum points would be a good start from which to launch the remainder of the campaign.CD are not without hope however, as Mathew Sinclair especially is looking for runs in a big way and if he could get going on the Pukekura Park pitch there could be some scoring fireworks.The teams are:Central Districts: Glen Sulzberger (captain), David Kelly, Jamie How, Mathew Sinclair, Ben Smith, Richard King, Campbell Furlong, Bevan Griggs, Andrew Schwass, Michael Mason, Brent Hefford, Richard Scragg (12th man).Canterbury: Gary Stead (captain), Craig McMillan, Chris Harris, Chris Cairns, Paul Wiseman, Shane Bond, Chris Martin, Brad Doody, Michael Papps, Darron Reekers, Gareth Hopkins, Carl Anderson, Warren Wisneski.

Surrey storm to a sixth championship victory


Martin Bicknell bowling blitz – the best since Laker’s record
Photo © Paul McGregor

Surrey completed a resounding victory over Leicestershire by 10 wickets atGuildford today – their sixth win in the championship this summer. The homecounty scored 119-0 from 39.3 overs with Mark Butcher (47 n.o.) and Ian Ward(61 n.o.) taking the title-holders home with a day and a half to spare.Martin Bicknell, who took all four wickets in the first innings, producedyet another magnificent display of fast bowling. His return of 9-47following 7-72 in the first innings gave him a match analysis of 16-119 -the best achieved in England since Jim Laker, also of Surrey, took 19Australian wickets in the Test Match at Manchester in 1956. Bicknell becamealso the first bowler to achieve 50 wickets in the championship this summer.
The 47 runs put on for the seventh wicket by Vince Wells and Phil DeFreitas,who hit 24 in one ball less, alone provided any resistance. Bicknelldismissed both within three deliveries to catches by Butcher and Brown. Withthe last two wickets folding tamely Leicestershire were all out for 87. Incontrast to that batting debacle the Surrey opening batsmen showed howplacid for run-scoring the pitch could be, and they knocked off the runswithout giving a chance. Butcher brought up the victory with a cover-drivefour, one of eight boundaries in his innings.Bicknell, who played club cricket for Guildford, said: “I love playing atGuildford, it’s my home ground and I know a lot of people here. Playing thisweek every year is something I look forward to.”He has taken five-wickets in an innings three times this season – a feat hewas not able to achieve once last year. Although he claimed to be doingnothing different this summer to the blast four or five seasons Martin washappy for the figures to speak for themselves. He recognised that chanceshad to be taken when they arose because otherwise Saqlain Mushtaq and IanSalisbury would take the wickets, but he would gladly exchange this analysisfor another championship.

Dempsey hails Fulham heroics

Fulham hat-trick hero Clint Dempsey has praised his side after they beat Newcastle 5-2 on Saturday.

The United States international bagged three goals in the commanding win, with an impressive second half display by Martin Jol’s men.

Despite a fantastic individual showing, the attacker has stated the victory was down to a collective performance by the team.

“It was definitely a frustrating first half. We didn’t have any rhythm,” he told Sky Sports.

“It had to do with them being confident from their form but also I think maybe it was in the back of our mind a little bit the result against Blackburn, being a man up, and not taking advantage of that game and losing.

“But in the second half I thought we showed a lot of character and got the early penalty and Danny Murphy put it in the back of the net, which gave us confidence.

“Their mentality switched from thinking they were going to get three points to trying to salvage a point.

“We never took our foot off the gas and we were able to take advantage of our opportunities and put the ball in the back of the net.

“I’m happy with the way things are going and hopefully I can keep putting the ball in the back of the net,” he finished.

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The Cottagers face Everton next in the FA Cup.

By Gareth McKnight

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Gagging to know the truth?

Heard the one about the “family man” Premier League footballer who had an affair with an ex-“star” of Big Brother? Well you probably have if you are able to master an internet search engine, but details of their tryst cannot be reported in the mainstream press due to him successfully obtaining an injunction preventing the fully story from being revealed.

Leaving aside the issue of whether this tawdry tale should be considered newsworthy, why was this footballer able to stop the story from being published when the likes of John Terry, Peter Crouch and (for those with longer memories) Garry Flitcroft were not so successful?

The answer can be found in the European Convention on Human Rights which the UK signed up to in 1998. Article 10 of the Convention protects the “right to freedom of expression” including the “freedom to impart information”. However, under Article 8, an individual has the right to “respect for his private and family life”. Clearly there is a conflict between these two Articles, and the Courts will generally be required to weigh up which of these competing interests is more legitimate in deciding whether to grant an injunction or not.

In the case of John Terry, despite initially being granted a temporary “super injunction” (which prevented the press from reporting that an injunction had even been obtained), the Judge lifted the injunction as he deemed it “not necessary or proportionate having regard to the level of gravity of interference with the private life of the applicant”. That is to say that freedom of expression (of the press) was more legitimate than the possible interference with Terry’s private life. It seems that the key factor in making this decision was that Terry was less concerned with “personal distress” than the impact of adverse publicity on his reputation and more particularly, the commercial effect that the revelations would have on his sponsorship deals.

In the case of our unnamed footballer mentioned above, however, the Judge must have believed that the main motivation in seeking an injunction was to protect the player’s family and not his own image. This is particularly the case where a player’s children are likely to suffer bullying at school if details of the story are revealed.

It remains to be seen how this area of law will develop in the future. The furore surrounding the latest raft of injunctions and political unease at the judiciary “establishing a new privacy law via the back door” has put this issue at the forefront of the media agenda. David Cameron himself has waded in to question whether Judges should have the power to issue “super injunctions”. It is unlikely that the government will seek to introduce a new privacy law in the near future, but it may be that the new Defamation Bill (currently in consultation until June 2011) is used to re-assert the legislature’s authority over the judiciary.

*

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Adam Leadercramer is a senior lawyer at onside law, a boutique law firm specialising in the sport and entertainment sectors. Adam regularly advises players, clubs, third party investors, agents and others involved in the football industry, and is a Millwall season ticket holder.

Steve Bruce pleased to finally land Asamoah Gyan

Sunderland manager Steve Bruce is delighted to have finally landed Ghana striker Asamoah Gyan, having tracked the player for several years.

The 24-year-old joined the Black Cats for a club record fee from Rennes just before the transfer window slammed shut, with Bruce relieved that a deal was done after seeing Kenwyne Jones leave the club and Fraizer Campbell suffer a serious knee injury.

He told the Sunderland Echo:"I was actually after Gyan a year ago, when we had Darren Bent on the go.

"He was definitely our top target. I first watched him three years ago and I have consistently kept watching him since then.

"The problem we had with him over the summer was the fact I did not think I was going to get him. Fenerbahce were in as well and I just was not sure.

"In the end you have to say fair play to the owner, because with Frazier Campbell getting injured Rennes knew they could stick to their asking price and never budge.

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"With what happened to Fraizer it became a necessity to bring someone in and we wanted Gyan, because I did not just want to go down the route of bringing in somebody for the sake of it.

"I am delighted to get him. He has that fire in his belly, he is a wonderful athlete and he has a great attitude."Subscribe to Football FanCast News Headlines by Email

Bolton Wanderers v Wolverhampton Wanderers – Match Preview

Two teams desperately battling for safety meet at the Reebok Stadium with Bolton knowing they need a win to cut the gap between themselves and Wolves.

Wanderers have had a truly awful first half of the season and sit four points away from safety after losing to Newcastle on Boxing Day. Boss Owen Coyle has been given the whole of January to turn things around at the Reebok Stadium and he’ll be keen for his side to kick start their survival bid against fellows strugglers Wolves. The imminent sale of defender Gary Cahill won’t help Bolton’s cause with the England man set to become a Chelsea player in the New Year. However the rumoured £8 million fee will give Coyle some room to manoeuvre in the transfer market and bolster a squad crippled by injuries to key players. Bringing in a defender to replace Cahill and a striker who will supply a regular source of goals is sure to be top of his list. Summer signing David N’Gog has failed to do just that since his move from Liverpool and Coyle will be hoping his side can start 2012 on a winning platform.

It will be difficult against a Wolves side who held Arsenal to a draw at the Emirates Stadium on Boxing Day. Mick McCarthy was delighted by his sides resilient display in North London as they gained a valuable point in their battle to avoid relegation. Wolves have endured another poor season slipping back towards the bottom three after stringing together a number of positive results in the opening weeks of the campaign. Two wins in 16 games since the end of August put them on a steep descent towards trouble although their performance against the Gunners will have provided a huge confidence boost heading into this game. With Steven Fletcher back in the goalscoring groove and Matt Jarvis returning to the form that won him an England call up McCarthy will be optimistic that his side can triumph over Bolton.

Bolton Wanderers 19th : 12 points

Team news: Gretar Steinsson could return from illness to face Wolves leaving seven other first team players in the treatment room.

Key Player: Mark Davies

Since returning to the starting eleven in the last month or so Davies has been a shining light for Bolton putting in some enterprising performances in midfield. He’ll be a big player for the Trotters in 2012 as they battle to beat the drop.

Wolverhampton Wanderers 16th : 16 points

Team news: Nenad Milijas is suspended after being sent off against Arsenal although David Edwards could return from a groin injury to replace him.

Key Player: Wayne Hennessey

The Welsh international was unbeatable against Arsenal on Boxing Day pulling off five or six unbelievable saves to ensure his side travelled home with a vital point. Hennessey has improved remarkably this season and will be expected to maintain his impressive form in 2012.

PREDICTION

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Bolton just can’t seem to win home or away this season and will be further debilitated by the loss of Gary Cahill. Wolves have the means to win this game with Steven Fletcher banging in the goals up front and they should move clear of the bottom three after this one.

Score: 1-2

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What formation should England use?

It’s a well known fact that Fabio Capello prefers to use the 4-4-2 system, however we all know the limitations of this system and it’s debatable if it suits England’s best players. The best alternative systems are 4-5-1 and 4-3-3. The potential limitation of either of these systems is the lack of striking support for Wayne Rooney.

It has been suggested that after the recent friendly against Ghana, 4-3-3 has become the new favoured formation. Therefore, it seems logical to discuss this first. Based on the Ghana game it seems the idea is to play two wide players with a central striker. Players like Ashley Young, Adam Johnson, Stewart Downing and other wide players would be in contention to support Rooney. If the formation doesn’t work it can be altered by bringing on another striker.

The 4-5-1 system is generally considered a negative and defensive system, however with the right players it can also be considered a very attacking way to play. The key to this formation is getting the midfielders to push up and support the loan striker.

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The 4-4-2 system is something English players will be used to and is still favoured by a lot of managers who prefer this system; Capello being one of them. It can make teams a bit overly predictable; however it is hard to beat, if a team has a lot of good strikers.

It’s important to remember that it’s players that win games and not formations, but managers need to pick their best players and find the right formation. Rather than pick a formation and then try and find the players that fit into that system. So Capello has to decide who his best players are?

In many ways strikers are a weakness for England at the moment. In particular, Peter Crouch and Jermain Defoe have had poor seasons in the Premier League. England could probably do well to build the team around players like Ashley Young and Adam Johnson. Therefore, you can understand the appeal of the 4-3-3 system. But is Wayne Rooney suited to playing the lone role up front? Especially as he often plays more as an attacking midfielder rather than an out and out striker.

These questions will need to be answered and England will need to decide on the best system going forward. So that’s my view, but what do you think? What system is most suited to the England players? Can Wayne Rooney play as a lone striker?

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How should Hodgson go about getting three into two?

Along with Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres, Joe Cole’s addition to the Liverpool squad has meant that Roy Hodgson has assembled a dynamic attacking trio that has the makings of being one of the most deadly combinations in the Premier League. The question for Hodgson is how he will accommodate all three in the team when Cole and Gerrard are seemingly vying for one place.

Since joining Liverpool, Cole has expressed a desire to play for the Reds in his preferred position in the hole behind the striker. Cole got his wish when Hodgson chose to select the ex-Chelsea man in his favoured position in Sunday’s pre-season friendly defeat to Borussia Mönchengladbach with Steven Gerrard being used in a deeper role along side Cole’s fellow new signing Jonjo Shelvey.

The attacking midfield role is something that is familiar to Cole as he started his career at West Ham playing the very position he wants to fulfil at Liverpool. Cole’s more familiar role as a wide player came as a result of necessity rather than choice as both Chelsea and England utilised Cole in the wide left role which has been a problem position for club and country.

Ever since he was a teenager, Cole has displayed the attributes necessary to succeed in the position. He brings huge technical ability along with the guile, vision and flair to a position where such skills are hugely valued.

While Cole has expressed a wish to play in the attacking midfield spot, the player that occupied that spot for most of last season under previous boss Rafa Benitez was fellow England international and Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard. However, with that being said, I don’t believe that playing behind the striker is Gerrard’s most effective position.

Gerrard started initially as a more defensive player in his formative years at the club and it is this defensive grounding (though not often seen) that has led me to believe that Gerrard’s best position is in the centre of midfield as a box-to-box midfielder rather than playing behind Torres.

Gerrard’s effectiveness for Liverpool has come from his ability to arrive late in the box to score goals. Playing in behind the striker would severely hamper the opportunities for Gerrard to make those late surges into the opponent’s box for which he has become famous for.

Where Gerrard and Cole will ultimately line up for Liverpool is down to the formation that Hodgson chooses.

Given Torres’ class and the lack of another proven striker in the squad, Hodgson could choose to go for a 4-2-3-1 with Mascherano (if he stays) or Aquilani alongside Gerrard in centre midfield. Cole would occupy the attacking midfield spot; with Ryan Babel, Maxi Rodriguez and Dirk Kuyt vying for two spots out wide.

More likely is that Hodgson will choose to play Cole in his unfavoured left position as part of a 4-4-2 which would allow him to play new signing Milan Jovanovic, Ryan Babel or possibly David N’Gog or Daniel Pacheco alongside Torres while still accommodating Gerrard and Cole in the same team.

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With the PL season nearly upon us, let’s see the WAGS that will be keeping the players on their toes. Click on image to VIEW gallery

Fast becoming the most important role in football?

Arsene Wenger’s recent comment that attacking full backs win games highlights the rise and rise of the position. Players like Djalma Santos and Nilton Santos in the Brazil team in the late 1950s and later Roberto Carlos and Cafu set the trend for the multi tasking defender and it is a position that has been built upon greatly. Take the top English teams for example: Man Utd have Rafael and Evra, Man City have Richards and Clichy, Chelsea have Cole and Bosingwa, Arsenal have Santos and Sagna, Tottenham have Walker and Assou-Ekotto and Liverpool have Johnson and Enrique. How many of those players’ defensive abilities would have warranted them a place in the famous Arsenal back four of the nineties, or Liverpool’s defence in the eighties? Perhaps Evra, Cole and Sagna but the rest have sacrificed defensive solidity for attacking prowess. That is not to say they are not good players, far from it: they are all good players, but the style of their play is indicative of what is now expected from full backs. If Wenger was looking for a defender whose main asset was his defending then he would not have bought Andre Santos; however that does not detract from his usefulness – he has already scored against Chelsea in the league and Olympiakos in the Champions League.

Integral

The rise of full backs has coincided with their role as a tactical necessity for many teams in world football. Take Dani Alves for example. The right back spends more time in the opposition half than he does in his own. Why? Because every time Barcelona line up against a team that isn’t a real threat (so most of the time) the opposition half will play the game with ten men behind the ball. Subsequently the need for extra men to break down the opposition defence for Barcelona requires players like Abidal and Alves to get forward. Not even Barcelona can break down opposition defences all the time Alves plays a crucial part in making sure that it happens more often than not. The same can be said for Marcelo at Real Madrid, or Maicon at Inter or Phillip Lahm at Bayern Munich. In fact how many young brilliant full backs coming through academies do you hear of these days that do not have the extra weapon of going forward as one of their attributes? It has become a necessity.

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Formation

With a change in formation the role of the full backs has also become more important. With more and more teams playing 4-3-3 than ever before the full backs are required to come forward to fill the gaps where the wide midfielders of a 4-4-2 would otherwise have been. This is most noticeable at teams like Arsenal and Barcelona. Obviously Arsenal utilised attacking defenders even when they played 4-4-2 but since they switched to their current formation the full backs have become more and more attacking. Without their full backs advancing up the pitch teams who play a 4-3-3 risk being dominated in the midfield due to their play being too narrow

Centre-backs

A need for an attacking element to your game is not just confined to the full backs either. More and more we are seeing centre backs who not only posses better technique but who also enjoy marauding into the opposition half. Recent arrivals in the Premier League such as Vermaelen, David Luiz, Sebastian Coates and Christopher Samba are all demonstrative of this. In other leagues to Pique, Pepe, Thiago Silva, Vertonghen and others all represent a new era of defenders, defenders from which managers demand an extra gear to their game.

Football is like any other aspect of life in that there will always be a form of evolution changing and driving on our sport. It is only natural for not only managers;’ tactics but also the roles of all positions to become more complete. Just in the same way that wingers must defend and strikers must be involved in build up play then defenders must attack. Isolated cases throughout history suggest that this is far from a totally new phenomenon but what is new is the frequency and importance of such players. You will never again see a team like Arsenal with the back four they had in Wenger’s first couple of years just in the same way that you won’t see Liverpool like that either. Some will consider that a shame but whilst it may not be working out perfectly for either of them at the moment any evolution has teething problems. The future for full backs is bright, and it contains a lot more than their used to too.

Follow me on Twitter @H_Mackay

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