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If he was only half as consistent on the pitch as he is off it running down our club and angling for move.

 

Pretty short of patience for what you would probably call a luxury player that doesn't seem to fit properly anywhere in our team. Yet to show any reason for buyers to believe the brief glimpses of potential will grow into anything. Add me on to the skeptical list.

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Guest antz1uk

TBH i think i'ts a bit like the Cabaye situation, all those top teams would have him but they'd only be prepared to pay about 6/7m as they'd see him as a squad player, Arsenal turned Cabaye's head but they weren't prepared to pay the big money for him.

 

Like some have said, he's not consistent enough to be in those upper echelons of the top quality players, sell the f***er and when we do show him pics of Cabaye, Debuchy, Remy, Enrique, Ba etc etc and remind him he just might up getting piles off those heated bench seats. the grass isn't always greener but these f***ers heads get turned more than that kid on the entity

 

:lol: Sorry, man, that was The Exorcist. The Entity was when Barbara Hershey got raped by a ghost. Goddam it, I couldn't go to bed without righting that wrong. That's been hammering in my head all night. Moussa Sissoko, I hope you're happy now, giving me a headache, you Crystal Palace-loving motherfucker.

 

Ahh yea you're right, oops my bad. Oh well I was in bed at 12 and slept like a log  :lol: :lol:

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He has no intelligence. He has the physical attributes to be a top footballer & little awareness of how to improve or make the best use of it. Given him slack recently, but interviews like this just prove the same thing. Id not be fussed if he left, i dont rate him as highly as many on here.

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He can't possibly mean that. It would be laughable.

 

He's just your average border line illiterate footballer who has been picked up on something because it's an international break, the transfer window is shut and there's not much for most football journalists to write about.

 

Have to say, one of the things that makes me most want to just stop bothering with football at all is the enormous sense of entitlement exhibited by utterly average players.

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Sissoko's game is all about the transition. Win the ball in midfield or attacking, get the ball to Moussa within 2-3 seconds while the other team is trying to get into position he will cause trouble.

 

Sissoko could do a good job for any type of "gegenpressing" or counter attacking team.

 

I fear SMC's style of play is the antithesis of Sissoko's. We'll look to have possession for possessions sake (hence Brothers Sideways in midfield).

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Guest firetotheworks

Stop being a complete gimp then. :lol: You're talking on a football forum where loads of people on here know a lot about football and can smell football hipster nonsense like "gegenpressing"a mile off.

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Having a problem with chequed shirts and beanie hats is your own problem, not those that wear it. I have made a simple point, using a word that you don't like but readily understand. Wosdaprowblem? The word hasn't changed my point and I haven't explained the word or point in a patronising tone.

 

Once again, the problem is your own interpretation KI.

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Guest firetotheworks

It's not a massive deal, it's just completely unnecessary posturing that serves only to put yourself on yet an even higher self-built pedestal of football knowledge whist everyone sees exactly what you're doing and laughs about it.

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Guest firetotheworks

FWIW, I'm not laughing at you learning the game like, it's more that I see stuff like gegenpressing and so on as being fluffy football hipster nonsense that's only there to make people sound smart, so when I see people actually using it, it's funny. Coupled with your arrogance it's pretty easy to want to pick it apart.

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Well, i'd never heard the term and now i've looked it up and learnt a new word.

Also, having read the first find on google search (i'm that well informed) i can see that 'gegenpressing' would be hard for us as we play a bit too spaced out.

I have been elevated!

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How does one use Gegenpressing successfully?

 

There are several prerequisites for successful counterpressing. The decisive factor is the overall positioning of the team and their playing style right before attempting to counterpress. The players must play as close to one another as possible so that they can press together as a unit right after the ball is lost – which is a given in short passing football. At the same time, they should not stick so close to one another that they neglect to cover enough space. Usually, a good layout in possession and a good shape behind the lost ball go hand in hand.

 

Some trainers use the basic rule of thumb to “occupy the fewest possible zones with individual players, but the greatest possible distance between the players within those zones so that they don’t occupy the same space” to make the positioning simple to understand; although, with a rule of thumb like this, some aspects are lost in terms of complexity.

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