Ok, we recently conceded the same goal repeatedly.
A cross from the right to the far post, where Kaebi has to mark a target striker and of course he heads it in.
We actually had the same problems without Kaebi recently as well.
The second goal by Qatar was similar, only that it was Beikzadeh this time, who despite being 189cm tall was unable to win the duel in the air.
We almost conceded the same goal again today from the other side, when Feshangchi let the high ball through and we were lucky Mali couldn't convert.
Now the point is, there are many teams with small fullbacks who are not really good in the air. A prominent example would be Bayern Munich and Germany, who have a world class fullback in Phillip Lahm, who is small (170 cm) and weak in the air as well.
However, they barely concede such goals and my impression is not that Lahm is much better in the air than Kaebi, but that you barely ever see him having to go into such areal battles.
How do they do that?
Ok, here is the situation:
Normal fourback:
------------------------------xxxxxxxGOALxxxxxxx--------------------------------
-----Rightback---------Centreback-----------Centreback-------------Leftback----
Fourback when defending on the left (shifting to the left):
----------------------------------xxxxxxxGOALxxxxxxx-----------------------------------
----------------------------Rightback--------Centreback-------Centreback-----Leftback
Of course this doesn't always happen, sometimes midfielders help out, but often such a shift is not avoidable and then the rightback suddenly covers the far post. Now if a striker like Pandev or Dzeko moves to the far post, he will find himself paired up with the rightback, and if that's a small guy, a good cross means a great chance to score.
As said, Germany and Bayern know to avoid that, but I didn't really figure out how yet.
Is it because they avoid the shift of the fourback by help of the side midfielders?
Is it because they have defensive midfielders helping out in central defense so the fullbacks don't have to mark near the goal?
Is it because the second central defender man marks the taller guy in the box instead of zonal marking and simply covering the guy nearer to him? Or does the central defender automatically go to the far post?
Any other suggestions?
I think the main difference is the right centreback in that scenario. I have the feeling in those goal situations our defenders didn't turn around to have a look at the far post. They mostly didn't mark anyone anyway, but didn't bother to check if they could mark someone instead of marking empty space. I guess there might be a complete misunderstanding of zonal marking, which doesn't mean you mark a zone, but rather that you don't statically mark a man but that you "hand him over" to another defender if that is savely possible, as soon as he leaves "your zone".
A cross from the right to the far post, where Kaebi has to mark a target striker and of course he heads it in.
We actually had the same problems without Kaebi recently as well.
The second goal by Qatar was similar, only that it was Beikzadeh this time, who despite being 189cm tall was unable to win the duel in the air.
We almost conceded the same goal again today from the other side, when Feshangchi let the high ball through and we were lucky Mali couldn't convert.
Now the point is, there are many teams with small fullbacks who are not really good in the air. A prominent example would be Bayern Munich and Germany, who have a world class fullback in Phillip Lahm, who is small (170 cm) and weak in the air as well.
However, they barely concede such goals and my impression is not that Lahm is much better in the air than Kaebi, but that you barely ever see him having to go into such areal battles.
How do they do that?
Ok, here is the situation:
Normal fourback:
------------------------------xxxxxxxGOALxxxxxxx--------------------------------
-----Rightback---------Centreback-----------Centreback-------------Leftback----
Fourback when defending on the left (shifting to the left):
----------------------------------xxxxxxxGOALxxxxxxx-----------------------------------
----------------------------Rightback--------Centreback-------Centreback-----Leftback
Of course this doesn't always happen, sometimes midfielders help out, but often such a shift is not avoidable and then the rightback suddenly covers the far post. Now if a striker like Pandev or Dzeko moves to the far post, he will find himself paired up with the rightback, and if that's a small guy, a good cross means a great chance to score.
As said, Germany and Bayern know to avoid that, but I didn't really figure out how yet.
Is it because they avoid the shift of the fourback by help of the side midfielders?
Is it because they have defensive midfielders helping out in central defense so the fullbacks don't have to mark near the goal?
Is it because the second central defender man marks the taller guy in the box instead of zonal marking and simply covering the guy nearer to him? Or does the central defender automatically go to the far post?
Any other suggestions?
I think the main difference is the right centreback in that scenario. I have the feeling in those goal situations our defenders didn't turn around to have a look at the far post. They mostly didn't mark anyone anyway, but didn't bother to check if they could mark someone instead of marking empty space. I guess there might be a complete misunderstanding of zonal marking, which doesn't mean you mark a zone, but rather that you don't statically mark a man but that you "hand him over" to another defender if that is savely possible, as soon as he leaves "your zone".
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