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#klopp's other model son
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The trophy is in good hands 🧤
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fishylife · 5 years
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Ok, I still don’t know a single thing about soccer/football so I’m just going to throw together a bunch of people that I like and call it a team. Thanks @goats-guts-and-glory for including me in this fun game :D
Manager: 
- Jurgen Klopp and/or Pep Guardiola. Can it be both? Can they co-parent the team? Jurgen is the fun dad except when you do the one thing he tells you not to do. That’s when he goes “I’m not mad, I’m disappointed.” Pep is the Bruce Wayne dad. Super cool and charming in public but if he catches you with your hand in the cookie jar he will go Batman on your ass. 
- Pochettino can be the third coach. I don’t have a defined role for him but I still want him as a coach. 
Players: 
- Fernando Llorente - For no other reason than that I’m in love with him
- Ante Rebic - Ball of Balkan energy on the pitch, dog and cat loving cafe nerd off the pitch. Looks like he could beat me up but is actually a cinnamon roll.
- Son Heung Min - The role model I didn’t know I needed. Always happy. Scores goals. Hugs friends. 
- David Silva - Seems like a fun player to watch. I’ve heard that this man commands a lot of respect from his teammates which is pretty cool. I also feel like there’s a layer of sass hidden in this tiny man.
- Bernardo Silva - I haven’t seen him play as much but he seems to be pretty hardworking and the fact that he and David Silva play similar roles makes me think that there’s a Silva factory with branches in Spain and Portugal that just churn out little top grade midfielders. 
- Luka Modric - Mother hen who’s super smart and everyone listens to him because not only is he a kind human being but he makes an effort to learn other people’s languages to communicate with them so I am certain that he is a leader that people like and look up to (not literally).
- N’golo Kante - The man is an accountant so I automatically trust him. Also most humble dude in the world, drives a mini cooper, and deserves cookies.
- Per Mertesacker - The first soccer player I became a fan of. Also seems like a lovely man.
- Virgil Van Dijk - He seems like a pretty capable player. And/or maybe I just have a thing for super mega tall defenders.
- Javi Martinez - Yeah, tall defenders are definitely my thing. 
- Keylor Navas - I don’t know but I feel like I can trust him. Like, as a person. He’d probably be a good babysitter in case I needed to borrow him for that kind of stuff.
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sadiiomane10 · 7 years
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Jurgen Klopp and his 20+ sons prt2
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emre can aka the greatest human being ever born
model??? footballer??? both??? both is good
gets stick, comes thru w the best goal uve ever seen
invented good hair and looks
will fight you
one time he scored a overhead bicycle kick and its now been renamed TheEmreCAN
benzema tried it, he couldnt 
kloppo loves all his sons equally but he loves emre can more, its tru
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loris karius aka prince charming
goalkeeper, model, he can do it all
social media hoe
wore socks w slippers one time, i disowned him
hes a good man, likes to sing and dance
one time he fell off an uberboard…….
was bleach blonde for a while
parties in ibiza like he owns ibiza 
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dejan lovren aka he doesnt have a nickname the fuck (should be called the beeslayer cus ykno winkwink)
scored THAT goal v bvb,
will forever be a legend for it
is a big teddy bear  
a jokester, laughs alot
the only person to touch emres hair and not die - a miracle 
embarrasing dad to marko grujic
amazing dad to his real kids
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nathaniel clyne, aka my underappreciated fave
U N D E R A P P R E C I A T E D 
underappreciated
underappreciated 
needs more love and appreciation
did the hip hop battle w studge, lost
appreciate hiiiiiimmmmmm!!!!!
will play every game, gets no love
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simon mignolet aka saint simon
got stick, bossed goalkeeping and shut them up
angry bean
shot stopper
his defence lets him down, saves our damn ass
a pure 
opened a coffe shop in belgium; 
prolly to deal w the stress of his defence letting him down
hence the reason he needs free coffee all the time, i dont blame him
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joel matip, aka he also doesnt have a nickname smh (it should will save lfc’s dumb ass even when they dont deserve it)
he was free, 
we got our best defender for free, its a dream
we’re so lucky to have him
made defending his bitch
he scored one time it was emotional
he got injured one other time, our whole team fell apart and conceded goals like they live for it
also a good man
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shamal george aka smolkeeper
came on as a striker in preseason, it was so great
dont be fooled by his nickname hes so tollll, toller than kloppo
so in love w his gf, im jealous 
posted that ovie meme
got injured, i cried 
future best goalkeeper in the world, i dont make the rules its tru
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ben woodburn aka woody
everyones fave child
made us all fall in love w him in preseason
made his debut and  then scored against leeds, everyone cried
mini stevie??? prolly 
kloppo will protect him to death, no media hounds are getting near him
trents best friend 
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Trent Alexander-Arnold aka just trent aka utd are still prolly in his pocket
the other child we are all overly emotional over
started the utd game 
made utd his bitch
seriously he was so boss, it was unbelivable 
put that tounge away child
ben’s best friend, aka stuck to each other level of friendship
baby defender bossing defending, cries,
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divock origi aka belgium babe
also scored v bvb
saved us alot in the 15/16 season then he got hurt 
scored a wonder goal v bournemoth
it was seriously so good, i cant even describe it 
did so much weight training he went up a shirt size-hulk is that you??? :DD
a child
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danny ings, aka could be the best striker we’ve ever had if he didnt get hurt all the damn time 
the pic above is an accurate representation of his past two years 
got injured once, came back, got injured again
spends time w his dog and gf, 
social media hoe 2.0
scored v everton which makes him a tru red
never not injured
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marko grujic aka my son
a tol smol; toller than kloppo
celebrated like stevie in preseason; made us all so freaking emotional
dejan’s embarrassed son
stays home listening to Chantaje
snapchats music all the time
lives in a fancy ass apartment but is forever in his car
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alberto moreno aka spanish puppy
is a defender, is benched for a midfielder
grew a ponytail ditched it to go bleach blonde, 
member of the brazillian squad
also too young to have a child
i dont think anyone ever knows what he’s saying they just go w it
hyperactive child 
link to part 1 
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torentialtribute · 5 years
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Data experts and Klopp’s charisma turn Liverpool into kings of Europe
In the canteen at Liverpool the training ground in Melwood, two tables stand next to each other. At one, sit the players and coaches. Mo Salah munches breakfast alongside Jordan Henderson and Jurgen Klopp .
At the other, a group of non-descript people tuck into their morning poached eggs. They look nothing like the superstars their backs are pressed against. Yet the work of these geniuses, housed in a white office, a few strides down the corridor from the cafeteria, has helped gain Knock an edge in their pursuit of European glory.
They are known as the 'laptop guys' and without these individuals trawling through data, analysis and theorizing, Liverpool could have been left clinging to hopes of reclining the glories of former years.
Liverpool beat Tottenham Hotspur 2-0 in the final of the Champions League on Saturday night
They are led by Ian Graham, the club's director of research. His bond with Klopp was forged early on when he provided the new Liverpool manager with an analysis of two defeats from his time at Borussia Dortmund.
"You saw it! We destroyed them, "blurted Klopp. Graham explained he had not seen the game, he had simply analyzed the underlying data. It had been Graham, too, whose statistical model had scrutinized Klopp's under-performing Dortmund side in a 2014-15 season that saw the German club in the relegation zone.
His conclusion was that Dortmund had leg unlucky instead of incompetent. Liverpool were looking for a manager to replace Brendan Rodgers. Graham knew Klopp was their man.
When Klopp decided he needed a rest after Dortmund in the summer of 2015, Liverpool did not look elsewhere. They waited until the German was ready and brought him in the following October.
Tim Waskett works next to Graham. Waskett studied astrophysics before life as a football analyst. Then there’s Dafydd Steele, a maths graduate and former junior chess champion.
Perhaps the most fascinating member of the team is Will Spearman, one of the more recent additions. A Texan son of a professor, Spearman studied for a PhD in high-energy physics at Harvard before going on to work at CERN, searching for the Higgs boson particle. It was his dissertation that first provided a width for the "God Particle."
A lot of credit has to go to the 'laptop guys' behind the scenes, who are crunching the numbers
Here is a man who spent years searching for the most minute measurement in physics, now trying to give Liverpool an advantage, no matter how small. His insight has proved crucial.
Of course, these boffins do not take all of the credit, but Liverpool have embraced the marginal gains more than any other club. It was Klopp who hired Thomas Gronnemark to coach his team's throw-ins.
The analytics of Graham's team helped not only with Klopp's appointment and tactical observations that the manager may want to pass on to his team, but also with the transfer scouting that helped Liverpool thrive.
Graham's formula, among many things, looks not simply at percentage of completed passes but at whether each pass makes a player leaves his team more or less likely to score a goal because of it. It is through this that Graham urged the club to sign Naby Keita.
Liverpool's early transfer policy based on statistics and resale value did have flaws. The £ 16million purchase of Mario Balotelli in 2014 was hailed by the renowned Swiss CIES Football Observatory as the best value-for-money signing of that year, but turned out to be a disaster.
However, Liverpool have made three astonishing signings under Fenway that have been laid for their current success.
Luis Suarez was signed as damaged goods from Ajax in 2011 and turned out to be a superstar, almost single-handedly turning Liverpool into genuine title contenders
More recently, Mo Salah was signed from Roma for £ 34m in 2017 and has been the Premier League's top scorer for two seasons.
It was also such an analysis that encouraged the club to sign Philippe Coutinho for £ 8.5m in 2013. They sold him to Barcelona for £ 145m last year. The profit helped bring in Virgil van Dijk and Alisson, who have tasks Liverpool to the next level. How far this club has come in less than a decade. Forty-eight hours after buying Liverpool in October 2010, John W Henry and Tom Werner watched their new club lose 2-0 at Everton to stay rooted in the relegation zone.
As owners of baseball's Boston Red Sox, Henry and the Fenway Sports Group value the importance of harmony and smooth running off the pitch. Liverpool have it now.
The football side of affairs is run by sporting director Michael Edwards, who has been working at Anfield since 2011 for Portsmouth and Tottenham. Edwards heads a team of data and analyst specialists, with Klopp very much involved.
Sporting director Michael Edwards heads a team of data and analyst specialists
When Klopp arrived in 2015, he had a very good idea of ​​what he wanted, with Sadio Mane and Gini Wijnaldum signed the following summer. In time, Klopp has begun to admire and appreciate the input of Edwards's team – it was they who convinced the German that Salah was ready for the Premier League.
Chief executive Peter Moore is from Liverpool and a boyhood Red but has an American-based business background. Regarding his predecessor Ian Ayre got involved in football and commercial work, there is a clear division now. Moore concentrates on sponsorship, ticketing and finance, rather than recruitment.
Both men report to Fenway's 'man in England' Mike Gordon, who is based in London.
Key to Liverpool's revival has been the redevelopment of Anfield that could lead to a final capacity of 61,000. Not just the stage but the whole area has been transformed to give fans an experience akin to watching a major sports event across the Atlantic.
Liverpool's owners never pretended to know it all. "If they made mistakes, they listened, worked it out and fixed them," says a source.
Klopp is eager to praise his staff as well. Or 36-year-old assistant coach Pep Lijnders, he says: "I could write a book about him, about his influence, his optimism and his lively presence."
Besides the data, Klopp still relies on his old friend from Mainz, assistant manager Peter Krawietz, who is nicknamed 'The Eye' for his ability to spot a potential signing and also strengths and weaknesses or opponents.
A leading agent says: 'A lot of clubs go fishing for players. You always feel you're one of a number. Liverpool seem clearer about what they want. If they speak to you, they genuinely want to do a deal. "
Jurgen Klopp relations on Peter Krawietz, who is nicknamed 'The Eye' as he can spot a signing
The tactic may not always work in the short term but over several years, it's been a key to Liverpool's success. The best example is Van Dijk. Every phone-in show and pundit was screaming at Klopp to sign a center back after he missed out on the Dutchman in the summer of 2017.
Liverpool ignored the clamor and eventually got their man in the January 2018 window, even paying a premium fee.
The impact of Van Dijk has been extraordinary and gives an insight that Klopp will not panic buy or accept second order.
Liverpool have also been ruthless when they have needed to be. Rodgers, who gallantly led them to a thrilling second place in the 2014 Premier League title race, was fired barely a year later, his fate decided before he took the team into a final Merseyside derby at Goodison. Rodgers himself had given the job in 2012 after Henry had fired Kenny Dalglish, despite "The King" reaching two cup finals.
There has been no room for sentiment. Players such as Roberto Firmino, who fitted the Klopp philosophy, were signed before he arrived.
Liverpool also proved to be tough negotiators in the transfer market. Besides squeezing Barcelona for the huge Coutinho fee, they also successfully heroed out for £ 26m for defender Mamadou Sakho when there was no hope of him playing again under Klopp.
Crystal Palace ended up coughing up after Liverpool made it clear they would stick Sakho in the reserves for another year rather than accept a penny less.
It is a high risk strategy but it has allowed the club to gain maximum revenue for players which has been re-invested. Since 2014, Liverpool have assembled a world-class team at a net spend of £ 164m. In contrast, Chelsea have spent £ 205m, Arsenal £ 261m, Manchester United £ 488m and Manchester City £ 570m.
When Henry with the media soon after his takeover, he earnestly wrote down the words 'pass and move' on a notepad when a local hack tried to explain the philosophy of Liverpool's teamwork, dating back to Bill Shankly.
It was a sham on Henry's part, he already thought he knew best and had already lined up Damien Comolli as sporting director, the appointment confirmed three weeks later. Comolli was later sacked with a mixed record – Suarez and Jordan Henderson were signed under his watch but so, too, £ 35m Andy Carroll, Charlie Adam and Stewart Downing – and an imported communications director, Jen Chang from America, left in disgrace after he threatened a supporter.
To Henry's credit – and that of FSG president Gordon who was the company's eyes and ears in the UK – they worked hard to adapt their New England philosophy to a part of England with its own characteristics so unique it is sometimes dubbed "The People's Republic of Merseyside."
Dalglish, arguably the greatest figure in the club's history, was brought back into the fold as a club ambassador. Full-time appointments were made to liaise with supporters and fans' groups, both local and international.
There will always be the odd conflict between a hard-headed business and a community asset like Liverpool – local residents are currently unhappy the club are selling the famed Melwood training ground to property developers – but no club tries to engage harder with their fans than Liverpool.
No club tried to engage harder with their fans than Liverpool, with plenty of local heroes
Trent Alexander-Arnold's young local hero is active in supporting important campaigns such as reducing gang involvement in nearby schools.
What for the future, then? Can Liverpool be bigger than Manchester United? Can they become English football's driving force again?
United and Liverpool are traditionally English football's biggest and best-supported clubs – at home and all over the planet.
If Liverpool can build on this season while United continued to miss out on the Champions League, the balance of power could swing back again after years of dominance at Old Trafford.
Premier League research from 2017 put Liverpool's global support at 1.1billion.
Their social media audience is 66 million and they have 288 official supporters' clubs in 94 different countries.
While they are not ready yet to take United in pure figures, Liverpool believe their fan base is more active than at any other club.
Ultimately, their continued growth depends on what Klopp and his players manage to do on the pitch.
So far, they are delivering in spectacular fashion.
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jodyedgarus · 5 years
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With Manchester City Out, The New Champions League Favorite Is …
Eight days ago, the FiveThirtyEight Soccer Power Index (SPI) gave Manchester City the best chance to win the Champions League. On Wednesday, Manchester City crashed out of the competition in spectacular fashion, conceding three goals at home to Premier League rival Tottenham Hotspur. The series finished 4-4 on aggregate, but Spurs get to play on because of the competition’s away-goals rule. Remember all that talk about City winning the historic quadruple? That’s all over now.
Pep Guardiola’s Sky Blues got off to a quick start, grabbing the lead via a strike from Raheem Sterling in the game’s fourth minute. Sterling’s goal canceled out Tottenham’s 1-0 aggregate lead, and the tilt was on. But it wasn’t long before Son Heung-min struck to give the lead back to Spurs, and it wasn’t long before he struck again. At that point it looked like City was doomed, but then they stormed back, scoring twice to tilt things back in their favor. Spurs were not done, however, and got the series-winning goal from unlikely hero Fernando Llorente in the 73rd minute. They still had to survive some end-of-the-game drama: City scored what appeared to be the winning goal, but VAR ruled that forward Sergio Aguero was offside in the buildup, and Tottenham was on to the semifinals to face Ajax.1
City is out, but the favorites to win the whole thing still hail from Northern England. According to our SPI, Liverpool has the best chance to conquer Europe. The Reds followed up their very professional 2-0 win over Porto at Anfield last week with a very professional 4-1 win over Porto at Estadio de Dragao on Wednesday. Porto needed to score at least two goals to send the series to extra time — and at least three to win it outright — and the first 35 minutes of the match reflected that: Porto completed twice as many passes in the attacking third as did its opponents from Merseyside en route to outshooting them 14 to 3.
But then Liverpool scored a goal in the 26th minute, and it was all but in the bag for Jurgen Klopp’s side. Eder Militao, future center back for Real Madrid, scored a late goal for Porto, but it was merely consolation. And Liverpool’s reward for its 6-1 aggregate victory? A date with Barcelona in the semifinals.
Speaking of the Catalonians, they made relatively light work of Manchester United in the quarterfinals on Tuesday. Lionel Messi did Lionel Messi things at Camp Nou, scoring twice from outside the box — one shot with his left foot, the other with his weaker right — in a matter of four minutes. The first was vintage Messi, a left-footed effort driven low that curled past the outstretched body of Manchester United goalkeeper David de Gea and into the bottom left corner of the goal. The second was less spectacular, a speculative effort that de Gea whiffed on uncharacteristically. Gift or not, the goal put Messi two clear at the top of the Champions League Golden Boot race. A goal in the 61st minute from old United foe Philippe Coutinho put the series out of reach for the Mancs. And now the soccer world can salivate over a Messi-vs.-Salah showdown in the semifinals.
If the result in Barcelona felt like a forgone conclusion, the result in Turin felt like anything but. Ajax’s 2-1 Tuesday win (3-2 aggregate) marked a sort of long-fermented revenge: In April 1997, the last time the Dutch giants played in the Champions League semifinals — a month before the team’s current best player, Frenkie de Jong, was born — they were eviscerated by Juventus, losing by an aggregate score of 6-2. That Ajax team featured club and country legends Edwin van der Sar, Frank de Boer, Marc Overmars and Danny Blind,2 but Lucky Ajax wasn’t very lucky on that occasion.
This time around, Ajax took the game to Juventus from the opening whistle, a strategy that should have stunned exactly no one who watched the team embarrass Real Madrid last month. Total shots and shots on target were nearly equal Tuesday in Turin, but Ajax created more big chances and completed a higher percentage of passes in the attacking third than Juventus. Crucially, the Dutchmen didn’t panic when Cristiano Ronaldo scored to give the Italians the lead in the 28th minute. They kept pressing, kept playing on the front foot, and midfielder Donny van de Beek bagged an equalizer just six minutes later. And even after it took the lead on a header from team captain Matthijs de Ligt in the 67th minute, Ajax didn’t sit back. The side smelled blood and attempted more passes inside the penalty area in the final 23 minutes plus stoppage time than its opponents. Ajax could have scored a couple more — and now it has a 16 percent chance in our SPI model to win the whole thing, up significantly from before the quarterfinal’s second leg.
It’s hard to predict whether Ajax pups like de Jong, de Ligt and van de Beek will go on to have the kinds of long, fruitful careers their elder countrymen did, but there’s little doubt that they’ve cemented themselves as club legends. They’ve made Ajax relevant again. Now all that’s left for them to do is to make Ajax champions again.
Check out our latest soccer predictions.
from News About Sports https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/with-manchester-city-out-the-champions-league-favorite-is/
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freebetalerts-blog · 5 years
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Champions League Tactical Preview: Spurs & Liverpool to qualify for the last 16
(New post on FreeBetAlerts.com) - https://freebetalerts.com/2018/12/10/champions-league-tactical-preview-spurs-liverpool-to-qualify-for-the-last-16/ #Football, #Freebets, #Tips
Champions League Tactical Preview: Spurs & Liverpool to qualify for the last 16 Please share.
. looks ahead to the sixth round of Champions League group matches, predicting Liverpool to beat Napoli by two goals and Spurs to win at Barcelona… “Sergio Busquets no longer has the pace to patrol the base of midfield alone, and so should Barcelona amble around a little aimlessly Spurs can win the second balls and release their front three to run straight at the Barca centre-backs.”
Barcelona v SpursTuesday, 20:00Live on BT Sport 3Tottenham need to win in Barcelona to qualify for the knockout phase of the Champions League, and with the hosts set to rest key players while Mauricio Pochettino left Harry Kane and Christian Eriksen on the bench last weekend this is a real possibility. Barca’s defence remains vulnerable – and without adequate midfield support – which offers a counter-attacking opportunity to Spurs’ fluid front three.Kane, Dele Alli, and Heung-Min Son are likely to start in a 4-3-3 formation that looks to quickly distribute to the forwards, mimicking the model used in a 3-1 victory over Chelsea recently. For this to be successful the visitors will need to show greater energy and purpose in the midfield battle than their opponents, which should be possible if Barca rest one or two of their forwards.Ernersto Valverde’s team lack composure against opponents willing to press them, with a disconnect between midfield and attack exacerbated when one of Luis Suarez or Lionel Messi is missing. Sergio Busquets no longer has the pace to patrol the base of midfield alone, and so should Barcelona amble around a little aimlessly Spurs can win the second balls and release their front three to run straight at the Barca centre-backs.Liverpool v NapoliTuesday, 20:00Live on BT Sport 2Napoli line up in a 4-4-2 under Carlo Ancelotti and in recent weeks Jurgen Klopp has responded to this formation by mirroring it, as he did against both Bournemouth and Burnley this month. Consequently it should be another lopsided 4-4-2 for Liverpool in which Xherdan Shaqiri floats infield from the right to become their number 10. The Switzerland international is fast becoming their most creative, tempo-setting player.His direct opponent on Tuesday night is Marek Hamsik, the playmaker sat in a deeper left-centre midfield position by Ancelotti. Playing him in an uncomfortably defensive role isn’t usually a problem because Napoli tend to dominate possession (54.9% in Serie A), but Hamsik is a weak point against confrontational opposition. He failed to make a single tackle in a 3-1 defeat at Juventus and only mustered two defensive actions in the 1-0 win against Liverpool.Klopp’s side are much improved from that day, and so Hamsik is unlikely to get away with it this time. As Shaqiri bends towards the Slovakian’s area of the pitch he should be able to control proceedings.Valencia v Man UtdWednesday, 20:00Live on BT Sport 3 In their most confident performance of the season to date, Man Utd beat Fulham 4-1 at Old Trafford by returning to their traditional attacking roots; Jose Mourinho’s side hit the flanks as quickly as possible, with full-back Diogo Dalot and Ashley Young running straight at their opposite numbers before crossing into the box. It is a tactic that should work well in Spain.Dalot and Young attempted 17 crosses between them against Fulham, with the 19-year-old Portuguese particularly impressive down the right. His deliveries were consistently good but it was his movement forward that really stood out. United have been crying out for a right-back brave enough to bomb forward on the overlap, and Dalot’s runs successfully freed up space for Juan Mata as he cuts inside. It is no coincidence that Mata completed more key passes (three) than in any other game this season.Valencia have been vulnerable in the full-back positions this season. Juventus dominated the flanks in a 1-0 win at the end of November (left-back Jose Gaya was a passenger, failing to make a single tackle or interception), and Real Madrid were similarly strong on the opposite flank when they beat Valencia 2-0 on December 1. That day, Daniel Wass was terrorised by Sergio Reguilon and Gareth Bale. Gaya’s suspension means 21-year-old Toni Lato will play at left-back, further strengthening the case for Dalot to grab the headlines again.Man City v HoffenheimWednesday, 20:00Live on BT Sport 2Man City must avoid defeat if they are to top Group F, which should be easy enough despite mounting injuries for Pep Guardiola’s side. David Silva seems likely to miss out, which means City will be heavily relying upon the Riyad Mahrez and Bernardo Silva partnership that has flourished over the last fortnight. Together, they should be able to create overloads against Hoffenheim’s struggling left-back Nico Shulz.Hoffenheim have failed to win any of their last four matches, and that’s largely because of their unexpected shift to a 4-3-3 formation – with Schulz one of several defenders left exposed by the shift. He was at fault for Wolfsburg’s first goal in a recent 2-2 draw and made an error that led to a goal when Shakhtar won 3-2 in Hoffenhiem. Silva is increasingly pulling wide to become a secondary right winger for City, and his combinations with Mahrez were key to City’s 2-1 win at Watford a week ago. Jose Holebas couldn’t handle the amount of pressure down his side. Schulz surely won’t either.
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⚽️This guy was great as usual! Love him to bits!
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