Ralf Rangnick. Right man, right place, Wrong job!!

“He’s never managed in England.” Paul Merson.

“He’s never managed in England” or “What does he know about the English game?” are probably two of my most hated statements in football…Well…English Football media. I would add, with my most insincere apologies to Paul Merson…It is also one of the stupidest statements in football!

I would actually love to question what people like Paul Merson know about the English game. I know, these blokes all hold such high regard amongst the Daily Mail readers and White Van Men of the football audience, but personally I can’t stand it! I can’t stand them!

(Stops self from ranting…Collects thoughts…Restarts Blog)

So, consider this…Pep Guardiola and Jürgen Klopp, the two previous winners of the Premier League, have both indirectly been influenced by Ralf Rangnick’s theory of the game. Thomas Tuchel, the current Champions League winning manager, has directly been influenced by the Ralf Rangnick’s theory. Throw in Ralph Hasenhüttl, Julian Nagelsmann, Jesse Marsch and Hansi Flick, to name just a few well known names, plus the many names that many football fans will be less familiar with and indeed it is clear the man has influenced enough coaches to be worth the hype.

There is something ironic about his theory though…It isn’t even his. He doesn’t even claim it to be. Any “Inverting the Pyramid” readers will already know that organised Pressing was invented by the legendary Dynamo Kiev manager Valeriy Lobanovskiy. It was in a 1983 friendly match that Rangnick first came across the style and supposedly Gegenpressing was born.

I think a more valuable question to ask the next time somebody says “What does he know about the English game?” would be “What is the English game?”. Is it pressing? As any watcher of Manchester City or Liverpool would possibly believe? But what about Possession? Manchester City and Liverpool do very different things with that. So is it Tika-Taka? What about Conte and his evolved Catenaccio ideas? What about the tactical nous of Mourinho and Benitez? Are we to ignore the influence they had on English football, just because it is not in vogue at the moment. Do we ignore Wenger? Do we ignore Ancelotti? Did the Netherlands and Total Futbol not have anything to say on English football?

That is just the thing! English football is classically kick and rush! Yet, very few teams play that way and I would argue none of the Premier League winning teams have played that way at all! Consider English Football…or more specifically Premier League Football, more of a mixing bowl. The argument is as redundant as asking what Guardiola, Klopp, Mourinho and more could all do if they just didn’t have all that pesky money swashing around. Who actually cares?

I’m guessing if you are putting down your Daily Mail, pulled over in your white van or someone who hates how “money has ruined the game” you’ve stopped reading and deleted every trace of my work by now. Thank God! For the rest of you, I will now explain my Title of this piece.

Ralf Rangnick, is not actually that successful as a coach. As I am sure you are aware by now, he most recently managed Schalke in top flight football, and he stepped down from there in 2011 with chronic fatigue syndrome.

Rangnick’s real success has always been behind the scenes, but this is probably why all reports of what he will do next season from Manchester United have been very vague. Manchester United’s hierarchy aren’t really, very good at making good footballing decisions, so the thought of a combustible, autocratic, straight talking, leading football brain being in charge probably scares them a lot! Add to that the change of chief executive at the club and it just isn’t the right time for definitive decision making, but one gets the feeling at clubs like Manchester United “definitive decision making” is not a word they have on any inspirational banners around Carrington or Old Trafford’s offices.

But there is not a doubt in my mind, I would be handing him the keys and walking away to go work on some sponsorship deals if I was the incoming chief executive Richard Arnold!

If you look at the work Rangnick first did at TSG 1899 Hoffenheim in not only getting them to the Bundesliga, but what he did with their coaching philosophy, analysis department and giving chances to young players. Over the years of his career he has continually given young players such as Sejad Salihović, Demba Ba, Alexander Hleb and even Arsenal’s current young star Emile Smith all chances and influenced their brilliant careers.

Take a look at the entire Red Bull Football group and it is basically what Manchester United could expect with a Rangnick run empire. A group of clubs that have a shared philosophy of play, recruitment, business model, network that stretches the globe. Look at the players that have come through Red Bull clubs, players like Sadio Mane, Dayot Upamecano, Erling Haaland, Naby Keita, Joshua Kimmich and Timo Werner to name just a few. This could be Manchester United!

Whilst I do admit, I hope Ralf is a success in the manager role he currently occupies (only to shove it to Paul Merson et al.) I really think he is the right man in the wrong role. Hopefully, Manchester United find an ounce of sense between them and give him all the footballing power in West Manchester!

Hopper ✌⚽

If Brighton are xG kings. Wolves are the xG jokers!

For those old school football fans who write off xG, as it is new and confusing, I apologise, this one is not for you. However, for those who are curious to discuss or even learn about xG, welcome…Come along!

In the 2020-21 season, Brighton were hailed as the xG Kings, which in short, is a scientific way for saying “they play great, but are unlucky!”

xG is loved by many and probably dismissed by a many-and-one. Despite the dismissal of pundits and dinosaurs alike, it really is not that difficult to understand. There is an algorithm in which the likelihood of scoring is quantified and put into a number, with 1.0 being a definite goal and 0.01 being the half-est of half-chances. The algorithm takes into account distance, angle, defenders, goalkeepers etc. and so that we simpletons don’t have to worry our little brains about it, puts it into a number. As one of my lecturers often told us on my Sports Coaching degree, “don’t worry…you don’t need to do the sum, just know what the algorithm is doing for you!!” So if a team or a player has an xG of 10 but has scored 2, they should have scored 10 but are missing 80% of their chances, with me? I hope so.

The reason xG is important in a modern age is important.

Football has always been very late compared to other sports to adopt many improvements and fact-driven assets. For example, Rugby, NFL, Basketball and many other sports were way ahead of Football in getting sports scientists. The fact we even call these people “Sports scientists” is behind in itself. Considering Sports Science is holistic. A coach, a physio, a psychologist, an analyst, a bio-mechanist and all the other “ists” are all sport scientists, but they don’t dabble in other sciences when they become specialists. No more so than the car salesman doesn’t sell you the car and fix its brake pads or does the pilot serve you drinks mid-flight. There are some cross-overs, but on the whole, sports scientists stay in their lane.

Other examples of Football’s reluctance to change would be goal-line technology, referees not being heard by audiences, head injury protocol or video refereeing…or even looking at successful video refereeing and doing what that sport is doing. Even changing rules for the better of the game, seems to take forever, as if the only thing religions across the World could all agree on is that all the varying God’s took the time to write down the rules of football themselves and thou shalt not ever change them. But that is probably a whole piece for me to write in the future unless someone more important covers it first.

The big difference with football in comparison to other sports is coverage. By being the most popular sport around the world, naturally, it gets more coverage than the others. There are many plus points to this coverage, however, one of the massive negatives (in my opinion) is many unlearned people, having very loud voices, on very large stages, to voice their unlearned opinion. In other words, just because you can kick a ball, does not mean you understand the myriad of progressions and how they work. So, because you don’t get it and it wasn’t around in your day…doesn’t mean it is rubbish. Otherwise, we would all be using pigeons and smoke signals and I don’t know how to even start smoking a blog.

In the pre-xG days, a teams form was solely based on results. There may be a feeling that a club is doing well, usually because they play the “right way”. But even with the right way, there are a number of teams that played that way and went down to the Championship, Norwich, Bournemouth, Swansea etc. Likewise, there have been a number of teams who play a perceived wrong way and stay up. This usually leads to managers either being given longer or sacked, based on “feeling”.

But post xG and for the managers who embrace the future and are “forward-thinking”, it has been possible to quantify the qualitative evidence. In other words, factually prove you’re doing well, without breaking out the “feels”. For modern clubs, focussing on performance more than results.

Brighton 2020-21 xG Kings!

When considering Brighton in 2020-21, this was vital. Graham Potter seems to be linked with every job in England, including the England job itself. I have to admit…I’m a believer!

10 games into the campaign, to the non-believer’s, they would have thought you were mad. Brighton had won just 2 games out of those 10. Indeed, by the end of the season, they had only managed to win another 7 games to make it 9 overall. Sitting in 16th, you would be forgiven for believing they had a bad season…but…

With 15 losses, Brighton had lost fewer games than Southampton, Crystal Palace, Wolverhampton Wanderers and Newcastle United, all above them. They only conceded 46 goals and that is less than 8 of the teams that finished above them. So, what on earth was happening in the attack?

This is where xG can help. Brighton scored 40 goals last season, 1 of which was an own goal, the highest goal scorer being Neal Maupay with 8. Consider Southampton, one place above them got 47 and you see that, fair enough, that is about right…right? Wrong! Brighton had an xG of 51.6, which as we know, means they should have scored an additional 11 goals. Figures that with their good defensive record, should have had them sitting around 10th or 11th.

The explanation is simple. Brighton got into the right positions and created the right chances, they just couldn’t score! Top scorer Maupay himself should have scored an additional 5 goals, making him the worst in the team for G-xG (Goals – expected goals). When you consider Southampton again, the worst G-xG was Nathan Redmond with -1.3, in other words, he only missed a goal and a third of the goals he should have scored. Meanwhile, 8 players all outscored their xG.

Consider the games that would have been won by Brighton rather than the 14 draws they ended up with and it is easy to see why they are indeed xG Kings of 2020-21.

Wolves, the xG Jokers!

Now consider Wolverhampton Wanderers this season, 2021-22. Currently, Wolves sit in 8th place, between Manchester United in 7th and Brighton in 9th.

Undoubtedly, results-wise this does indicate that Wolves are having a good season. Indeed the only teams that have won more games sit above them and the only teams to have won fewer games are all below them. There is one outlying variable that will not appear in the league table though…Jose Sa!

As he arrived from Olympiacos in summer 2021, annoyingly for stat nerds like me, there aren’t many. This season though, he has been brilliant!

In simplistic Match of the Day level statistics, he has conceded 15, which is less than Manchester United’s David De Gea with 29 and also less than Brighton’s Robert Sanchez with 19. But that does not tell the half of it.

Firstly, Sa concedes 0.75 goals per-90, compared to De Gea’s 1.45 per-90 and Sanchez’s 1.00 per-90. Look deeper and it gets even better. Save percentage Sa = 85.9%, De Gea + 71.7% and Sanchez = 76.1%. These statistics can even outdo the Premier League’s leading goalkeeper Ederson and his 73.9%. However, on another important metric PSxG+/- (post-shot expected goals minus goals) Sa with +6.7, loses out only to De Gea (+8.4) but is performing better than Sanchez (+1.3) and significantly outperforms Ederson (-1.8). This statistic basically means how many goals they should have conceded minus the ones they did concede, with a + being how many better off they are. Therefore, this takes into account the quality of the chances they are facing.

Finally, there is the goal scoring statistics. Wolves have scored 16 of their 17 goals, with 1 own goal to help. This actually underperforms, much like Brighton did in 2020-21.

Predictably, Liverpool, the Premier Leagues top scorers, also have the highest xG (52.4) and are outscoring it (55). Equally, Burnley, the league’s lowest-scoring team have the lowest xG (16.9) and are underscoring if you were to not count own goals (15). Manchester United sitting one place above Wolves in the table have the 6th highest xG (27.7) and outscore it (31) and Brighton sitting one place below Wolves in the table, have improved on last season to be 13th in the xG statistics (xG=23.7) underperforming by (-3.)7 with (20) goals. Wolves sit 3rd from bottom on xG (20.7), which is even more concerning when you consider Wolves have scored just 17 goals so far, this puts them above only 20th place Burnley and 18th place Norwich.

So to summarise, Wolves are conceding high probability chances, but thanks to Jose Sa, they do not concede as many of them as they should and they do not create many clear chances and they take even less of them. But ultimately the only statistic that decides the league table are points on the board. There is no doubt that the 31 points on the board for Wolves are impressive, especially when all the evidence points to the fact they are not even playing well.

Making them the Premier League’s xG Joker in the pack!

My AFCON 11

With the African Cup Of Nations kicking off, I have picked my AFCON 11 and a brief summary of each player. Hopefully, there may be some players you have not heard of. Please tell me yours!!

Goalkeeper: Andre Onana (Cameroon). Back with perfect timing for his nations home African Cup of Nations! Onana was arguably unlucky to receive 9-month ban having taken what he thought was paracetamol for a headache the day after a Champions league tie with Atalanta. He had actually accidentally taken Lasimac, a Furosemide-based diuretic, with Furosemide being on WADA banned list. Since leaving Barcelona due to the arrival of Claudio Bravo and Marc-Andre Ter Stegen, Onana has climbed through the ranks of Jong Ajax, to become the mainstay in between the sticks at the Johan Cruijff ArenA. As can be expected with any Barcelona or Ajax goalkeeper, Onana is brilliant with the ball at his feet, but additionally, he is very good with his hand distribution. Some writers noting his “netball style throw”. Onana’s shot save % is around 71% which only 1-6% below the likes of Alisson, Ter Stegen, Courtois, Ederson and Senegalese rival Eduard Mendy, which is why, up until his ban, he was routinely linked with big clubs across Europe. If the home nation are to go deep into AFCON, it is surely going to include some brilliant performances from the Ajax man.

Right-back: Achraf Hakimi (Morocco). Hakimi made his big-money move to Paris St Germain in the summer from Internazionale. Over Hakimi’s career, he has excelled well beyond the leading Right-back’s when it comes to his Goal’s+Assist’s per90. Admittedly, defensively, he can struggle when facing attackers 1v1, but in a proactive and pressing side, he is one of the strongest for pressures.

Left-back: Ramy Bensebaini (Algeria). Algeria are one of the most in-form teams going into the African Cup of Nations. Ramy Bensebaini could be a strong piece of the machine if Algeria are to impress. Defensively he is solid, with a better tackle per90 record than the top left-backs in Europe including Robertson, Chilwell and Theo Hernandez. Versus dribbles, he is among the best statistically and this is likewise in his pressing successes. Attacking wise Bensebaini is not as strong as the leading left-backs, but hopefully, he is able to impress at AFCON.

Centre-backs: Bouna Sarr (Senegal) and Eric Bailly (Ivory Coast). At this point, my natural position was to look at Kalidou Koulibaly. He has played more this season than either of my choices, however…when you look at the statistics, both Sarr and Bailly have been brilliant when they play. Sarr is part of a Bayern Munich side that is strong, whilst injuries and changing managers have left Bailly down the pecking order at Manchester United. Meanwhile, Koulibaly is the main man at Napoli and is having a brilliant season. That said, AFCON is not club form and Sarr will be a partner to Koulibaly in a strong Senegal team and Eric Bailly will be the main centre-back with Ivory Coast. Hopefully, all three are able to have strong tournaments in what is probably the most excited and highest level of quality AFCON in history.

Central-Midfield: Ilaix Moriba (Guinea), Amadou Diawara (Guinea) and Hannibal Mejbri (Tunisia). With my midfield, I have actively tried to avoid the obvious names. Whilst Keita, Partey, Bennacer and the likes will no doubt have strong tournaments, the players I have picked are young and exciting players and names you may not have heard or seen much of.

Moriba joined RB Leipzig this season from Barcelona. RB Leipzig were quick to take advantage of the Barcelona financial situation, but no doubt the rise of Pedri and Gavi will have impacted Ilaix’s decision to go elsewhere. Other than Florian Wirtz, there is not a big name teenage central midfielder with a higher xG than Moriba per-90 minutes with 0.19 per-90. Moriba stands alongside Pedri as the leading completed at 55.8 passes per-90 and a high 91.5% accuracy.

Amadou Diawara is an exciting midfielder in the style of Ngolo Kante, Idrissa Gana Gueye or Yvies Bissouma. Unfortunately, due to injuries and changing of manager at Roma, Diawara has only started 82 games since his debut for Bologna in 2015-16. His statistics do not quite reach the likes of Kante or Bissouma, yet nevertheless, I am excited to see him in a high intensity Guinean midfield alongside Naby Keita.

Hannibal Mejbri is probably the biggest unknown of the midfield I have chosen, having played the grand total of 9 Premier League minutes for Manchester United. There is still no doubt of the Tunisian’s talent. Despite the lack of club appearances, Hannibal has played 4 times for his country and last season in Premier League-2 racked up a goal/assist ratio of 0.49 per-90. I would highly recommend a trip to Youtube to see Hannibal’s best skills! Although, of course this isn’t always the most accurate measure of a player.

Right-Forward: Jeremie Boga (Ivory Coast). Boga has been a big part of a very exciting Sassuolo side since 2018-19. Having come through the Chelsea conveyor belt, Boga was only able to make 1 appearance for the Blues. He can play in Midfield or as an attacker and has a Shot-creation rate of 3.09 per-90 this season in the league. Unfortunately, Boga is in a strong Ivorian side and may not feature in every game, but when you consider he has a higher successful dribble % than Mohammed Salah, he is an exciting player to look out for when he does play.

Left-Forward: Ismaila Sarr (Senegal). “Take care of my boy” Sadio Mane says to then Watford Captain, Troy Deeney, after Liverpool win 2-0 at Anfield on the 14th of December 2019. Roll forward to February 2020 and Isamaila Sarr is coming off the pitch at Vicarage road having scored twice against The Reds. From the moment Mane spoke so highly of Sarr, I have been monitoring him. This season has been hit by injuries and Watford’s poor Premier League form, yet Sarr has still scored 5 goals in just 12 appearances. The Mane link routinely creates noise that Liverpool are following Sarr’s progress and with dribbling statistics are on par with his international teammate’s and likewise with his shot-creation per-90 minute stats, it is easy to see why. Ironically, it may be Sadio Mane that keeps him out of the team for Senagal, but I for one hope we see him have a strong tournament!

Centre-forward: Sebastian Haller (Ivory Coast). The most goals in his first 5 Champions League games record! No not Cristiano Ronaldo, not Robert Lewandowski and not Lionel Messi. Sebastian Romain Teddy Haller of Ajax and Ivory Coast! I remember the first time I saw Haller playing for France in the Toulon Tournament in 2014 and since then I have been intrigued. After coming through at Auxerre, Haller had a good scoring record for Utrecht and Eintracht Frankfurt. However, British fans will mostly be familiar with his struggle at West Ham United. But I urge you to acknowledge this as a blip. West Ham were a very different team at that point and unfortunately, at 6 foot 1, Haller was played much as an outlet to hold up the ball, which has never been his strength. Since moving to Ajax, Haller has a goal-scoring ratio of over a goal every 2 games and this season a goal + assist ratio of 1 per game. The Ivorian will no doubt have a massive part to play if his country are to go far in the tournament. Finally, his comments regarding the lack of respect for a tournament that is older than the European Championship, definitely score points with me.

I hope you enjoy this read and the African Cup of Nations. Let me know which players you are looking forward to seeing.

✌⚽ Hopper.

How to build Newcastle.

With the signing of Trippier but the loss to Cambridge United, it is clear that Newcastle are both on the right track, but a hell of a long way from the place we all know they are headed.

In recent weeks, we have seen Newcastle linked with Digne, Tarkowski, Ekitike, Wood, Coutinho, Ramsey, Bale, Isco, Rivaldo, Bobby and Jack Charlton, Shearer, Keegan and Messi. But which signings are both feasible, but also would be sensible at this time.

At this point in time, the most important thing for Newcastle is to do is finish above the three teams they are adrift with currently, Norwich, Watford and Burnley.

As things stand, Norwich sit bottom having played 19 and gained 10 points, Newcastle 19th, played 19 and 11 points, Burnley 18th, played 17 and 11 points and Watford just outside the relegation zone on 13 points having played 18 games. You would like to think Leeds, Everton and Southampton are clear with an 8 point gap for the former 2 and 10 for the latter. Although, in football, stranger things have happened.

With Burnley having two games in hand over Newcastle, it is out of Eddie Howe’s team’s hands to a certain degree. But…is it?

Currently, the January transfer window is open and as previously stated, Newcastle are linked with a lot of players. Whilst my default position on transfers is to suggest buying young and moulding players to be the ultimate approach to squad and club building, it is clear that Newcastle do not have the time for this. Therefore, I would opt not to sign the likes of Ekitike at this point. Newcastle need to view this transfer window as a standalone, get the job done window. In the summer there is time for a long term, strategy based, recruitment process. Right now, Newcastle need experience and know how to get through this season and remain a Premier League side.

The next group of players Newcastle are linked with are the players who at one point would have been the players sought after world wide. Decisions will need to be made by the Newcastle recruitment team, which of these players can deliver the aforementioned experience and know how, and which of these players are washed up, past it and looking for a last pay day. The other red herring to avoid would be the mercenaries. We all remember in the early days of Manchester City as the Abu Dhabi group came in, Robinho’s arrival. It is important to remember that in the earlier days of Qatar’s stewardship Paris Saint-Germain there were as many flops as there were success stories. Consider Zenit Saint-Petersburg, FC Anzhi Makhachkala, Chelsea, FC Shakhtar Donetsk and basically every club in China, and I’m sure Newcastle have enough evidence to guide themselves through the turbulent, rocky, waters, in which Agents are in their natural territory and your years in business will leave you scuba diving without flippers surrounded by the sharks.

However, Manchester City did stumble onto a strategy that worked and continued to do so throughout their path to Premier League dominance.

At the end of the 2008/09 Robinho and Jo season, Manchester City sat in 10th. Among the clubs above them in 4th, 5th and 6th sat Arsenal, Everton and Aston Villa. Whilst there were 7th, 8th and 9th between them, City were only 3 points behind Fulham in 7th. However, the gap between 7th and 6th was a sizeable 9 points, making it 12 points for Manchester City to gain, in order to take the next step in their progression.

Queue the 2009 summer transfer window. In comes Emmanuel Adebayor, who with 10 league goals, was Arsenal’s second highest scorer (the first being Robin Van Persie with 11 goals). With Adebayor, came Kolo Toure, an experienced Premier League winning Centre-back who played 29 of Arsenal’s league games the previous season. Joining them, Gareth Barry, the Aston Villa captain and Joleon Lescott, off the back of a good two seasons with Everton, in which he had also played regularly for England.

This strategy, not only strengthened Manchester City, but directly weakened the teams who were in the next places they wanted to head. The 2009/10 season saw City finish above both Villa and Everton, with Liverpool, not Arsenal falling below them, Manchester City finishing 5th.

They continued this strategy season upon season. In 10/11, City strengthened

significantly. In came future club legends such as David Silva and Yaya Toure (joining his brother), along with Edin Dzeko, Mario Balotelli and Aleksander Kolorov. But they were all joined by James Milner of Aston Villa.

2011/12 saw Sergio Aguero joined by Arsenal’s Samir Nasri and Gael Clichy. 2012/13, Jack Rodwell and in 2015/16 Raheem Sterling angered Liverpool fans by joining City having narrowly missing out in a title race with them just one season prior.

Nowadays, City have no need to cripple the teams around them, mostly because it is tough to do so when you consistently sit top of the pile. Although, they still indulge Pep Guardiola in the next big thing to give him projects. But they tend to go for a specific Pep Guardiola style player.

But for Newcastle, the chances of getting the Pep of the time and giving him the right toys to play with are a long way off. When they will be competing for the next Mbappe, Haaland or Bellingham. But if we come back to right now and the 2022 January transfer window. They could learn a lot from the Manchester City of a decade ago. Steer clear of a Robinho. Get yourself a Gareth Barry. Look at Burnley, Leeds, Everton and Southampton. Tomorrow look at Wolves, West Ham and Tottenham. The road is long.

My experience

For the last 10 years, I have been lucky enough to work at every level of football from grassroots to professional clubs.

I am currently Head of youth phase in the Welsh academy system and previously have coached in the English academy system.

Recently, I have completed my Masters degree in Football Coaching, which is in addition to my BSc Sports coaching degree and holding a UEFA B licence. I have coached, been an analyst, scouted and video scouted in my time in football.

My goal is to use my experience and knowledge about football to give nuanced opinion of certain themes and topics a few times a week. I will not try to exaggerate, click bait or give tribalist opinions of current form or results, if you are looking for football banter, I happily can suggest a whole array of Facebook pages for just these things.

I hope you enjoy the content I provide and I hope it can give a more in depth opinion from a football nerd, who just likes to express his views based on my expertise, experience and research.

Hope you enjoy, Hopper 🤙🏻