People don't like change,
especially when the status quo has produced four La Liga titles, two
Champions League titles, two Copa del Rey trophies, four Spanish Super
Cups, two UEFA Super Cups and two Club World Cup titles over the last
five years. So when Barcelona finished a competitive match with less
possession than their opponents for the first time since a 4-1 loss to
Real Madrid in May 2008 (317 matches ago), it became the headline...even
though Barca beat Ray Vallecano 4-0.
Barcelona's official website,
which gets it's data from Opta, said possession was only 51-49 percent
in Rayo's favor while Opta's English language Twitter feed said Barca only had 46 percent of possession (and Opta's Spanish language Twitter feed said 45 percent).
Whatever the actual number was, it was less than what has become the
team's standard practice of ball hoggery. Even in losing 7-0 on
aggregate to Bayern Munich last season, Barca still had 60 percent of
possession or more in both legs. But to stave off the "end of an era" talk
that grew last season even though Barcelona still won La Liga, there
was a need to modify and adapt and avoid stagnation and predictability.
And as Gerard Pique said before 4-0 win over Ajax earlier in the week (yes, another 4-0 win), new manager Tata Martino is trying to do that.

Hakuna maoni:
Chapisha Maoni