Ken Early: Boastful Sam Allardyce leaves Man City less sure of themselves before moment of truth - Irish Times 8/5/23
Pep Guardiola’s team showed the limits of the Leeds manager’s tactics, yet their mood is not as bright as it might have been as they go into Tuesday’s Champions League showdown with Real Madrid
Sam Allardyce's Leeds lost 2-1 to Manchester City on Saturday
but his return to management has made the Premier League more entertaining, in
a way. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA Wire
Ken Early
All lovers of football should be delighted by Sam
Allardyce’s sudden re-emergence as a key character in what was looking like a
predictable ending to another season of the Premier League. It’s hard to
imagine many people were enthused by the prospect of watching Leeds lose
heavily at Manchester City on Saturday – until Sam set aside his podcast
headphones and sat down for his first press conference as Leeds manager.
“I might be 68 and old, but there’s nobody ahead of me in
football terms,” he said. “Not Pep, not Klopp, not Arteta ... In terms of
knowledge and depth of knowledge, I’m up there with them. I’m not saying I’m
better than them, but certainly as good as they are.”
Saturday’s showdown was now the object of feverish
anticipation as the braggadocious podcaster went head to head with Pep
Guardiola.
Guardiola knew what Leeds’s approach was going to be. As
Allardyce said on a recent podcast, “I have certain ways of working and the one
way of working which everybody sees as a negative, which is actually the best
positive of all: stop goals going in ... You go in and set the structure. The
structure is not to get beat.” The not-getting-beat structure involved Leeds
keeping as many men behind the ball as possible and hoping to block and clear
their way to a result.
Guardiola also knew how his team were going to solve the
problem. The plan: if they drop deep and leave no space behind the defence,
then we’ll use the space they leave in front of the defence.
After 12 minutes, Riyad Mahrez found himself in a crossing
position on the right, but rather than aim for one of the team-mates attacking
the six-yard box, he pulled a low pass back to Kevin De Bruyne, who shot from
the edge of the box.
On 16 minutes Mahrez did it again, this time feeding Ilkay
Gundogan in the D. Confronted by a mass of Leeds defenders, Gundogan passed it
back out to the right wing and De Bruyne, who immediately pulled another low
ball back to Alvarez on the edge of the Leeds box.
On 19 minutes, Mahrez again came in from the right and rolled
the ball to the edge of the box, into the space that had opened up in front of
the retreating Leeds lines. Gundogan’s shot fizzed in at the near post. There
were nine Leeds players in the box, but the City midfielder was unmarked.
On the touchline Allardyce conferred urgently with his
assistant, Karl Robinson. Were they planning some measure to stop the bleeding?
If so, the effects were not immediately apparent. On 23 minutes Mahrez came in
from the right and – you guessed it – pulled a ball back to the edge of the
box. That one was cleared by Weston McKennie, but four minutes later Mahrez
again got free on the right and pulled it back to Gundogan unmarked in the D.
This time the low shot found the other corner.
City were showing Leeds: “Park the bus if you like. We’ll
round you up like sheep and score from the space you leave in front.”
Allardyce consciously presents himself as the opposite to
all the many frauds and posers who try to dress football up as something more
complicated than it is. “In the media world, around this country of ours, this
‘style of play’ rubbish – it’s doing my head in,” he grumbled on a recent
podcast. But that is what all this talk of styles of play is really about: the
ongoing effort to find answers to the new questions being asked by teams such
as Guardiola’s. The pitches are perfect year-round, the players run twice as
far as before, the goalkeepers are playing out from the back – in all these
ways the game really has changed. When Allardyce learned to play and to coach his
way, no team had either the ability or the patience to pass the ball 900 times
in search of the right kind of opportunity. Playing the way Leeds did against
City is like trying to lasso a flying saucer.
Yet Allardyce is also right that, in some ways, the game is
the same as it ever was. So much is decided by how you react to an unexpected
shock, and fear can still suddenly jam the gears of any team.
After City scored their second, the match settled into a
holding pattern – City saving energy for bigger tests to come, Leeds playing
dead and hoping to avoid further damage to their goal difference. The stand-off
lasted until the last ten minutes, when City won a penalty, which Erling
Haaland surprisingly handed to Gundogan so that he could complete his hat
trick. It was a nice personal touch from Haaland, showing that his pursuit of
records is not yet an all-consuming obsession. But Gundogan missed, Leeds
promptly scored from the next play after a mistake by Manuel Akanji, and City
were suddenly faced with the appalling prospect of a late equaliser in a game
they had dominated to an almost absurd degree. They needed Haaland’s elite
time-wasting-in-the-corner skills, previously showcased against Newcastle, to
take them home.
Afterwards Gundogan reflected: “The sad thing now is,
looking back, the disappointment of failing to score the penalty is a bit
higher than actually scoring two goals and winning the game.” In addition to scoring
twice, he had completed 170 passes – breaking a Premier League record
previously held by himself. That he could feel disappointed after such a
performance tells you something about City’s high standards – but it also tells
you something about football.
Guardiola’s former assistant Juanma Lillo has spent his
career in coaching preaching that we should praise what is done well, not just
what ends well – but he’s fighting a losing battle against human nature. How
you feel at the end of the game is usually how you feel about the game, and
this is not what City wanted to be feeling as they prepare for the defining
moment of their season against Real Madrid at the Bernabeu tomorrow night. If
Madrid do derail the no-brakes City treble train, you hope Allardyce doesn’t
forget to claim his little share of the credit.