Bedfordspurs
Mark Falco
No idea what it wasIf you're talking about the McGregor walk thing, I think he promised to do it on that Comic Relief livestream he did a while back.
No idea what it wasIf you're talking about the McGregor walk thing, I think he promised to do it on that Comic Relief livestream he did a while back.
And yet United kept picking him game after game. Why because of his drive and competitiveness. Without that he would be another Mark Kinsella, Matt Holland or Liam Miller. Take that out of Alli and you're left with Jenas or Joe Cole.
Scholes to me was more of a clumsy tackler than a dirty fudger like Keane. Alli is too skillful to be as clumsy as Scholes, he's got a short fuse in the heat of the battle, comes with age to a certain extent but as many others have said, I wouldn't change him.
Do you really believe that? I agree to a point but his football ability is largely why he's been so successful, not his poor temperament. People make the same excuses for Rooney. Surely he can be aggresive and show competitiveness without kicking/elbowing/making leg breaking tackles?
I'm not so sure. Jenas had great footballing ability - the man was technically great, able to score, dribble, pass and hit free-kicks with skill and verve. The CC semi against Arsenal showed what a complete player he was. He was also a fairly hard worker, at least compared to some of the team-mates he had to play with during his time here. But there was always something lacking in him, that little bit of desire, hunger, fight and a refusal to lose that separates the great from the acceptably good.
Now, you can say that such a desire and competitive nature need not manifest itself in silly challenges or angry kicks out, and you may be right. But it's a delicate thing, managing mentalities. And you might well find that such a hard edge, far from being an unnecessary bit of baggage, is actually key to Alli maintaining that sort of fight and verve that keeps him above the rest. Managing personalities isn't a science - it's an art. And I think we ought to be very careful when deconstructing Dele's.
That's the thing, he doesn't even need to change a whole lot. Knowing Poch, I'm sure he wouldn't want him to lose that edge, he just needs to say listen Dele, you can be aggressive, wind people up, be cynical within reason and provided it doesn't cross the line, just don't make crazy, leg breaking tackles and elbow people. I don't know why it's such a hard concept for players like him and Rooney to grasp.
I'm not so sure. Jenas had great footballing ability - the man was technically great, able to score, dribble, pass and hit free-kicks with skill and verve. The CC semi against Arsenal showed what a complete player he was. He was also a fairly hard worker, at least compared to some of the team-mates he had to play with during his time here. But there was always something lacking in him, that little bit of desire, hunger, fight and a refusal to lose that separates the great from the acceptably good.
Now, you can say that such a desire and competitive nature need not manifest itself in silly challenges or angry kicks out, and you may be right. But it's a delicate thing, managing mentalities. And you might well find that such a hard edge, far from being an unnecessary bit of baggage, is actually key to Alli maintaining that sort of fight and verve that keeps him above the rest. Managing personalities isn't a science - it's an art. And I think we ought to be very careful when deconstructing Dele's.
I agree with the "is" in your sentence above, but not the "was". Wheelchair was originally an attacking midfielder and only really moved deeper in the last couple of years.these comparisons to Wheelchair are pointless - Alli practically plays as a second striker whilst Wheelchair was/is a deeper laying central midfielder
I agree with the "is" in your sentence above, but not the "was". Wheelchair was originally an attacking midfielder and only really moved deeper in the last couple of years.
point taken, but did he ever play a role similar to Alli? not to my recollection, he was always more of a creator than a goal scorer - in terms of role on the pitch
Jenas always frustrated because so often he seemed to play within himself. He'd play the conservative ball, when an ambitious one that he was capable of playing was on. To make matters worse, he always seemed to up his game against Le Arse, which just went to show that he had it in him. Back to Alli, what do you think he's worth in the transfer market now?
point taken, but did he ever play a role similar to Alli? not to my recollection, he was always more of a creator than a goal scorer - in terms of role on the pitch
How dare you! All awards should go to ZlatanI maybe biased but I think Dele is currently in the lead for young player of the season
Jenas had the lot other than the drive I agree 100%
He got caught in the trap of never realising how good he was IMO