Tottenham vs. Ajax 4/30/19 UCL Semi-Final First Leg

SUMMARY:

This semi-final match-up featured two teams that, perhaps may have surprised us at the beginning of the tournament had we been told they would make it as far. The game started out with each team struggling to get into stride as they coped with the opposing teams pressure. Early on, Ajax were able to beat Spurs’ first line of pressure and get Schone on the ball who was playing balls through the Tottenham back-line. This was allowed to happen by Frenkie De Jong dropping between his two center-backs and picking up the ball and the ever-supporting Andre Onana in goal.

When Tottenham attempted to press the back-line of Ajax, Frenkie De Jong dropped in between his two center-backs which pulled one of Tottenhams midfielders out to pick him up (indicated by the black arrows. Often times they did not want to follow De Jong that deep so they laid off of him a little. This allowed space for him to play the ball to Schone who could then play balls in behind the Spurs line.

By the tenth minute, Tottenham decided to let Ajax’s center-backs keep the ball in order to properly mark all of the midfielders. This led to Ajax having a considerable amount of possession.

Goal (Ajax):

The volume of possession that Ajax had meant that they had many chances to move the ball around the Tottenham penalty which means they are only one pass away from being in on goal. This is exactly what happened when a thread of the needle pass from Ziyech went through the Spurs back-line to Van De Beek who had ages to fake-out Lloris and pick his spot to put it home for the visitors.

This goal did not seem to cause much of a reaction from Spurs and Ajax were completely dominant. At around the 22nd minute Tottenham changed from a 3-4-3 system to a 4-3-3 having Danny rose tuck into midfield and Vertonghen play left-back. This tactic was presumably to add another man to midfield to try to control Ajax’s complete domination in midfield.

The rest of the half was largely more of the same with Ajax dominating most of the possession. However, Spurs were able to create a few chances at the end of the half by exploiting the more direct route by giving service to their big physical target man in Llorente who posted himself against the much less physical Daley Blind.

Second Half:

The second half was much more balanced with Spurs realizing their attacking potential by playing the ball directly to Llorente and having Lucas Moura run off of him. They also switched from a 4-3-3 to a 4-4-2 with a diamond midfield to have Dele man-mark De Jong to spot Ajax’s possession. The onslaught of Spurs’ balls into the box were ultimately negated by the brilliance of Andre Onana coming off his line to snuff-out any danger. The game ended 1-0 after a dominant first half from Ajax and a second half that will leave Tottenham with some hope for the second-leg in Amsterdam.

GOALKEEPERS

Hugo Lloris

Perhaps a frustrating game from Hugo Lloirs being left stranded by his defenders in the goal, but otherwise Lloris had a good game between the sticks for Spurs. Lloris was forced to go long due to the smothering press from Ajax so there was not too much to observe in terms of his distribution. In the 24th minute Lloris made a save at his near-post when Van De Beeks run into the box was rewarded and it appeared that he would play the ball across goal, but instead mishit it at Lloris who had dove to cut-out the cross and the ball rebounded off of his leg for a corner. Again, I am a big believer in anticipating from goalkeepers, however from this angle I believe Lloris should have stayed on his feet as his first priority should be the near-post, but he was lucky that the ball hit his leg and did not end up in the back of the net. Other than a few high ball claims Lloris did not have a whole lot else to do.

Andre Onana

Perhaps I am way too early in this assessment, but I am beginning to consider Andre Onana as a top 5 goalkeeper in the world. At the beginning of the game the pure quality of Onana’s distribution was clear either playing short under pressure to his defenders or breaking the line of pressure confidently by playing balls to his high full-backs on many occasions. Another option that Onana found brilliantly well was the driven ball straight to the chest of Tadic. The hold-up play has been absolutely crucial to Ajax’s success and he has played the false nine role brilliantly. He receives a great deal of help from the quality of the driven balls that Onana plays to him that allows him to take the ball down and make it stick without giving the defender a chance to win it. Throughout the game I stopped taking notes on how many times Onana came out to claim a ball played into the Ajax penalty area. He put on an absolute clinic in commanding your area as a goalkeeper. Despite being very young for a goalkeeper Onana shows absolutely no hesitation when he sees a ball in the air coming toward his penalty area. He is very athletic and comes out displaying his impressive power and even came out 15 yards on a number of occasion to claim balls. On one occasion in the first half Onana came out to clear a free-kick and punched the ball while clearing out BOTH Tottenham center-backs who were attempting to head the ball. Unfortunately, this led to the injury of Jan Vertonghen and I wish him the best. Not only this, but Onana also cut out a few driven crosses with the technique of taking a very square stance to potential cut-back opportunities in his box. I could not be more impressed with Onana and I look forward to watching his progression further.

Juventus vs. Ajax 4/16/19 UCL Quarter-Finals, Second-Leg

SUMMARY:

They said they couldn’t do it at the Bernabeu, and this time Juventus would be too tall an order, now, they couldn’t go all the way could they? Ajax seems to believe so and at this point, so do I. The game ended 1-1 in Amsterdam a week ago with many people feeling appreciative of the effort of the Ajax team, but ultimately feeling that Juventus and Ronaldo would be able to defeat them at home. This young Ajax team, however, does not play with an ounce of fear and showed up to Turin in their patented Dutch attacking 4-3-3 with every intent to display art in the form of football. The opening minutes of the match were very stop and start with neither team seeming to be able to establish themselves into a rhythm. Eventually, Juventus started to take some control of the match by pressing Ajax high up the pitch and playing them at their own game. This proved to be an effective tactic which suppressed Ajax’s quick attacks.

When Andre Onana had the ball, Dybala pressed him leaving his center-back mark open. This prompted the Juventus center-midfielder on the side closest to the ball to press the center-back left open by Dybala. The center-midfielder on the weak side would then tuck in to mark the defensive midfield pivot De Jong. This meant that there was a man open in midfield for Ajax, but he was hard to find. This is, perhaps, the reason that Allegri went with Emre Can in midfield alongside Matuidi as, in the event the open man was found, they would have the athleticism to get back into position.

This tactic led to Juventus having a lot of possession in the first quarter of the match. This possession led to a corner-kick in the 28th minute which was swung into the near-post for Ronaldo who powered home from six yars out, no chance for Onana. This did not seem to deflate the young and fearless Amsterdam side who responded with a goal of their own six minutes later. The goal came from an Ajax build-up starting with their goalkeeper in which all eleven players on the team touched the ball, Johann Cruyff would be proud. Schoene is played wide and his cross was deflected to Ziyech at the top of the box who strikes toward goal, his shot dribbles through to Donny Van de Beek 12 yards out and totally unmarked. He slots home into the bottom right corner. The half ended with Ajax still struggling with the Juve press and doing their best to find quick outlets down the wing, around the midfield blockade.

Second Half

Ajax start the half in sixth gear and are creating lots of opportunities forcing two fantastic saves from Wojciech Szczesny in the space of five minutes. Juve had chances of their own particularly one from the eighteen year old starlet Moise Kean in the 61st minute who had come on for the injuredDybala at the start of the half. By around the 63rd minute Ajax begin slicing through Juventus like warm butter. They have been keeping the ball for most of the half and begin putting it to good use creating glance after glance at goal and the Old Lady apparently on her heals. In the 67th minute this pressure lead to a corner-kick for Ajax. The ball was swung in toward De Ligt, Ajax’s 19 year old captain who power over three Juventus defenders to power it in. At this point with two away goals Juventus would need to score two and Ajax showed no signs of stopping. Although Ronaldo is always a threat and headed two chances straight at Onana, the game ended with the young Amsterdam side going through to the Semi-Finals of the Champions League. Incredible.

GOALKEEPERS:

Wojciech Szczesny: As mentioned in the review of the last game, the Polish international has had a tough road to get to where he is, but it is evident that the road has shaped a fine goalkeeper who has matured at Juventus the way wine matures in a cellar. Other than the Ajax goal, the first half was largely uneventful for the Pole having very little to do aside from playing a few short passes to his center-backs and clearing his lines. The goal left Szczensy stranded by his defender as Van de Beek was completely unmarked behind his back-line. The finish from Van de Beek was very good to slot it to Szczesny’s left and I do not think he had any chance to save it. Szczesny came up very big in the beginning of the half for Juventus and kept them in the game. The first save he made came when Van de Beek played a ball through for Ziyech to Szczesny’s left inside the box. As we saw in the first leg, Szczesny reads the shooter’s body shape and begins leaning toward where his body indicates that the ball will go. In this case, the ball is far closer to Szczesny and he reaches up a left palm to stop it from going in over his head as he leaned to his right. I am a fan of reading a striker’s body position and feel that goalkeepers are in the right to start moving once they have read it. This shows that even if the ball doesn’t go completely in the direction that a goalkeeper anticipates, as long as you are only leaning in that direction you are still able to make the save if it comes more central. The second save he made, only five minutes after the first, came from a curled effort from the top of the box from none other than Donny Van de Beek. The save was very similar to a save Szczesny made in the first leg. Szczesny pulsed his feet as the ball was being passed around the box until he saw Van de Beek pull his leg back and then set his feet. He then used one cross step from right to left before pushing off his left leg and tipping the ball over the bar with his top hand. Szczesny used his bottom hand to make the save in the first leg of the fixture which I think is an important thing to note as the position of the ball made it easier to reach with his top hand in this scenario and it does not have to be one or the other, a keeper can use both. It is also entirely possible that Szczesny is right-hand dominant and chose to use his right hand on both occasions.

ANDRE ONANA: It was a mostly quiet game for Onana. Despite the pressure that Juve applied to Ajax they only had a few clear-cut chances. Onana only had to record 3 saves that I can remember, two of which coming from Ronaldo headers that bounced before heading straight to the African ‘keeper. Juve chose to press Ajax in this match which I felt was the correct tactic as it chose Onana to kick the ball long on multiple occasions in this game, something that he did not do much of in the first leg allowing Ajax to routinely build attacks from the goalkeeper. He was able to find the open man left by the press (as discussed above) on a few occasions, but for the most part Juve forced him into creating a 50-50 ball between Tadic and the Juventus back-line. Onana made one impressive save in the first half from a Dybala volley with the outside of his foot heading for the side-netting to Onana’s left. The ‘keeper again showed how incredibly athletic he is by shuffling once to his left and springing off of his left foot to hold the mid-height volley. The save almost looked easy for him, but it was not a tame effort by any stretch of the imagination. Throughout the match, I noticed how amazingly calm Onana is in the Quarter-Finals of the Champions League. He did not look even a little bit nervous as displayed in the second half when he moaned at De Ligt for clearing a ball that he called to collect with three Juventus players inside his six yard box. He has supreme confidence in himself and does not seem to be bothered by much, this is a gift of the highest quality for a goalkeeper.

Ajax Vs. Juventus 4/11/19 UCL Quarter-Finals

SUMMARY:

Despite the routine brilliance of Cristiano Ronaldo, this was a match-up that showcased the pure class of this fairy-tale Ajax side. The first half opened with both sides seeming to be feeling the quarter-final nerves in the opening minutes and couldn’t string together a comprehensive string of passes. Juventus opened the game by startling Ajax with an early chance in the 3rd minute after a charging run from Bernardeschi through midfield who then blasted his strike over. Following this, Juventus could not seem to keep a hold of the ball and gave it away cheaply on a number of occasions. This sloppy pattern soon broke and from it spurred a young, fearless Ajax side that displayed exactly what has taken them to this stage in the biggest competition in the world. As Juventus started to keep a small bit of possession of the ball, the home side unleashed a ferocious high-press which effectively pinned Juventus in their own half with little hope of playing their way through. Due to Juventus being forced to play the long ball, Ajax was able and determined to keep a considerable amount of possession which they could immediately put to attacking use making chance after chance with the insurance policy of the press in the event that their attack broke down. The match turned into a modern-day siege, the Amsterdam side akin to the battering ram persistently banging on the castle door and the Turin side like the castle holding steadfast to the barrage. In the late stages of the first-half however, Juventus found a way to break through the press by way of the long outlet, a surging run from deep midfield, or Ajax being caught in possession. In accordance with this vulnerability, just before the half-time whistle none other than Cristiano Ronaldo broke the deadlock. Betancur was able to dribble through the Ajax press starting a counter-attack and play a ball to Ronaldo who was occupying the center-forward position. Ronaldo then played the ball wide to Cancelo and started a powerful run from a deep position. Cancelo dinked the ball over the back line and Ronaldo was their to power the header home from 6 yards out. Cristiano had done it again. When the second-half started, the scene was set for a half of Juventus defending deep in a compact 4-4-2 formation and allow Ajax to try to break them down. This plan was promptly scrapped when in the 46th minute Neres curled one home. The attack came from Ajax playing out of the back from a goal-kick and playing a ball into the channel for Neres. Cancelo was there to intercept, but made a mess of his first-touch allowing Neres to take the ball from him, cut in onto his right foot, and stroke the ball past Szczesny. The game continued in, more or less, the same fashion as it did in the first-half and Szczesny was by far the busier of the two ‘keepers. Despite a flurry of attacks from the substitute, Douglas Costa who provided a pacey escape route for Juventus and struck a low effort against the post in the 85th minute, the game ended level in the first leg of the quarter-final in Amsterdam.

GOALKEEPERS:

ONANA: Andre Onana has emerged as one of the best young goalkeepers in the world at the moment. He is extremely sound and well-rounded as one would expect of a keeper that spent many years in La Masia and has been at a club now for almost four years with one of the best track records of producing young talent. One thing that, as always impresses me about Onana is his distribution and the ice-cold composure he has on the ball. I can only recall one instance in which Onana took only one touch in clearing the ball when receiving a back pass from his defenders which struck as unusual enough to write it down in bold letters in my game notes. There were multiple occasions in the game that the Cameroonian receive a ball inside his 6 yard area with pressure less than 10 yards away and still took a touch and found a teammate with either foot. The incredible thing is how routinely he does this. I believe that he is up in the mix with Ter Stegen when it comes to taking a first touch away from a forward and distributing to teammates. Andre Onana uses a technique when distributing mid to long range balls in which he swings at the ball quickly, but has a short follow-through and almost fades away from the ball after striking it. This appears to be a very efficient technique that not enough goalkeepers use. Another thing that impresses me about Onana is his confidence which seems to be a theme in this Ajax side. He came out to punch a ball in the first half from a corner that many goalkeepers would leave, although it was headed before him by his teammate, you could see that he was confident enough to even come for that ball and might have got their had De Ligt not headed it away. Lastly I am struck by the focus of a young goalkeeper like Onana for 90 minutes. Having had very little to do throughout the game, with the exception of the Ronaldo goal in which he had no chance due to the range and power of the effort, Onana finished the game by making a few interventions that kept Juve from earning the win. The first came from a cross from Cancelo from the right that was headed toward the far-post. Onana waits until the ball passes by all the traffic then springs off of his right foot to push it wide. This is a situation that any goalkeeper knows requires an intense amount of focus and having done virtually nothing all game, Onana pulled it off in the 88th minute. He then collected the driven cross from Douglas Costa on the other side which came from the rebound of the initial save. The second instance was another cross from Cancelo from inside the box which Onana gathered low to his right. It was a driven ball and Onana did well to hold it under pressure. Onana often takes a wide stance a considerable distance from his near post when facing a close range potentially crosser which shows his intent to control his area and his confidence in his apparent athleticism to cover his near-post.

SZCZESNY: Across the field between the sticks for Juventus, Szczesny is a contrast to Onana in that he does not possess the prowess to play out from the back which perhaps Juventus could have used when dealing with the Ajax press. This was highlighted by two stray balls early on in search of his left-back which were played out of bounds. Despite this, Szczesny has really come into his own for the Old Lady. From showing inconsistent flashes of his potential at Arsenal, to proving that he may be able to fill that potential at Roma, I believe that we are finally seeing Szczesny fulfilling his potential. The Polish international was tested early on when Dusan Tadic unleashed a swerving effort from the top of the box. The ball seemed to be heading towards Szczesny’s right and he shuffled towards it. The trajectory of the ball ended up taking a swerve to Szczesny’s left forcing him to collapse to his left to collect. This showed, for me, showed his progression as the Szczesny of old may have spilled it. In the 18th minute Szczesny was tested again by a curling shot from the top left of the box by Ziyech which was arguably the save of the match. As the ball headed toward the top left corner, Szczesny took a cross-step from left to right then took his push-step with his right foot and tipped the ball over with his bottom hand (right hand). I was impressed with how quickly and sharply Szczesny was able to execute the footwork that ultimately allowed him to make the save. He chose to go with the bottom hand as the ball seemed to be dipping and landing almost behind him which presents a better opportunity to go with the bottom hand. Other than this save Szczesny did not have to make any other saves of note in the first half. He was tested very early on in the second half though. I do not believe that Szczesny had any chance with the Neres goal, because he was being screened by a few defenders and the shot was well placed, perhaps he could have taken a shuffle and dove on this occasion instead of cross-stepping as that would be quicker, but that would be asking a lot. Szczesny made a good save in the 65th minute from an effort from Veltman, the right back for Ajax. Ziyech had the ball at the top of the box and played the ball wide to the right where Veltman had made a run into the box. The Juve back line was able to cut off half of the goal which allowed Szczesny to take a step forward to cut the angle. As Veltman strikes the ball, you can see Szczesny anticipating that the ball will be struck to his left by reading the body posture and the position of the defenders cutting of the the other side of the goal. The big polish goalkeeper leans toward the direction that he has read the shot will be taken, allowing him to make the save low to his left. I do not understand the stigma behind a goalkeeper anticipating the direction of a shot. Many goalkeeper coaches would tell young goalkeepers to wait and react, but in some instances a good goalkeeper can read the body posture of a forward and make a save that would not be able to be made had they not anticipated and started their movement in that direction. It would have been extremely unlikely that Veltman could have struck the ball through defenders across his body into the far corner, so why not begin leaning in the other direction? A situation as such reminds me of an interview with Edwin Van der Sar in which he described a free-kick at the top of the box. He stated that 9/10 of the time the shooter will go over the wall, so if he’s playing the odds and wants the highest percentage of success for his team he should anticipate moving in that direction, right?. However, in the one time out of ten the ball goes to the goalkeeper’s side and he is beaten, he has made a mistake. I have the upmost respect for a ‘keeper that chooses to go with the odds and potentially sacrifice himself.