Saturday 11 October 2008

Ramzi Rambles: A new day has come! (part 1)


An era ended, a new one started. Since the end of last season, the team witnessed a lot of changes, and it's good to take advantage of this international break to make an overview that covers all the aspects of the team including the new coach and his philosophy, transfers and their impact, and the expectations and demands for the near future.



The end of a glorious cycle!

It’s not possible to start talking about the new cycle before briefing about the previous one, even though it will need more than a briefing to give the Rijkaard era a fair analysis. Especially that, even for a person who has never been a big fan of Frank like me, it feels bad when I notice that the new fashion is to criticize Frank to praise Pep. So I will consider this part as a message of gratitude for this man.

While making a fast research to support my topic, I found an article about the Frank Rijkaard era on Wikipedia, so I need to mention that the following is a mix between what I read and what I believe, aiming to create an objective point of view.

Frank was appointed in a period where everything sounded too pessimistic for Barcelona. The team was under achieving, the club was in debt, there was nothing you could hang your hopes on, except a new board of directors from the new generation of Socis, with lot of enthusiasm and desire to turn the table! Even though they started their era with a huge disappointment for Barcelona fans - then - when they failed to sign David Beckham, who was the fans favorite target and the board election’s promise, but instead signed the secondary option, Ronaldinho.

The squad Rijkaard inherited was a mix of the old underachieving players who yield no success since 1999.

Rijkaard had a disappointing start at Barcelona that saw some sections of the club's fans call for his resignation, and even caused crisis when the board of directors split between those who wanted to sack him, and those who wanted to keep faith. He drew flak from the media when the team lost to Real Madrid in December 2003, before he unlocked the path for Barcelona to enjoy one of its best cycles, finishing second in 2003-2004 after a heroic come back, then with the strong support of Laporta, and within the next couple of years finally managed to win La Liga both in 2004–05 and in 2005–06. After rebuilding the squad signing new players like Deco, Samuel Eto'o, and Rafa Marquez.


He became the first Barcelona coach to have won twice at Real Madrid's stadium, an achievement which even successful managers like Johan Cruijff, Louis van Gaal and Luis Aragonés were unable to accomplish, so it wasn’t strange that he was among the five nominated coaches for UEFA's Team of the Year 2005. On March 8, 2006 he was also honored by UEFA for his contributions to the European Cup Competition throughout his career as player and manager.

As a coach, Frank Rijkaard's essential philosophy is to guide his team towards playing attack-minded football as a cohesive unit. In doing this, he believes a team can achieve the dual objectives of winning games and ensuring the audience's enjoyment of the spectacle.


The tactics used during his tenure as manager of FC Barcelona best exemplify Frank Rijkaard's commitment to playing stylish attacking football. During the team's 2004–05 and 2005–06 campaigns, the coach frequently fielded a 4-1-2-2-1 formation, a system which encouraged the creativity of the players in the front third of the field and created optimal interplay between the midfielders and forwards during attacks. Within this system the four defenders also tended to play in a relatively high position on the pitch to support the midfield which frequently advanced to participate in the attack. The team generally focuses on maintaining possession in the opponents' half of the field, applying pressure in order to force the opposition to make errors in defense and offensive counter-attacking.

With regards to man-management and motivation, Rijkaard rejects the notion of a "star system" and promotes the idea that every one of his players is a valuable member of the team. He rarely praises one individual over another in the squad, although he has been known to acknowledge the outstanding contributions of a player within the context of a team performance.

Yet, here are things I don’t like about him as a coach, but let me start with what I like:

  • No doubt he made very difficult and brave decisions; it wasn’t easy to release some of the most notable players in the squad like Juan Román Riquelme, Patrick Kluivert, and some other stars who were considered as untouchables, Beside giving the opportunity for Victor Valdes to take Rüştü Reçber's place – some may draw a sarcastic smile while reading this, but those who know how it was before will worship Valdes as a goal keeper. I simply like the coach when he makes his decisions based on what suits his vision, the coach needs to build his squad picking the right players, not the good players. That’s something Rijkaard must be appreciated for taking in consideration.
  • Even though the standard tactical structure of 4 – 3 – 3 is not an invention, especially for a Dutchman, but no one can doubt that it clicked for him perfectly. In addition his well to give his players the freedom to express themselves offered the perfect environment for Ronaldinho to turn the world around.
  • He was a decent figure, we never felt worried when we watched him in an interview because we knew he will never say or behave in a way that may scratch the club image or stature.

What I didn’t like about him:

  • He was not a tactical genius by any mean; poor reading of the game caused bad substitutions, inability to change the tactical structure or to enrich what’s existed.
  • Related to previous point, and the overdose of dependence on individual talent rather than collaborative work. It worked at the start because the squad contained a supernatural group of hungry talents including the most gifted player walking on the planet, beside the fact that the rise of Barcelona was timed with the declining of most of the major teams in Europe where most of them were at the end of a cycle – that may give an answer of how the hell Monaco and Porto played a Champions league final! But later on, when things became serious and when tactics became crucial he failed to meet the demands of the new challenge.
  • Inability to create a disciplined environment and to put boundaries for the players, neither outside the field – long nights – nor in the field whether it was during training or games.
  • Allowing some players to force their way into the starting line up based on their reputation and not on their form.


In brief, even though he is not the most gifted coach, but he was the perfect coach in the perfect situation, Barcelona had talents who only needed a coach to give them the chance to express themselves, and Rijkaard with his flexible tactics was a perfect choice for them, we saw in Barcelona a version of Ronaldinho that we hadn’t seen in France – PSG, where he had a more tactical oriented coach. What makes a coach good or bad is actually – besides knowledge - the kind of teams he coach and the conditions that govern his career, which is exactly what makes José Mourinho for example seems to be a more qualified coach than Guus Hiddink!

A coach who leads the club to win as many titles as Frank Rijkaard did, deserves to be imported in the clubs books and fans hearts.

Season

Div.

Pos.

Pl.

W

D

L

GS

GA

P

Cup

Europe

Other Comp.

2003/2004

1D

2

38

21

9

8

63

39

72


UC

Last 16


2004/2005

1D

1

38

25

9

4

73

29

84


UCL

Last 16


2005/2006

1D

1

38

25

7

6

80

35

82

Quarter-final

UCL

Winner

SSC

2006/2007

1D

2

38

22

10

6

78

33

76

Semi-final

UCL

Last 16

SSC

ESC

CWC

2007/2008

1D

3

38

19

10

9

76

43

67

Semi-final

UCL

Semi-final




Next...The new adventure!

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

I MUST add!
Rijkaard is HUGE factor in Messi, Iniesta and even Bojan breakthrough to the first team of Barcelona! Besides titles and joy I think that is his most valued contribution to Barcelona... I remember in his first two seasons when he put Iniesta in game I was wondering "Why is he putting this guy on?"...I didnt see that then, I see it now, I admit!

Anonymous said...

Rijkaard loved his players especially the youngsters, thats why i liked him so much. I have never seen a coach who loved his players so much

Anonymous said...

Good post, good views, but I think you're really underestimating Rijkaard, Ramzi.

He made Barcelona the most attractive playing team by chosing to play incredibly offensively.

Àlex said...

Hey refter,

Are you sure you're not mistaken with the address?? FCB are an offensive team since the stone ages!!

It's our trademark!!

Rijkaard added a lot of composure to the team, but it was time for a change!! Credit to him but his time is over at the club

Unknown said...

I think you have spoken too quickly...lets see this your new tactical genius/ disciplinarian achieve what Rijkaard did.
All i can see so far is an abundance of poorly used talent...time will tell....

Anonymous said...

I think he is a great coach. Only Cruyff was maybe a better one for barça. what a gentleman. The only mistake he and the board made was to not begin a new circle.When cruijff said so we all called him crazy but he was right. Rijkaard believed too much in his players. And with a little bit more luck we would have won another CL. In that case no coach would ever done better with barça..You must admit, if ronnie would be there we would have beaten man u.
And what about the youngsters!
messi bojan iniesta. Frank, I'm a fan!
Jordy

Anonymous said...

"Ramzi Rambles" i don't like your blog, we must respect Frank Rijkaard!!!

Anonymous said...

Fan of Frank too. He made mistakes but he also was unlucky with injuries. Think you're a little bit too hard on him here, Ramzi.

Ramzi said...

Well, I am not sure if i am little harsh on rijkaard, may be, but i think its obvious that i appreciate him or else i wouldn't spend time talking about his era showing how grateful we have to be for him, and i am not sure how many people are writing articles about Great Rijkaard on the net, So I need to insure that I appreciate everything he did. And i praised him for that.

Regarding his tactical skills, i am not saying he was naive, but he was not a genius for sure and his staff wasn't helpful, Reading the game was terrible, substitutions usually were fruitless and usually the ones who don't complain being substituted were the ones who were picked to be substituted.
the only time a big tactical change has been made was when he tried the 3-4-3 and that was in the worst timing and the team collapsed under heavy defeats.
he kept using to flying backwards even when the team lacked a DM to help the CBs creating some depth for the back.
those are some samples of many, i already have them written by game, because thats a part of what i do for my future, so i am making my judgements based on events, but of course those are not judgements but point of view.
but no coach is perfect, every coach has a weakness, so when i say that this was his weakness in my opinion, that doesn't mean i Under estimate him.
regarding the youth players, well honestly i missed this point while writing the article, but even when i thought about it before, i had mixed feelings...in a way for sure they started playing during his era but:
1) promoting them was a natural process, iniesta took his time before been taken seriously, Messi was a super star even before being promoted so any coach would have promoted him, and for bojan, there were two choices even promoting him or losing him after Barcelona B dropped to lower division.
2) those players didn't improved a lot during that period, just compare messi/ iniesta tactical improvement to C. Ronaldo improvement in Man UTD, the latest started as a clown but improved greatly while iniesta and messi still perform based on their natural talent, they are better than C. Ronaldo already? I honestly think so, but thats because they have better talent. what attributes they improved in the past 3 years?
so i have no opinion about the youth point, i think i will read your comments and try to make up my mind...
is pep a better coach? i never said so, neither worse, I always said that we need to wait and see, lets give him a fair chance before we judge, beside, in my next rambling we can talk about pep;)

Anonymous said...

i completely disagree with you ramzi; rijkaard gave me the best days of my life and of all barca lovers and fans and up to now i have posters of rijkaard evrywhere in my room.when people say that pep is better than frank i disagree: pep is still not proven, when he will win one liga sorry 2, one champions league than they can be compared. you'll think i don't have faith in guardiola,trust me, all my confidence is in this guy...
oh yeah, you'll never smoke alone frank.

KAYR

Anonymous said...

oh yeah, i didn't see one comment on Titi or on guddy after atletico game. where are u titi and guddy haters, yeah that's what i thought.

KAYR

Ramzi said...

A coach who leads the club to win as many titles as Frank Rijkaard did, deserves to be immorted (from immortal) in the clubs books and fans hearts.
I wrote imported instead, spelling mistake.
Again, I believe I praised the guy more than criticized him, but i am happy Barcelona fans still appreciate him (I do so also), that was the objective behind writing this post, and I never said pep is better :)

Anonymous said...

that's the ramzi that i like reading from and another mistake:
"and i never said pep is better" u should add:
" i said pep will be better..."

KAYR

Anonymous said...

My best eleven for us so far:

Valdes
alves puyol pique abidal
xavi busquets GUDDY
messi sammu (iniesta,henry)

Wat do you think ramzi?

KAYR

Ramzi said...

Based on the performance so far, thats true KAYR, but i will wait to see hleb beside Xavi.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

Another nice Ramzi Ramble,
I really like your way of writing , & i would add lacking of fitness, stamina, & real training during Raijkard era

He won titles? yea & we appreciate that, but that does not mean we can't see his faults & weakness

tell now, Pep is better in many aspects, but let's give him 2 seasons then we can judge who is better!

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