COMMENT: The Spaniard has been made the scapegoat for the Champions
League thrashing by Madrid, but the defeat showed that many Bayern
players can't interpret the coach's vision
The consensus among the majority of football fans and critics in the
aftermath of Tuesday's humiliating 5-0 Champions League semi-final loss
against Real Madrid was that Pep Guardiola was solely to blame for
Bayern's failure.
But the
truth is that Bayern's surrender to Madrid was more due to individual
errors than any overarching 'philosophical' failing. "The reason for the
defeat isn’t related to the possession," Guardiola said after.
"Football is played with the ball and then there are other things. If
you don't play well and you defend set-pieces badly, that's just how it
is." Yet Guardiola is being questioned. The real inquest should focus on
the players and their suitability to Pep's plans.
Look
at the footage of Guardiola on the sidelines, throwing his water bottle
around. Do you think he set his team out to pass the ball 800 times and
muster only a few shots on goal? He is the most innovative coach in
modern times. He is not the type of man to say 'go out and pass it, see
what happens'.
Admittedly, he made mistakes. "We did not play
well tactically," Philipp Lahm said. "We played an open game way too
early." Javi Martinez was bought to plug the exact type of hole Real ran
through for the goal in the Bernabeu and the third at the Allianz
Arena. "I was wrong on some tactical issues," Pep said.
What
is clear now is that Guardiola's stance has changed since his first
press conference. "I need to adjust to the players, not the other way
around," he said at the time. "Football belongs to the players, not to
the coach. I will have to adapt."
If he was to adapt to the
Bayern squad's strengths, then it would have been a case of continuing
what Heynckes did with them to immense effect last season. The veteran,
once Guardiola's signature was announced in January, worked hard to
ensure that his team went out on a high. They won him the treble in
devastating style.
But Bayern didn't hire Pep to do Heynckes' work. They hired him to do
things his way. Pep, though, would have to do it largely with Heynckes'
players. If Bayern's decision-makers wanted to sustain the Heynckes'
legacy, he would have been kept on or else they would have found a
successor - much like Barcelona replaced Pep with Tito Vilanova.
There
are some in the squad who have adapted to what Guardiola has asked of
them. Others haven't. Lahm is the leader of the first group. Pep credits
him with being the "most intelligent" player he has ever worked with.
That is because he bought into what the coach has asked.
That
element of the Bayern team doesn't really do things all that differently
now compared to their time under Heynckes. Then, they kept the ball for
70 per cent of the time too. It's how they get into the final third
which is supposed to be different.
Heynckes played with
variation; crosses, long shots, Mario Gomez mopping up loose balls. They
scored all kinds of goals. He liked an overload, as Pep does, and there
were plenty of pull-backs from the byline too.
It is impossible not to compare what Pep's Barcelona did to what this
Bayern side do. Barca had plenty of the ball on the edge of the box
facing deep defences too but they usually found a way; a one-two, some
Lionel Messi magic, a switch of play from Andres Iniesta to Dani Alves.
The
man brought from Barca, Thiago Alcantara, was supposed to be the man to
stitch it all together for Bayern. The old meets the new through the
Spain midfielder. "I spoke to club about my concept and told them why I
want Thiago," Pep told the press prior to the signing. "He is the only
player I want. It'll be him or no one. We the need the special quality
that Thiago brings."
Thiago's injuries have denied him the chance
to be the difference maker that Guardiola expected him to be. His
passes were missed against Real because he understands what Pep wants
more than anyone else. "He wants to control the game with Bayern, the
same as in Barcelona," Thiago told FourFourTwo. "He has a
definite idea of what his football should look like. One of Guardiola's
objectives is creating superiority in numbers. Always having two players
against one opponent is what the team strives for."
But
their play against Real Madrid was fruitless. All season long in the
Bundesliga, it was no trouble. Arjen Robben would do something to get
the ball into the box and someone would put a toe on it for a goal. No
such luck for long spells against Real Madrid. Bayern looked to Robben
with similar regularity but he could not do anything worthwhile;
constantly sought but not capable of carrying the creative burden.
On
the other side, the once-explosive Franck Ribery met resistance. He
barely put a meaningful pass into the penalty box over two legs. Toni
Kroos, for all his technique, is much slower in his thoughts and
execution than either Xavi or Iniesta. He made the two fouls that led to
the two goals from free kicks. It is understandable that Bayern, and by
extension Pep, are holding out on a new contract. Mario Mandzukic isn't
capable of holding the ball under control to bring his fellow attackers
into play.
Jerome Boateng simply cannot be relied upon to defend
for 90 minutes without making at least one error. These come in the
form of concentration lapses or poor positioning.
Manuel Neuer
is probably the best goalkeeper in the world. He has been responsible
for plenty of points over the course of the past three seasons. But his
basic football skills are not up to the standard of Victor Valdes.
Guardiola would happily dispense with a goalkeeper if he thought the
ball could be moved from that area quicker and more accurately.
That's six from the group who started the other night who might think they could have done more to put Bayern through.
Bayern suffer a lack of pace all over; they seem to go forward in
instalments instead of with fluency. They switch off at set-pieces.
Their overlaps are telegraphed. There is little intelligent movement
from the midfield sector to the box. It can all be very sterile when
confronted with a sturdy defensive puzzle. Those are failings of the
players and not the coach.
What Pep has in mind for Bayern is not
possession for possession's sake. That does not work. In the
Bundesliga, where teams often now surrender before Bayern even get out
on to the field, there is usually a momentary lapse and Bayern score
their first goal. After that, all bets are off. But the Champions League
is different. Clean sheets are protected more ferociously. Bayern have
not protected theirs with any sort of enthusiasm.
It was
reported that one of the reasons why Pep decided against renewing his
Barcelona contract was the board's refusal to sell four of the team's
best players - Cesc Fabregas, Gerard Pique, David Villa and Dani Alves.
He wanted replenishment in the playing ranks. It was not forthcoming. He
spoke in the end of not being able to motivate the players after such
an intense period together. What he needed was a sense of permanent
alertness in his squad that would prevent complacency. If they couldn't
cut it, he would get rid. And that was with his own team, let alone one
coached to every trophy going by a predecessor; fattened on success and
the various vices it brings.
When you want an honest answer out
of Bayern Munich, Thomas Muller is usually your man. "It wasn't easy to
motivate ourselves after playing against Dortmund and the difficult game
in Moscow," he said after Bayern made heavy work of a league game
against Eintracht Braunschweig in the winter. When they lost 3-0 to
Borussia Dortmund last month he was again forthright. "We just weren't
as fresh or hungry as we really should be, or at least should want to
be," he said. "We can't make an excuse out of how difficult it is
psychologically. At the end of the day, we want to win every game, but
we're just lacking that hunger." Bayern's weather vane.
The only
way forward for Guardiola is to remake Bayern in his own image and to
work up that hunger again and resdiscover that motivation. He needs
players to execute better and avoid carelessness. An awkward
juxtaposition of his football and Heynckes' failed to hit the mark this
season in the Champions League.
It will be a very different
Bayern next season. Pep's Bayern. It might well be built without the key
treble winners because Pep will have seen that his plans cannot be
carried out by Heynckes' men. "It's not about repeating something but
creating something new," Thiago says. He and Mario Gotze were too
peripheral in their first seasons but they will be more influential next
term. They, along with Robert Lewandowski, represent the new Pep era.
Guardiola's quest to find a new way of winning goes on. This group of players failed him at the last.
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