Oh ye of little faith!

CoymayDuring last week Sky Sports repeated their coverage of some of the games which enabled four of the five national teams represented in the British Isles to qualify for the Finals tournament of the European Championship which began on Friday.

In Wales’ case this meant that the home game with Cyprus, the great win in Israel and the goalless draw in Belgium were all given another airing, but it was the coverage of the last of these matches which took my eye most because it corrected an impression that had formed in my mind in the eighteen months or so since then.

My recollection was that the match in Brussels represented a glorious rearguard action by the Welsh as we clung on to our clean sheet in the face of non stop Belgian pressure. Yes, the reality was that we spent most of the time defending, but what I’d forgotten was that, far from barely threatening the home goal, we had our moments in attack as well and the home team always had to be wary of our speed on the break, along with our effective passing in advanced areas.

Watching what we had to offer in attack in a match where the emphasis was mainly on what was happening at the other end of the pitch only served to make me even more aware of how uninspired, punchless and downright ordinary (actually, “downright ordinary” makes us sound better than we actually were!) we had been in this department in our three games going into the tournament.

I won’t repeat much of what I said in my piece last Monday about the 3-0 loss to Sweden in our final warm up match. Suffice it to say that the game, along with the earlier ones against Ukraine and Northern Ireland, left me thinking that, short of Gareth Bale conjuring up something wondrous on his own, it was very hard (no, make that impossible!) to see where the goals were going to come from when we reached the tournament that has been so eagerly awaited – thinking about it, that process probably started on the night we defied the Belgians in their own backyard.

Bale and Aaron Ramsey may have been missing for most of that time, but the latter added little to our attacking play in Gothenburg and so, as mentioned before, it seemed to me that we were virtually totally reliant on the former to come up with something – we were closer to being a one man team, in an attacking sense, then any of the others who’ll be appearing in France in the coming weeks.

In the earlier piece I alluded to a while back I had been pretty harsh on the three forward options open to Chris Coleman in his squad, but, when I heard his selection for yesterday’s opening group game with Slovakia, I found myself thinking that the manager had taken a huge gamble which was likely to end in failure.

What got me wishing for one of Sam Vokes, Simon Church and Hal Robson-Kanu to be included was the use of Bale in a forward position with Jonny Williams being the closest thing he had to a striking partner.

For me, there was a real danger that Wales could end up with Bale being left as an   isolated and ineffective target man who would only have a colleague within twenty yards of him when we had an attacking free kick or a corner – pushing our best player so far up the pitch would also rob us of him being able to run at defenders with the ball from around the halfway line.

Before the game Marek Hamsik of Napoli had been picked out as Slovakia's biggest threat, and, within minutes, he had showed why as he weaved past three Welsh defenders to open up our defence. In the BBC's commentary box, Steve Wilson was shouting "what a goal!" as Hamsek completed what appeared to be the formality of netting, only for Ben Davies to complete a truly amazing clearance, Davies wasn't my selection of Welsh man of the match just for his goal line heriocs, but you have to wonder what the following eighty seven minutes would have provided without it.*

Before the game Marek Hamsik of Napoli had been picked out as Slovakia’s biggest threat, and, within minutes, he had showed why as he weaved past three Welsh players to open up our defence. In the BBC’s commentary box, Steve Wilson was shouting “what a goal!” as Hamsek completed what appeared to be the formality of netting, only for Ben Davies to make a truly amazing clearance, Davies wasn’t my selection of Welsh man of the match just for his goal line heriocs, but you have to wonder what the following eighty seven minutes would have provided without them.*

Also, while not denying Williams’ talent and that he has been an effective performer for his country on plenty of other occasions, I was concerned that a physical Slovakian defence would render him a virtual passenger who would contribute little at either end of the pitch.

Spain may have won this tournament four years earlier with their “false” number nine and a formation which could be best described as 4-6-0 I suppose, but, with due respect to a group of players who are responsible for getting us to a place where most of us have never been before when it comes to supporting our national team, Wales football teams need something more “basic” than that don’t they?

What Coleman decided on at the top end of the pitch rather took my mind off another controversial selection further back where Joe Ledley was, hardly surprisingly, not risked from the start. However it was not Premier League winner medal holder Andy King who, came in to play in a deep midfield role, it was Wolves’ Dave Edwards, another player who, at one time, looked to be a non starter for this tournament because of injury .

I’d presumed that King would come in to play alongside the fit again Joe Allen, but, even though he’s no longer the player whose game was based on runs beyond strikers to get into double figures every season as a goalscorer any more, the Leicester man isn’t really a natural for a holding midfield role either, so our manager deciding to look elsewhere was not completely surprising to me.

In the event though, it did seem odd to opt for someone whose career has, in many ways, mirrored King’s in terms of how his game has developed through the years, in Edwards – if King wasn’t a natural fit for that defensive midfield role, couldn’t the same be said about Edwards?

Coleman would have had days. If not weeks, to think about his selection when it came to the forward and sitting midfield roles, but, when the unlucky Wayne Hennessey woke up with a back spasm, he only had a matter of hours to contemplate what to do when it came to picking a goalkeeper.

Truth be told though, the manager would probably have only needed a few seconds to come to his decision. A year ago, to lose Hennessey like that would have been a disaster because goalkeeper was the one position where we lacked the sort of quality squad depth to have an experienced international performer to come in if need be.

However, after a season in which he has shone during a loan spell at Aberdeen, played a couple of times in the Premier League for Liverpool, sat on the bench in a European club final and earned his first two caps for his country, Danny Ward gives us the quality cover in that position that we lacked previously – Ward for Hennessey was a no brainer.

At just twenty two though, this was a huge stage for Ward on which to make his competitive international bow and there had to be a question as to how well the rookie keeper would cope – would he have his career defined by a mistake in a high profile match in much the same way as Scott Carson has following a very expensive blunder in an England v Croatia game at Wembley?

Surprisingly, thankfully and gloriously, we never got to know quite how Ward would react when put under pressure. Grateful for some brilliant defending that prevented a Slovakia goal in the opening minutes, the keeper was hardly tested – while it would be an exaggeration to say I could have played in goal for Wales yesterday and we still would have won, Ward will definitely have had far busier afternoons in his career so far. He did what he had to do adequately, but such was the level of performance of those in red shirts in front of him, “adequate” was all he needed to be.

All of the outfield players turned in seven out of ten performances or better. Gunter was superb in the first half as he showed an aptitude for the attacking side of his wing back role that is often absent from his game and Taylor played like the Premier League regular that he is. Inside them, Chester was a cool customer, Davies my Welsh Man of the Match and, while he could never be called a weak link, captain Williams was outshone by his two central defensive partners on this occasion.

Edwards took to his role like a duck to water before injury slowed him down and Allen was a close second in the man of the match stakes as he, yet again, showed what an important player he is for his country.

When it came to the three players charged with providing most of Wales’ attacking ideas, Williams was a complete nuisance for the Slovakian defence as his close control and dribbling skills drew countless free kicks (including the one from which Bale put us ahead from in the tenth minute).

More than that though, the Palace player exasperated Martin Skrtel so much that the Liverpool man assaulted him with an elbow to the head as he shepherded the ball out for a goal kick. With his team 1-0 down at the time, he should have seen a straight red card and the game could have been put beyond his country if the referee and the guy who gets paid for standing by the goal doing nothing had applied the laws of the game in the manner in which they are meant to be  – as the Sunday Telegraph says this morning, “It was directly in front of referee Svein-Oddvar Moen and an additional assistant behind the goal but, in keeping with football’s unfathomable convention that a defender can seemingly do anything to shield a ball out of play, no penalty was awarded.”.

Skrtel had still not learned his lesson as his dubious, and completely pointless, second half block on Bale could easily have led to a penalty and the rattled Slovakian captain eventually picked up one of five yellow cards shown to his team (Wales had none).

"Together stronger" could have just been the usual, banal advertising speak in other circumstances, but this repeat of the scenes in Cyprus nine months ago after Gareth Bale's goal yesterday offers all the proof that you need that it is so much more than that. In fact, with the sort of backing from the stands which has become the norm in the last year or two again present, it's meaning spreads beyond the squad management and players.*

“Together stronger” could have just been the usual, banal advertising speak in other circumstances, but this repeat of the scenes in Cyprus nine months ago after Gareth Bale’s goal yesterday offers all the proof that you need that it is so much more than that. In fact, with the sort of backing from the stands which has become the norm in the last year or two again present, it’s meaning spreads well beyond the squad management and players.+

Skrtel can be a commanding and effective centre half who, I believe, would have coped quite easily with the striker in the Welsh squad who would, seemingly, have offered the biggest goal threat –  Sam Vokes has been so effective for Burnley in the Championship in the second half of the season especially. However, Wales’ pace, movement and shrewd passing made him look lumbering here and this brings me on to the other two outfield players I’ve not mentioned yet.

Ramsey and Bale are the two “megastars” of this Welsh team, but they were also the pair of players who drew the most disapproving tuts from me as they gave the ball away carelessly at times. It was interesting to hear Chris Coleman say though that Ramsey is encouraged to try things that might go wrong in a Welsh shirt because, when he gets things right, he produces something that few others can – if that applies to Ramsey, I’m certain it does to Bale as well.

So, with that in mind, and while remembering that he was too easily brushed aside in the build up to Slovakia’s goal, I’d say that the way Ramsey was employed as one of two number tens showed him offering far more for his team than he did for most of the time at club level over the past season where he was used in a cautious manner for a role which, probably, could have been better performed by a less accomplished player more familiar with the holding midfield job than he is.

Ramsey was there to play a leading part in the winning goal when it came late in the game and frequently got himself into the sort of positions where a more confident finisher could have made the game safe for his side – I think that confidence may come if Wales can repeat the attacking verve and energy shown here.

However, the question remains, are we getting the best out of Bale by using him as we did yesterday? Well, I think Chris Coleman could reasonably say that the outcome of the game confirms he made the right decision. Certainly, Wales silenced my criticism of them having little to offer going forward because, debates about Bale’s effectiveness in the striking position notwithstanding, we manifestly, did carry a forward threat yesterday.

Overall Coleman got it right tactically in the most important match Wales have played in more than half a century, but it seems to me that Bale’s effectiveness as an individual was restricted by him being deployed in a manner which, arguably, was for the benefit of the team overall.

Yes, he scored from a free kick (which owed much to dodgy goalkeeping) and  there were some lovely flashes of skill from him throughout and yet, at the end, I couldn’t help wondering whether Skrtel and co were happier to have him playing on their shoulders or to have him running at them at pace with plenty of open, inviting green grass for him to move into?

I think that’s a real tough one to answer when you consider how things went overall, but, if anything, the introduction of Robson-Kanu complicated things somewhat, because we then saw his unselfish running help create the sort of gaps a deeper lying Bale is possibly better equipped to exploit than any other player on the planet.

If Robson-Kanu is fit enough to start in our next game, then Coleman has a very hard call to make. Again it could be argued that it boils down to the needs of the team against individual considerations, but I’ve got increasing faith that the decision he arrives at will be the right one.

Reading what I’ve said so far may give the impression that it was all pretty comfortable for Wales, but that’s not the case. Slovakia dominated the third quarter of the game on the back of substitutions and tactical changes made by their coach Jan Kozak and suddenly it was us who were on the back foot looking likely losers.

However, while Wales managers and coaches could legitimately complain about a lack of quality on the bench to influence matters when they were struggling in the past, that’s not the case now. The introduction of Ledley and Robson-Kanu provided the impetus for the balance of power to shift again going into the closing stages, as the former’s perceptive pass helped unlock the visitor’s defence for the latter to scuff in one of the most beautiful goals I’ve seen in my life!

Yes, we rode our luck when the Slovaks hit the post with four minutes left, but, overall, it was pretty comfortable for us once we went ahead for the second time and I believe that our win was a deserved one given how dominant we were for significant periods of the game (indeed, I can remember thinking around the thirty five minute mark that we were looking the best of the six teams to have played in the competition up to then.). We won the battle on the pitch and our manager won the battle between himself and his Slovakian rival on the touchline.

I’m going to finish with a question for those readers on here who are old enough to remember Sweden in 1958. I have this hunch that even if you are of an age whereby you can recall the events of fifty eight years ago clearly, what happened yesterday was still a new experience to you in the same way it was to those of us who either weren’t born then or, like me, were too young to know what was happening – “knowing about” what was happening at that World Cup and a game in Euro 2016 are two completely different things.

So, I would argue that yesterday represented a totally new experience for virtually every living Welshman and woman. For myself, I loved it, I want more of it and, with England conceding very late on to drop two points against Russia last night in the group’s other game, the truth is that a win against them on Thursday will secure our qualification into the knock out stage – I still don’t reckon we’ll beat England, but maybe we will have a fourth game (or more!) to play in France this month after all!

*picture courtesy of http://www.walesonline.co.uk/

+picture courtesy of http://www.theguardian.com/uk

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What was the point of Wales’ match with Sweden yesterday?

Coymay

I watched Wales’ 3-0 defeat by Sweden yesterday on a grainy and unreliable stream while listening to Radio Wales’ coverage of the match. Leaving aside the fact that what I was watching and listening to were about ten seconds apart, the overriding impression gained from what my eyes and ears were being fed was that the whole thing was something of a pointless exercise.

The radio commentary provided by Rob Phillips and Kevin Ratcliffe made it sound like Chris Coleman would not be concerned in the slightest by what was happening out on the pitch – indeed, from what they were saying, it felt like the whole ninety minutes was something to be endured in that the main object of the exercise was to come through the game without injury.

Judging by what I was seeing, it looked like the players were of the same mind as those describing the “action”. For example, when Ratcliffe claimed that Ashley Williams (who was also caught out for the first Swedish goal) could, and probably would, have prevented the final goal in the dying minutes if there had been something riding on the match, it was hard to disagree with him when you saw the replays – so, again, I found myself thinking what was the point of the whole thing?

It was interesting, and a bit concerning, to read Chris Coleman’s post match comments when he talked of Wales, possibly, being a little complacent – in fact, he gave the distinct impression that he believed this was a criticism which could be aimed at the team since they qualified for the upcoming Euros.

Quite what grounds the players of a country preparing for their first major tournament in fifty eight years had/have for feeling complacent, I cannot begin to fathom, but once that word has been introduced into the situation, it must be said that there were elements of what Wales did yesterday which could have been described as complacent.

Coleman still preached positivity though as evidenced by him stating “remember that when we’re 100% at it and we mean it, then we’re a good team. We’ll pick the boys up.”.

This echoed what the pundits were saying on television and radio during and after the game – the real business starts next week and it makes no difference how good or bad a side looks in the run up to a tournament because nobody gains any points to be carried into the main event through winning friendly matches.

So, the manager doesn’t seem too worried about what has happened since Wales beat Belgium at a raucous Cardiff City Stadium to all but secure their ticket to France. That match was played on 12 June and it will be virtually a year to the day later when we kick off against Slovakia next Saturday and if the men who know more than me about these things (e.g. Chris Coleman and former players with fifty or so appearances for Wales) are not that concerned by what has happened in the interim, then I suppose I shouldn’t be either.

Mikael Lustig scores the second goal for Sweden after Wales failed to deal with a corner - if the whole thing was written off as something of a pointless exercise for the Welsh, then I don't think the Swedes would have gained much to take into the tournament which begins in five days time either.*

Mikael Lustig scores the second goal for Sweden after Wales failed to deal with a corner – if the whole thing was written off as something of a pointless exercise for the Welsh when it comes to preparation for the Euros, then I don’t think the Swedes would have gained much to take into the tournament which begins in five days time either.*

However, not being worried, is not quite the same as being optimistic about our prospects and the question I ask is what is there that has happened since we beat the side rated the best in the world (according to FIFA’s rankings anyway) to make you feel upbeat about our prospects of making it out of our group?

As I made my way home on that sultry Friday night when Gareth Bale’s goal beat the Belgians, I thought that, given the evidence of displays such as that one, the one in Israel and the one in the first game with Belgium, we could repeat the 1958 achievement of making into the tournament’s second stage, what has there been since then to back up such a feeling?

Given the way the last year has gone, it’s somehow appropriate that our qualification was confirmed on a night when we were beaten. It’s not all been bad – we got the job done in Cyrpus, albeit unconvincingly, and I thought we played pretty well in defeats by the Netherlands and Ukraine, but the sense of momentum we had through most of 2015 seems a long way off now.

When we scored twice without Bale, Ramsey, Robson-Kanu or Vokes involved against the Dutch, it was reassuring to see evidence that we still had goals in us, but what have we seen since then to garner hope that we can score regularly in the Euros?

In the three matches since then, we’ve scored a single penalty in time added on at the end of the game to gain us a slightly fortunate draw, but it’s hard to think of much else that has seriously threatened our opponent’s goal.

Increasingly, it’s looking like Gareth Bale is going to have to play to the potential which marks him out as one of the players who could have the biggest individual impact in the tournament if we are to come up with enough goals – possibly, that’s always been the case, but I thought the Ramsey’s, Vokes’ and Robson-Kanu’s might be able to help out a little along the way.

That seems less likely now and with no real suggestion that our central defenders have a goal in them when they come up for set pieces in the way that, say, City’s do, we really do look like we need Bale to be at his brilliant best if we are to progress to the knock out stage.

All of this shouldn’t come as too much of a shock when you consider that we were hardly free scorers in our qualification group, but back then I thought that, come the big occasions, Ramsey in particular would be able to reveal the eye for a goal and a defence splitting pass which made him just about the best player in the Premier League in the first half of the 13/14 season.

That may still happen of course, but, if it does, then it will come about against a backdrop that has seen City’s youngest ever player never reaching such standards in the weeks and months since that Belgium game – Bale can produce the goods for Wales, but a Ramsey somewhere near his best would make it that much easier for him to do so.

So, after a match which seems to have all been a bit pointless, I still await the Euros with the sense of anticipation of someone who has longed for my country to take part in a tournament like this for more than half a century.

Am I worried about what will happen? No, but the slightly uncomfortable truth behind that answer is that in the last year or so, the sense of expectation that your team will do the business, which can often be a source of such worry, has gradually been eroded in me – by the same token, I suppose a lack of expectancy means that any success will taste all the sweeter should it come.

*picture courtesy of http://www.walesonline.co.uk/

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