Azzurri Thread (107 Viewers)

DAiDEViL

Senior Member
Feb 21, 2015
64,577
Conte: 'Eder top scorer'
By Football Italia staff
Antonio Conte stood up for Eder as “our top scorer in the squad,” but hasn’t decided whether to bring four or five strikers to Euro 2016.

The Azzurri face Scotland in a friendly this evening, kicking off in Malta at 19.45 UK time (18.45 GMT).

“Daniele De Rossi is doing fairly well, even if the pain in his Achilles tendon has resurfaced a little,” the Italy Coach told Rai Sport.

“Tonight I need to test him out, to see how he reacts to the pressures of a match situation.”

Eder will reportedly be cut from the final 23-man list and should start tonight as a last chance to prove himself.

Conte defended the decision to call him up at all, considering he has scored only one Serie A goal since leaving Sampdoria for Inter in January.

“Throughout the season Eder scored 13 Serie A goals, so he is our top scorer in the 30 Azzurri I have at my disposal today.

“After that, statistics are good unto themselves, but are of no interest to me.
In any case, I haven’t decided yet whether to bring four or five strikers to France.”
:delpiero:
 

Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
61,481
Italia vs Scozia (3-5-2): Buffon; Barzagli, Bonucci, Chiellini; Candreva, Florenzi, De Rossi, Giaccherini, Darmian; Pellé, Eder.
Soft midfield, Florenzi and Giaccherini are essentially tiny little wide players playing CM next to De Rossi, and Candreva really isnt a wingback.

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Really unlucky for them. Varane is absolute quality. I understand that Sergio Ramos is preferred over him (in recent years one of the best cb's in the world oddly enough), but why asshole Pepe starts everything is beyond me.
Varane's sitaution is like Morata's this season, he lost his spot because he wasnt consistent enough (some mistakes) or shown enough growth compared to before. Pepe is disgusting moron but he takes care of bussiness consistently.
 

DAiDEViL

Senior Member
Feb 21, 2015
64,577
Conte’s Italy flatter to deceive
Football Italia

Following an uninspiring win over Scotland in Malta, Edo Dalmonte argues that this is what Conte’s Italy was always going to be.

Last night’s 1-0 over Scotland was hardly a festival of champagne football, but fans who followed the BBC’s online commentary wouldn’t have known that.

Scoreless at the half, one contributor posted that “Italy lead 13-0 on shots on goal...but only one stat counts, right?”. Yes, the stat that RAI produced on 38 minutes, which confirmed that the Azzurri had only managed two shots on goal, against nine off target. A perfect summary of the most uninspiring Italy side to show up to a major tournament since Marcello Lippi’s retirement tour to South Africa.

The Azzurri’s pacy, often disjointed play may have convinced Italy fans that Antonio Conte is trying to wedge a number of square pegs in as many round holes.

Nothing could be further from the truth: these are, for the most part, exactly the kind of players that work in Conte’s system, and the same ilk that he has called up time and time again, to the detriment of more exciting alternatives.

Those among us who were hoping to see Lorenzo Insigne, Jorginho or Federico Bernardeschi stake a claim for a place in the squad- nay, a starting spot - have been disillusioned: they’re more alien to the current setup than the unimpressive Eder, Emanuele Giaccherini or Alessandro Florenzi. If that isn’t the biggest red flag, it's hard to say what is.

If the Federation were hoping that the Azzurri would resemble Conte’s Juventus when they hired him back in 2014… they got it, but in its most uninspiring, harmless form, typical of when the Old Lady passed the ball around in Champions League action without ever seeing daylight.

It feels like Italy only know how to play one way: like a Subbuteo team, with Conte covering the whole pitch with his men, and the passing resembling a sort of connect-the-dots exercise. The ball travels directly to the player, often forcing him to stop instead of looking for the one-two or to run into space.

This may explain why Insigne or Bernardeschi don’t fit in: they need to be able to run at players, not just wait around to make a decisive flick. Conte prefers the more hardworking sort (like Alessandro Florenzi, Antonio Candreva or Emanuele Giaccherini), who have all the intensity Conte wants, but none of the accuracy Italy need at the moment of truth.

A typical example was an Azzurri counter on 29 minutes, in which Candreva tripped over the ball before getting it back, only to see his cutback be wasted by Alessandro Florenzi. The Roman’s move to - and lack of familiarity with - the right-back position have been quoted as excuses when he makes mistakes, but what if it had been a lack of technique all along, especially in tight spaces? Why should a full-back with poor touch play in central midfield exactly?

One positive was Daniele De Rossi, whose quick, vertical passes often created danger on the outskirts of the box: Italy’s goal came when he found Eder (who was otherwise absent), to tee up Graziano Pelle for his fantastic finish. With his 14 Premier League goals and good work ethic, the Southampton striker is a credit to Conte, and deserves a starting berth.

Even the defence’s positive performance comes with a huge proviso: Scotland’s players barely showed up, and if they were picked because of their resemblance to Group E opponents Ireland, then the Azzurri have another thing coming at them. It is unlikely that even the most craven opponent in France will allow the Azzurri to control the flow and build slowly without countering with a purpose.

In a pre-match press conference, Coach Conte promised that this team “would be able to surprise everyone” at Euro 2016. Italy fans won’t be holding their breath.
i like it... a little biased though. :D
 

K.O.

Senior Member
Nov 24, 2005
13,883
With every approaching tournament since the 2006 triumph, it gets worse for the Azzurri. That squad is filled with Average-to-poor players.
 

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