[ITA] Serie A 2011/2012 (27 Viewers)

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Red

-------
Moderator
Nov 26, 2006
47,024
Actually, Napoli aren't looking better and better, they are looking worse and worse.
Two reasons for Napoli poor form since the end of the CL:

- Lavezzi has gone back to his old ways (going short and making the game congested instead of running the channels and dragging defenders out of position)

- Since Conte spoke about it and did it well with Estigarribia, teams seem to have finally understood the need to stop Maggio. Teams are now getting close to him instead of allowing him the space to get moving and dominate an entire flank

These two things mean far more of Napoli's play is slow and in central areas - both of which make it far, far easier for teams to play against them.

I believe their poor form through the first few months of the season was largely down to not really being able to cope with playing the the CL due to their lack of quality backups..
 

KC17

Senior Member
Aug 18, 2011
690
What's worrying is that we might end up (next season) struggling the way they (napoli) are right now, everything is possible .
I would say we already have more depth than Napoli, and we have much more potential to make buys over the summer. Not to mention the group we end up in if we make the CL will not be as tough as Napoli's this season.
 

Alen

Ѕenior Аdmin
Apr 2, 2007
54,026
Two reasons for Napoli poor form since the end of the CL:

- Lavezzi has gone back to his old ways (going short and making the game congested instead of running the channels and dragging defenders out of position)

- Since Conte spoke about it and did it well with Estigarribia, teams seem to have finally understood the need to stop Maggio. Teams are now getting close to him instead of allowing him the space to get moving and dominate an entire flank

These two things mean far more of Napoli's play is slow and in central areas - both of which make it far, far easier for teams to play against them.

I believe their poor form through the first few months of the season was largely down to not really being able to cope with playing the the CL due to their lack of quality backups..
Yup

Another thing, which might be just bad luck though, is that the ball doesn't want them like last year. This year too they create tons of chances, even in the last minutes (like last year when they scored a bunch in the dying minutes), but the ball just doesn't go in as it did in the previous season. They're missing penalties, hitting posts, wasting piss easy chances. It just wasn't happening last year when everything was going perfect for them.
 

Linebreak

Senior Member
Sep 18, 2009
16,022
Two reasons for Napoli poor form since the end of the CL:

- Lavezzi has gone back to his old ways (going short and making the game congested instead of running the channels and dragging defenders out of position)

- Since Conte spoke about it and did it well with Estigarribia, teams seem to have finally understood the need to stop Maggio. Teams are now getting close to him instead of allowing him the space to get moving and dominate an entire flank

These two things mean far more of Napoli's play is slow and in central areas - both of which make it far, far easier for teams to play against them.

I believe their poor form through the first few months of the season was largely down to not really being able to cope with playing the the CL due to their lack of quality backups..
Tactical genius by Conte to specify and expose their main strength and hence weakness.
 

adriano_c

Senior Member
May 26, 2009
6,540
Inter fan on forzainterforums:

"We won the first Scudetto in court, the second without any competition, and the third in the last day."
And the next with an inordinate amount of referee assistance.

Fucking disgust.

Fuck Inter.

Fuck Moratti.

Fuck Fachetti's bleaching skeleton.

Fuck blue and black. Period. God damn I hate them beyond words. I better log off before I turn into one of "those."
 

Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,803
[FONT=verdana, arial]Gasp: 'Eto'o, Balotelli and Inter chaos'[/FONT]
http://football-italia.net/node/15590


[FONT=verdana, arial]Gian[/FONT][FONT=verdana, arial] [/FONT]Piero[FONT=verdana, arial] [/FONT]Gasperini[FONT=verdana, arial] spills the beans on his disastrous Inter experience, from broken promises to Mario [/FONT]Balotelli[FONT=verdana, arial] and what the club really think of their players.[/FONT]


The former Genoa Coach was drafted in late over the summer when Leonardo quit in order to become director general at Paris Saint-Germain.


His tenure lasted only five games, as he was sacked after the 3-1 defeat to newly-promoted Novara and replaced by Claudio Ranieri.


“It was the worst moment of my career,” confessed Gasp to the Gazzetta delloSport.


“At that point, everything had already been decided. There was an absurd climate around us and the players were already resigned to their fate. We got everythingwrong.”


The tactician blames the club and President Massimo Moratti for many of the problems, especially the transfer strategy.


“Moratti explained to me that due to the financial fair play rules, a big star had to leave, but that Samuel Eto’o would remain. The objective was to regenerate a group that was showing signs of fatigue and needed to begin the renewal process.


“That was fine with me. I just needed Palacio, a midfielder and a defender, considering the injuries we had in those areas. We thought for the midfield about Arturo Vidal, while I also liked Radja Nainggolan, but Inter didn’t consider him worthy.


“The same was true of Domenico Criscito, not to mention we could’ve signed Rodrigo Palacio. They were looking for Alexis Sanchez, Ezequiel Lavezzi and CarlosTevez, who were much more difficult to get hold of.


“If I had the Palacio-Milito-Eto’o trident, then I was ready to take on the world. At least they made me happy by keeping Thiago Motta, who Inter had told to find himself a new club, and Diego Milito turned down a great proposal.


“It really would not have taken much. Just two or three players, not the nine that Inter ended up buying. So much for financial fair play! That is my biggest regret, that it would’ve been pretty simple to do well.”


This all points to Wesley Sneijder as the man who was set to leave over the summer in order to replenish the club kitty.


“The difficulties on the market made Eto’o leave. We brought in Diego Forlan and Mauro Zarate, who are very different to Palacio, and it all happened at the last minute. A great team needs to be defined at the start of pre-season training to work together.


“The first time I got to train the full squad together was three days before the start of the season, all without the necessary work.”
Gasperini was also criticised by President Moratti for using his favoured three-man defence.


“I was convinced that I had strong players who just needed to become a squad,” continued Gasp. “By motivating them with a new style of play, they’d have been reborn.


“I continue to believe Inter have great players and can still win the Scudetto. However, Inter believe the opposite. The Nerazzurri think they have ageing players who can form a great team, if they continue to play the way they always did.


“If that was their idea, then why call me? They knew I play with a three-man defence. I didn’t propose myself for the job, but rather Inter chose me.


“Moratti asked me to use Giampaolo Pazzini in the game against Roma, but in my view it was crucial to rediscover the best Milito. I couldn’t understand why there was so little regard for a player who was decisive in Inter’s triumphs. Sneijder can do everything, as he is a complete player, but he just needs to change his behaviour a little bit.


“The real problem was I didn’t see eye to eye with the club on anything – not the tactical ideas, nor the valuation of individuals. I was ready to give Philippe Coutinho and Luc Castaignos a chance, so why bring in Zarate and Forlan to keep them back?


“When I was sacked, Inter were only a point behind Milan. They blamed my 'tactical dogma’ for all the problems, while now I heard people say Inter can’t handle two strikers and a trequartista. I said that in August and nobody listened.”


Gasperini also reveals the player who could’ve made a shock comeback to Inter over the summer, when Inter faced Manchester City in an Irish friendly tournament.


“In Dublin Moratti spoke to me about the possibility of bringing back Balotelli. Perhaps he’d discussed it with Roberto Mancini. However, he explained to me that the only people at Inter who wanted him back were me and him. I thought the President and the Coach would be enough…”
 

Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
61,513
Exactly, it was all over the media.

It's media and their bullshit, somebody has to buy papers.
Dont know about Hamsik, media might be exaggerating some of his rumours throughout the years, but Lavezzi's is likely, he has had some issues with their president since he got there. Too much of a party boy complaints, being bad influence on south american teammates and so on, him wanting to move to better club. There is no coincidence they bought Vargas this winter mercato. Deffo exact same position and type as Lavezzi.
 

Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
61,513
Two reasons for Napoli poor form since the end of the CL:

- Lavezzi has gone back to his old ways (going short and making the game congested instead of running the channels and dragging defenders out of position)

- Since Conte spoke about it and did it well with Estigarribia, teams seem to have finally understood the need to stop Maggio. Teams are now getting close to him instead of allowing him the space to get moving and dominate an entire flank

These two things mean far more of Napoli's play is slow and in central areas - both of which make it far, far easier for teams to play against them.
:tup:
 
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