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« April 2013 | Main | June 2013 »

May 2013

05/28/2013

Was Fitness The Season's Biggest Problem?

Nufc-trainingWe have talked plenty about Alan Pardew's questionable tactics. My co-bloggers also lavished a dollop of blame on Newcastle's transfer policy (though I don't necessarily agree with Bob's conclusion from last week). But could the club's biggest failure have been on the training ground, starting in July? I'm starting to think that may be the case.

After Yohan Cabaye and Hatem Ben Arfa featured in Euro 2012 last June, neither player completed anywhere near 90 minutes - in total! - during Newcastle's eight-match preseason schedule. Was it any surprise, after such scant preparation, that both players spent the entire season either injured or off the pace? Obviously, a little extra rest was in order after national team duty. But sitting both players for six weeks, then throwing them into the teeth of the Premier League schedule was a disaster waiting to happen.

While they were the two most clear-cut examples of poor conditioning, it also affected Newcastle in other important ways. For months, I have been stressing the benefits of an uptempo approach, regardless of whether Pardew wanted to play a longball or short passing game. For one thing, playing quicker and pressing through the midfield is an effective way for smaller players to break up the attack and catch defenders on their heels. It's how Cabaye and Cheick Tioté established themselves as a formidable midfield duo in the 2011-12 campaign.

But there was only one stretch of matches where Newcastle played aggressively in the center of the park - in December leading up to the holiday period. The experiment came to a crashing halt after the 7-3 disaster at the Emirates. In that match, of course, it was 3-3 before Arsenal tore through a weary defense. From that point forward, it seemed that Pardew recognized his club lacked the legs to press.

Shortly thereafter, he started employing the 4-2-3-1 formation to guarantee that one central midfielder would play further up the field. While Moussa Sissoko had his moments in that role, it was never as dynamic as the swarming midfield three we saw in December. Even defensive midfielders, like Vurnon Anita and James Perch, became dangerous when given license to push forward. Yet we never saw it again, because the fitness situation made such an approach impossible.

Late in the year, what my co-bloggers perceived as mental weakness in the players could very easily be the product of poor conditioning as well. After all, having two or three players off the pace radically affects the team as a whole, leaving gaps that were exacerbated by poor communication. No amount of rah-rah leadership will give tired or injured players the ability to outrun their opponents. And given the fitness woes that affected the club earlier in the year, it seems a perfectly plausible explanation for the late-season swoon.

By all accounts, Pardew and his staff have all sorts of modern equipment designed to get players in the best shape possible. It's an indictment of the coaches that despite all the tools at their disposal, they didn't appear able to do that. And if Newcastle is serious about fixing the mistakes of last season, the training ground has to be the place to start. 

Posted by Matt at 07:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (5)

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05/24/2013

Blame Pardew, But For The Right Reasons

NUFC1213comparisonMy co-bloggers and I have been taking some flak lately about not being hard enough on Alan Pardew. In reality none of us is happy with the performance of anyone associated with Newcastle United this season, manager included. But we also think it's fair to ask, what about this nightmare was actually Pardew's fault, and what fault lies with the players and the people who procured them? Being the primary stat-head on the blog, I've decided to attack these questions with some key numbers derived from our previous "Moneyball" posts.

I believe some performance categories are more in the manager's control than others. Basketball coaches here in the States will often tell reporters, "We got the shots, we just didn't hit them." That's a veiled way of saying, "My system worked, the players just screwed it up." The excuse is overused but there can be truth in it. Teamwork is necessary to set up a shot, so that's more the job of the orchestrator than one individual. But once the shot is presented it's mostly up to the physical and mental ability of the player to make it. The same is true, I think, in soccer. You may not agree. But if you do, you might want to cut Pardew some slack.

On attack the past season's club functioned better than the previous club in every respect but one: The players didn't convert their chances. The latest club had more of the ball, completed more passes, and most important statistically, created many more scoring opportunities than its predecessor, rising from 15th to 8th in the league in chances. But with the departure of Demba Ba and the cooling of Papiss Cissé, Newcastle plummeted from the league's top five in chance conversion to the near-bottom: Only QPR, at 8 percent, was worse than Newcastle's 11-percent rate. On clear-cut chances, Newcastle created over 25 percent more than last year, but went from converting nearly half to only a third. You decide whether that's the fault of the manager, the players, or the acquisition program. 

In other areas, though, Pardew can't escape so easily. This club was a mess defensively and it never improved. As poor as the chance conversion was, defense accounted for minus-17 of the minus-28 change in goal difference from the previous season. To the naked eye the back looked disorganized too often, with players out of position and clashing with one another - a rhythm section lacking a conductor. Easier to see in the numbers is how opposing attackers blew past Newcastle untroubled. Tackling and intercepting are individual skills, but to rank 18th in both is a team-wide malaise a manager has the power to address. This Newcastle United club, as it stands, doesn't have much grit. They dribble fancy (4th in the league), but they don't intimidate or win clashes. They also went to the air more this past season - "hoofball" if you will, though it's unclear whether that was more a strategy or a defensive last-resort. The French factor? Maybe. But Pardew is an English manager, and he needs to impose some English standards of toughness if his team is to succeed in the world's toughest league.

In short, we come not to praise Pardew nor bury him. This club was a failure and Pardew was its closest overseer. But "Pardew out" is too simplistic. There is plenty of blame for what happened this year and plenty of places to put it.

Posted by Bob at 10:50 AM | Permalink | Comments (7)

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05/19/2013

Three Points: Spring Hangover, Summer Dreams

BenArfaArsenalHere’s this season’s final three-pronged match recap, examining Sunday’s 1-0 loss to Arsenal before turning attention to summer pastimes such as evaluating transfer rumors, sipping fresh lime margaritas and praying for American friendlies:

Shutdown central

While Newcastle United showed little prolonged threat in attack, this was one of the better defensive performances of the year (faint praise), throwing numerous wrenches into Arsenal’s metronome-like passing machine and shutting down the Gunners’ main weapons. Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa was effective despite being out of position on the left, dancing out to frustrate Theo Walcott with Fabricio Coloccini and Steven Taylor forming a refreshingly organized safety net behind. Cheick Tiote had some head-shaking moments on the ball – remember when the in-the-knows had his transfer value at £20 million? – but he was a welcome midfield roadblock. And Mathieu Debuchy’s reliability continues to surprise this observer who has long admired his versatility but worried about his occasional defensive naps in France. Except for one bad guess on a setpiece Newcastle would’ve swiped a point and sent Arsenal’s Champions League playoff berth to Tottenham.

Love him or Hatem

Hatem Ben Arfa can’t resist the challenge of taking on an entire opposing backfield by himself. He’s overdue to complete a signature coast-to-coast journey with a goal. And he looked on Sunday to be still carrying a bit of injury fat. But he sure does keep the other side occupied. Even without much sniff of an actual goal, he took several minutes by himself off Arsenal’s possession fixation and showed why Newcastle suffers without him. Would that he could stay uninjured and fit through a season.

Where have ye been, Newcastle?

During the second half at our pub an Arsenal fan turned to me and said, “What the hell. I thought you guys were bad.” I can’t come up with a better summation of the day. Not that it was a scintillating performance. But if Newcastle United had shown only this much orderliness and mettle through most of the season, the club and fans would’ve been spared their relegation worries, and Alan Pardew’s managerial seat would be off the simmer. 

Posted by Bob at 05:02 PM | Permalink | Comments (2)

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05/17/2013

Alan Pardew And The Problematic Transfer Policy

Alan-pardew-poor If you think Newcastle's problems -- this season and moving forward -- start and stop with Alan Pardew, then you are simple-minded. That might sound a tad harsh, but it's true.

Pardew deserves to draw criticism in the wake of a troubling season that saw his team tumble from Champions League contenders to relegation survivors. (Granted, it seems fairly clear at this point that Newcastle overachieved in 2011-12.) His teams tended to encounter the same difficulties match after match, including (but not limited to) a penchant for losing its grip on games after halftime, a complete aversion to set piece success and an inability to string together solid defensive performances.

Newcastle's seemingly endless injury list no doubt hindered Pardew's efforts to eradicate those problems. Pardew finally settled on a 4-2-3-1 formation in the second half of the season, but Newcastle never truly appeared fluid in any alignment. Pardew has long talked about his teams "playing on the front foot" and establishing a "rhythmic passing game," but his team hasn't turned that talk into a reality on the field often enough.

Still, Pardew didn't go from a solid Premier League manager to a complete oaf overnight. We all may have oversold his abilities in the delirium of last season, but he merited considerable praise for integrating new signings, getting the best out of Newcastle's most talented players and establishing a solid defensive backbone. Pardew drew deserved plaudits for overseeing a fifth-place finish. So did Newcastle's French-and-on-a-budget recruitment policy.

Yet only one seems to have been placed under the microscope this season.

The decision to only sign one senior player last summer -- and one who, with everyone available, wouldn't be expected to start -- set the tone for a season in which the club as a whole seemed to only aspire to do just enough to get by. But there are wider issues when it comes to Newcastle's much-celebrated transfer strategy.

What sort of players is the club signing? Available, affordable and young don't tell me anything about how they'll perform on the field. Newcastle may be collecting promising assets while avoiding sky high transfer fees, but is the club giving Pardew the players he needs to succeed in the Premier League? Let's even take Pardew out of the equation. Every manager has a philosophy, a style, a preference. Isn't synergy between scouting and transfer strategy and the manager's plans essential?

Moreover, no transfer policy can be totally rigid. A long-term plan is necessary; so, too, is having the flexibility to consider short-term needs. Team needs change from season to season. Key players get injured. Promising youngsters regress. Veterans start to slip. Clubs have to react to those developments. And sometimes, the appropriate response is to pay the necessary price to bring in proven, Premier League-tested players. Or at least to look outside of Ligue 1, a league that, at best, is the fifth-strongest in Europe.

This isn't manager mode on a FIFA video game. Buying nothing but young players doesn't guarantee future success. Intangible attributes like toughness -- both mental and physical -- and leadership matter. Newcastle, for all its promising French imports, badly needs more of those qualities. I'm not arguing that the club should return to the days of signing the Nicky Butts and Alan Smiths of the world. But there are plenty of 24- to 28-year-olds with Premier League success on their resumes, and Newcastle would be wise to consider a few of them.

Pardew has taken flack this season for not having a "Plan B" when his team struggles. His superiors at St. James' Park deserve similar criticism. And their chance to respond begins this summer.

Posted by Tom at 11:06 AM | Permalink | Comments (5)

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05/15/2013

Two Aubameyang Alternatives To Consider

It's not a secret that Saint-Etienne forward Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang is Newcastle's top summer transfer target. The Gabon international has lit up Ligue 1 defenses for 19 goals this season, combining tons of speed with the technique and confidence to belt in the odd 20-yarder. Of course, Aubameyang is not toiling in obscurity at this point, with the likes of Spurs and Arsenal also circling the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard. In other words, Newcastle should be prepared to look for alternatives if necessary.

Here are two other Ligue 1 wide forwards who might be worth pursuing. While neither would be ideal as a striker, both players would add flexibility to the squad and plenty of fluidity on the pitch.

Romain Alessandrini, Rennes, 24 years old Alessandrini-jump

Our podcast listeners or Twitter followers should be well aware of our love for the Rennes winger, who managed 10 goals in only 22 appearances during his debut season in Ligue 1. He's an exceptionally quick left-footed player who can play as an orthodox left winger, and is capable of putting in quite a good cross, but also offers much more, drifting all over the field to find space. He's also not shy about teeing up a long-range shot on goal. Much like January signing Yoan Gouffran, Alessandrini also works hard to defend his position (1.7 tackles per match)  - something sure to bring a smile to the face of Alan Pardew.

Two more points in Alessandrini's favor: just as his value was about to go through the roof, he tore a ligament in his knee in February. As we saw with Hatem Ben Arfa and Sylvain Marveaux, Newcastle is not afraid to bring in a currently injured player if he's talented enough, and Alessandrini certainly fits the bill. Just before that injury, he was called up to the French national team for the first time. Among Alessandrini's teammates in that early February camp? Yohan Cabaye, Mathieu Debuchy, Moussa Sissoko, and his roommate, Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa. Let the speculation begin.

Dimitri Payet, Lille, 26 years old Payet

After Cabaye and Debuchy already made their own Lille-to-Newcastle moves, negotiators at the two clubs should be pretty familiar with each other.  Following an excellent season - 12 goals and 13 assists in 36 league appearances - Payet is well worth the effort it would take to deal with Lille once more. Much like Ben Arfa, he is a flashy and confident dribbler with an eye for goal who can play from either wing (though he appears to favor his right foot). He's also capable of some gorgeous passing in the final third, something Newcastle has sorely lacked.

This past weekend against Reims, Payet demonstrated everything good about his game - a goal, an assist, a beautiful effort that smacked off the crossbar - though like Ben Arfa, he also turned the ball over a bit more than you'd like to see. There's also the issue of both Lille and Newcastle being sticklers for value in the transfer market. Nonetheless, Payet would certainly be cheaper than Aubameyang, perhaps in the £10 million range.

Of course, the main sticking point in going for a wide forward is a tactical one. Newcastle has to figure out an attacking plan which gets the most from the talents of Aubameyang, Alessandrini, or Payet, as well as its current stars. It doesn't necessarily have to be built around short passing, as Aubameyang has shown at Saint-Etienne, but it can't be unfocused as this season has been.

Posted by Matt at 08:20 AM | Permalink | Comments (12)

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05/14/2013

Premier League Safety Assured. What Next?

Ashley-annoyedWith only a Steve Harper-themed celebration separating Newcastle from the summer break, it's time to look ahead to next season. The task facing the club is simple: figure out how and why this particular team underachieved so drastically, and prevent it from happening again. To that end, there are plenty of decisions to be made, starting this week. In order, here's what the board needs to address:

Alan Pardew's future

His legion of detractors can't be happy to hear the news, but it's looking more and more likely that staying in the Premier League was good enough to keep Pardew employed at the club. Whether that turns out to be the case or not, Newcastle needs to figure out the manager situation in a hurry. The big issue with replacing Pardew would be finding someone demonstrably better. Obviously, someone like Rafa Benítez is a level up, but most of the other names mentioned have similarly shaky track records. Any new manager must also be willing to give up some control over his transfers, a constraint many top-tier bosses would balk at.

If the board does decide to stick with Pardew, he needs to answer for this season. "A plan detailing how he intends to solve Newcastle United's problems" would be a good start. That plan should also include the tactics he expects will get the best out of the club's key players, and a discussion with Graham Carr about who to bring in over the summer. Those types of plans seemed to be sorely missing this season, as Newcastle failed to establish any pattern to its play whatsoever. Sunday's win was a perfect example. The goals that kept the club up came via mistakes by José Bosingwa, not as part of any attacking strategy.

Transfer priorities: front line first

The biggest question the manager needs to sort out with Carr is what sort of player to bring in up front. To use two often-rumored players as archetypes: does Newcastle need an Andy Carroll or a Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang? A big, physical player would help fix the weakness from crosses and corners, while a speedy winger/striker would work well in a fluid front three. (Though as we've previously discussed, Aubameyang himself thrives in a longball-oriented style right now.)

Euro 2012 hamstrung Newcastle's pursuit of Mathieu Debuchy, as Lille hoped to profit from the right back's performance, but there is no showcase event this time around. Whoever the club identifies on its striker shortlist should be pursued with gusto, in hopes of bringing him in before the preseason starts. I'll be doing my part to help with that shortlist later this week, by offering two slightly cheaper Aubameyang types for the club to consider if it fails to sign the Saint-Etienne star.

Outgoing transfers: question marks galore

If Mike Ashley had planned on selling any of his stars for a profit this summer, poor performances may have put those ideas on hold. Rival clubs won't be bidding high on the likes of Yohan Cabaye or Cheick Tioté after the seasons they've had, and Hatem Ben Arfa's injuries will cap his value as well. 

But the biggest questions on the outgoing front will be around Fabricio Coloccini. After weeks of being written off by fans who downplayed his importance (including yours truly), Coloccini may have saved his best two performances of the season for the last two weeks, marshaling a back four that looked lost without him. 

With a coherent plan from Pardew, one more addition up front, and Coloccini deciding to stay with the club, next season could be a promising one indeed. But after having lived through the last few months, it's hard not to expect that come August, the manager will still be flailing tactically, Papiss Cissé will continue to be a mismatched piece, and Steven Taylor and Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa will keep playing like two guys who met each other 10 minutes before kickoff. It's shaping up to be a summer where things could go very right...or shockingly wrong.

Posted by Matt at 08:04 AM | Permalink | Comments (13)

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05/12/2013

Three Points: NUFC Stays Up With Ugly Win Over QPR

Nufc-qpr-badgesThree relieved notes from Newcastle United's survival-ensuring 2-1 win over Queens Park Rangers at Loftus Road:

Finally, some luck
No doubt the fans of any team battling relegation tend to think their side has been unlucky. Still, it sure seems like Newcastle has turned that feeling into a reality this season, between constant injuries and a handful of damaging refereeing decisions.

It's hard to whine too much, though, after QPR handed Newcastle the victory it needed to remain in the Premier League. Jose Bosingwa's jersey grab on Hatem Ben Arfa was so blatant and persistent that Lee Probert was forced to award a penalty for an infraction that sadly generally goes unchecked.

Then, Bosingwa completed a solid day's failure with a timid back pass that forced Rob Green into a rushed clearance and gave Yoan Gouffran the chance put Newcastle in front. Jonas Gutierrez, so often criticized this season (oftentimes with reason, to be fair), deserves praise for his hustle to pressure Green on the play. So too does Gouffran, who still had to finish from outside the box.

Still, it's hard to imagine there were too many teams Newcastle would have beaten on the road with the performance it offered up. United defended solidly for the most part (apart from several worrisome moments from right back Mathieu Debuchy), but it didn't create many scoring chances and allowed QPR to control proceedings in the second half.

Still the best
Fabricio Coloccini was the heart and soul of Newcastle's rise to fifth place last season. The Argentine, like the rest of his teammates, has endured significant turbulence this season — most of it seemingly due to his undisclosed-but-much-discussed personal problems.

But it's hard to confidently say Newcastle would be in the Premier League next season without Coloccini's contributions over the past two weeks. The backline was a total mess before the club captain returned from a back injury. With him back in the lineup, Newcastle has conceded one goal — on an unwarranted penalty kick — in two trips to London, a problematic destination over the years, and Coloccini has been the team's player in both games.

There is a whole host of issues that need to be addressed in the summer, but attempting to persuade Coloccini to stay should rank near the top of the list.

A feel good ending to a terrible season
Newcastle's season finale against Arsenal is meaningless in terms of survival, though the club could bank Mike Ashley a few extra million pounds by finishing higher up the league table (and could laughably reach as high as 10th). But the match will no doubt mean an awful lot to Steve Harper.

The 38-year-old, whose contract expires this summer, will start the final game of his 20-year tenure at the club thanks to Rob Elliot's dismissal. Since Newcastle has yet to announce any plans for a testimonial to Harper, the Arsenal match will ensure fans are able to properly send off the affable goalkeeper.

Harper has never been a world class goalkeeper, but he's been steady and dependable when called upon and has never complained about a lack of playing time. His leadership was key in Newcastle's recovery from relegation, and he seems like the type of character whom the club would be wise to bring back in some capacity when his playing career is over.

Posted by Tom at 01:12 PM | Permalink | Comments (6)

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05/08/2013

How Longball Could Work For NUFC

Asse-celebrationNewcastle's propensity for longball has been a frequent source of distress all season. At various points in the year, all the team has been able to do is launch the ball skyward, hoping in vain that Papiss Cissé or Shola Ameobi can hold it up. Whether it is a designed approach from Alan Pardew, or a panicked reaction from players struggling under opposition pressure, it hasn't worked. Most people would tell you that given the club's mix of players, it can't work. But after watching French club AS Saint-Etienne over the past few months, I'm convinced it can - even if Newcastle fails to bring in ASSE star Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang this summer.

Saint-Etienne has enjoyed a stellar season in Ligue 1, sitting fifth in the table and among the league's scoring leaders, with a +28 goal differential. It is also a longball team, first and foremost. Though ASSE drew 0-0 against Bordeaux this past weekend, it threatened the goal time and again, creating better chances than any Newcastle fashioned in its own 0-0 draw against West Ham (Cissé should-be goal excepted). But it goes through stretches where players can't string three passes in a row together, and defenders routinely bypass the midfield when they receive the ball. Far from grinding the game to a halt, Saint-Etienne still puts pressure on the opposition during these disjointed periods.

The difference? Les Verts rarely played it slowly through the defense and back to the keeper, allowing Bordeaux's defense to get set. Everything is done quickly - free kicks, throw-ins, and long balls - in order to take advantage of a flat-footed back line. Often the ball would be played over the head of a fullback, allowing Aubameyang to win a race, rather than forcing the forward to challenge for the ball in the air.

Saint-Etienne does have a hulking center forward in Brandão, but it's not as if he's incredibly effective with his back to goal and bringing others into play. For the season, he's completed passes at a 64.7% clip according to WhoScored, a good deal lower than Cissé's 75.6% in league play. When Saint-Etienne defenders hoof it through the center, the ball frequently comes free, just as it does when Newcastle launches it to Cissé. But midfielders surge forward to win the second ball or deny the opposition space, then play a through ball while defenders scramble back to recover. It's another thing Newcastle has not done nearly enough this year.

What I'm trying to say is that this sort of play - true "front-foot football," to use Pardew's much-derided term - is something that Newcastle could put in practice this weekend with just a subtle adjustment to the approach. Yoan Gouffran and Hatem Ben Arfa have enough speed to outpace a defender caught leaning the wrong way. Yohan Cabaye should thrive in a system that lets him be a bit combative, while also allowing him to try his silky passes against a defense that's not in an optimal position. Cissé can still be effective even when he's losing the majority of his aerial battles.

Whether or not this is the right strategy in the long term is certainly debatable. But given Newcastle's inability to play the ball out of the back effectively, it is certainly far better than what we have seen much of the year.

Posted by Matt at 08:19 AM | Permalink | Comments (7)

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05/04/2013

Three Points: West Ham Draw

Newcastle-westham-badgesThree immediate takeaways from Newcastle United's scoreless draw with West Ham at Upton Park:

All about context
The performance was far from a masterclass. But it also was a colossal improvement from last week's unmitigated disaster.

In fact, you could argue Newcastle showed its backbone on the road against an awkward opponent. Newcastle defended solidly for the majority of the match — there were several worrisome moments in the second half — and, were goal line technology in place in the Premier League, would have led through Papiss Cisse's first-half effort that Winston Reid attempted to clear off the line.

However, once Aston Villa and Wigan snatched late winning goals, Newcastle's result suddenly looked pretty damaging. Should Sunderland beat or draw with Stoke on Monday and Wigan beat Swansea on Tuesday, Newcastle will occupy the final relegation place entering next week's trip to Loftus Road.

O Captain! My Captain!
How Newcastle has missed Fabricio Coloccini. With its captain back in the heart of the defense, Newcastle's backline looked notably more settled.

Apart from Mike Williamson, Newcastle doesn't possess a center back who can even hope to challenge a player like Andy Carroll in the air (and Williamson wasn't used for obvious reasons). But Coloccini and Steven Taylor coped adequately with West Ham's aerial assault. Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa bounced back from last week's embarrassment with a solid outing at left back, while Danny Simpson was decent enough at right back.

The biggest plus to take away from Saturday was that, by and large, Newcastle stifled West Ham from creating much in the way of premium scoring chances. Considering Newcastle's defensive record this season, that's an accomplishment.

Jekyll & Hyde
Why can't Newcastle manage to control play for two consecutive halves? That's the £60 million question, isn't it?

A growing segment of the fan base will place the blame squarely on manager Alan Pardew. Regardless of whether or not you subscribe to that theory, we can all agree on this much: It's up to Pardew to fix it, and he's running out of time.

In the first half of this one, Newcastle drove the play, with Hatem Ben Arfa looking dangerous and Yohan Cabaye spraying threatening balls forward (including the one that should have led to the opening goal from Cisse).

After the break, though, Ben Arfa's influence waned, Cabaye seemed to disappear altogether, and Cisse was hardly involved. And unfortunately, Newcastle doesn't seem to have another way of attacking when Cabaye isn't sewing things together in the center of the midfield.

Unlike last season, the team doesn't look dangerous on the counter and it's not built for playing direct, either. Rip Pardew for bringing on Shola Ameobi for Ben Arfa all you want, but he doesn't have anything else that resembles a physical presence up front. Or a dangerous winger off the bench, which meant Dan Gosling replaced Yoan Gouffran when the latter was battling a cramp. Vurnon Anita would have been a more sensible option, but he's not exactly a creative offensive force, either.

Posted by Tom at 12:14 PM | Permalink | Comments (6)

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05/03/2013

Behind-The-Scenes Drama Overblown

Cisse-celebrateAfter Newcastle made headlines on Saturday for a shameful performance against Liverpool, it has continued to dominate the English press for what's happened off the field. As I said earlier in the week, I'm not buying Luke Edwards' contention that the club is riven by "French vs. everyone else" cliques. But the massive overreaction - banning his paper, the Telegraph, from press conferences, and embarking on a massive PR campaign - only serves to fuel a story that should have faded days ago.

Why don't I think the Telegraph story adds up? As my co-blogger Tom said* in an email, "I don't know what else explains the blatant lack of effort against a Liverpool team minus its best player and without anything substantial to play for." Well, what explains last year's team, fighting for the Champions League and brimming with confidence, getting obliterated by Wigan 4-1? Or not showing up at all against Everton on the season's final day, when Newcastle had nothing to lose, still a slim chance at the Champions League, and Everton had nothing to play for?

The poor performance on Saturday was worrisome given Newcastle's position in the table. Even without Luis Suárez, Liverpool used Daniel Sturridge's speed to take advantage of a disorganized back four. It cut off space in the midfield knowing that Newcastle has struggled under pressure and has not counterattacked effectively. These are problems that should be addressed. They're not necessarily a signal of locker room unrest.

And it's not like the team has looked unmotivated for weeks on end, either. As quickly as we've all wanted this season to just be over already, so things can start fresh (and hopefully in the Premier League), the last few weeks have felt like an eternity. But the win against Fulham which saw both Papiss Cissé and Alan Pardew end up in the crowd at St. James' Park was only a month ago. Four days later, the club nearly pulled off a miracle against Benfica. It's difficult to imagine a club that looked less torn apart by internal divisions than Newcastle on those two occasions.

Assuming that there was a kernel of truth in the Telegraph article, where did it come from? No doubt the locker room would have been a hostile environment after the derby loss, and even worse following Saturday's debacle. Particularly after that embarrassment, you would expect plenty of fingers to be pointed. Players probably did question Pardew's tactics, and each other. Who wouldn't after a performance where everyone, from the manager on down, was singularly awful in their own special ways?

So if someone at the club talks to Luke Edwards after the derby, and after Liverpool, and tells him the players and manager are at each other's throats, that would be completely true. In the hands of a writer looking for something sensational, it's also all the evidence he needs for his story. But it's also not an accurate portrayal of the state of affairs.

Of course, the easy way to put all of this silliness to rest isn't to shut journalists out of the club, or to put out cautiously worded PR statements, but just to win on Saturday and end any fears of relegation. Make that drama disappear, and the rumor mill will vanish along with it.

* See Tom's clarification about his comment below.

Posted by Matt at 07:51 AM | Permalink | Comments (3)

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