Chapter 1092 The Battle of Riazor (Part 2)
PS1: I continue to ask for recommendation votes here, saying that free books don’t require everyone to spend money, so it should be fine to give more recommendation votes? Thank you here~
PS2: Let me talk about the book friends group here. The group numbers are three, seven, zero, five, four, nine, nine, one, nine, and the verification answer is NTR Knight, well, that's it.
After the game began, La Coruna, who got the right to kick off in the coin guessing before the game, did not launch an offensive immediately with the help of home court, but firmly controlled the ball under the command of their organizational core, Juan Berellon, and then slowly penetrated into the half of Fiorentina, trying to gradually flatten the formation of Zi Lily, thereby gaining the initiative in the game and defeating the most powerful opponent in the entire G group.
Faced with La Coruna, who adopted a steady and steady strategy, the Fiorentine players were familiar with setting up many defense lines from the midfield. Marklele and Albertini defended head-on, while Pirlo and Dinatale, who retreated to the midfield, assisting defense on the side, using this method to maximize the interference of Belleron's organization in the midfield, forcing La Coruna players to fail to launch an offensive according to their pre-match idea.
Being hailed as "Ziedane of Spain" by fans and media, Belleron's insight on the court is naturally extraordinary. He could see Fiorentina's countermeasures at a glance, realizing that this was the opponent deliberately limiting his time to get the ball, not allowing him to calmly organize the offense in the midfield, and destroying his own offensive rhythm.
Faced with such a situation, Berellon also has corresponding countermeasures. After all, after playing in La Liga for so many years, Berellon has encountered many times when he is targeted by his opponent, so he naturally won’t panic because of this.
However, Berlelon obviously forgot a very important point, that is, unlike the La Liga where offensive football is the main focus and defense is basically based on the players' personal abilities and attitudes, most Italian teams attach great importance to defense, so they will not place the responsibility of defending the opponent's core players entirely on a certain player, but will rely more on a complete and strict defensive system to fight. As the well-deserved overlord of Italian football in the past seven years, Fiorentina is one of the best.
So, as time went by, Berellon quickly realized something was wrong: he found that no matter where he ran to catch the ball, at least one Fiorentine player could always appear around him to defend himself!
"I really didn't expect that after missing the dispatch and pass of Berellon, Laco could only rely on Victor and Romero to create a threat." Looking at La Coruña, who seemed a little confused and monotonous on the offensive end after Berellon was restricted by Markello and Albertini, Zhuang Mingge was quite moved, "No wonder La Coruña in his previous life was completely depressed after he was seriously injured. Now it seems that Berellon is indeed a very important existence for the current Laco."
Speaking of Super Laco in this period, it is inevitable to mention a player, that is, their midfield core, Juan Berlelon.
In Zhuang Mingge's opinion, among the Spanish players born in the 1970s, Berellon can be said to be one of the two best midfield organizers in Spain during this period (the other is Guardiola). His vision and mastery of footwork when passing are masters. Moreover, his passes are not lacking in imagination. He often gives away some magical passes in the game to assist his teammates in scoring. It can be said that in terms of organizational skills and assisting skills, Berellon is not much worse than Zidane.
There are two main reasons why Berellon failed to become a generation of midfield masters in international football like Zidane. First of all, Berellon is extremely general and even weak physical. Unlike Zidane, a midfielder who is extremely impactful on the court and can even dribble into the penalty area and score directly, Berellon, whose physical fitness is far from comparable to Zidane, is destined to be unable to rush on the court like the Frenchman, using scores to help the team win, and can only organize attacks outside the penalty area. Moreover, his thin body also makes Berellon lack the necessary confrontational ability on the court, which makes him have to spend more energy to avoid the opponent's defense when facing a top defensive midfielder like Maclale. In this way, he naturally invests less energy in organizing offense.
After all, unlike those midfielders who only know how to rush and hit hard by relying on their bodies, these midfielders in Fiorentina rely more on prediction and skillful defensive skills when defending. It is not easy for Berellon to cheat fouls and set-pieces in the frontcourt on them. If the referee decides that he is a fake fall, it will be a backlash.
It can be said that it is precisely because of the lack of physical fitness that Berellon has greatly restricted becoming a midfield superstar like Zidane and Rui Costa, and can only become a midfielder in people's eyes with excellent passes and rich imagination but other ordinary organizations.
On the other hand, what influenced Belleron to become a superstar is his extremely lacking ambition. Although La Coruna, who he played for, can be regarded as a strong team in La Liga, in terms of strength, fame and heritage, this small ball club located in northwest Spain is obviously not enough to allow Belleron to complete the transformation from a star to a superstar.
After all, except for a very small number of players such as Maradona, most superstars became superstars during their time in the giants. Especially after the arrival of the Boseman era, this phenomenon began to become more and more obvious. For example, Ronaldo, Figo, Zidane, Raul, Rivaldo and others were all like this, and the stars who stick to those civilian teams, such as Julen Guerrero, Matthew Leticel, Echeberia, etc., although they became famous in their youth, because the stage the team can provide them is extremely limited, so they were stuck at the threshold of the stars and failed to reach the expected heights.
Although Berellon was restricted by Fiorentina, since La Coruna during this period could be called Super Laco, it naturally had their unique features. After noticing that Berellon was surrounded by Fiorentina players and it was difficult to catch the ball and organize the attack, Iruetta made a gesture to the Laco players on the court, asking them to hand the ball over to Fran (the Spanish midfielder born in 1969, not the well-known Uruguayan striker) and Mauro Silva, who were responsible for the distribution of ball rights.
Although Fran and Mauro Silva are famous for their fierce defense and tireless running, as players born in two technically focused countries, Spain and Brazil, they naturally cannot be rough. They are doing their passes and dispatching work very well, but they lack the aura of Belleron.
Iruetta's move quickly achieved a miraculous effect. In the 23rd minute of the game, Mauro Silva passed the ball to Romero who was inserted on the left. The latter and Belleron used a classic two-pass one-to-one cooperation to break through Zambrota's defense and made a high pass. Diego Tristan, who followed up in the middle, hit the ball before Stam and headed the ball five meters in front of the goal!
Chapter completed!