How to take Control of the Game from the midfield [6 Tips from Andres Iniesta]
I got this interesting article from ‘FourFourTwo
Performance’ and I felt I should share it with you.
From picking the right pass to
bamboozling your opponent, the World Cup-winning Barça man shares his six steps
to taking charge of a game
- Keep an eye out for space
- Be aware of who's around you
- Make the right call at the right time
- Stay sharp when you receive the ball
- Confuse your opponent
- Play the ball fast and keep it down
- Keep an eye out for space
- Be aware of who's around you
1. Receiving
a pass
Before I receive the ball, I quickly
look to see which players I can give it to. Always be aware of who is around
you: if you feel them closing down, take a touch to move the ball away from
them. Try and put yourself in space to get the pass: the more space you have,
the more time you have to think. And when you get the ball, don’t move it
towards the opponent. That said, sometimes I’m happy to run at a player and
just hold the ball in front of him. That way I’ve moved the team forward.
2. Playing
the pass
Every pass is important. A bad pass
loses possession and puts the team under pressure. Short passes build momentum
and if you have the ball then the opponents can’t do anything. Know the time to
make a killer pass. If you need a goal, search for the space to make the pass.
If you’re protecting a lead, keep possession and play safer. Because we have
played together for a long time to a certain system, everyone knows where to
move. That makes my job easier, knowing where Xavi or Leo [Messi] will be.
3. Thinking
on your feet
If you think before your opponent
where the ball is going to go then you have an advantage. If you stay with the
ball at your feet and think about what to do, you are going to lose the ball.
The best players are the quickest thinkers. Where is my team-mate going to run
to? Will he stay onside? Which one has space? Which one is looking for the
ball? How do they like the ball – to their feet or in front? You can be the
best passer in the world, but without your team-mates being in the right
position, it’s no good.
4. Drawing
a foul
Make the opponent think that you are
going one way, then go the other. Confuse him. And when your opponent has the
ball, close him down quickly. Put him under pressure before he’s even had time
to think about an attack. Another thing: if the attack has gone, don’t waste
energy playing catch-up. You can be as much use to the team as a defender if
the ball comes back. Or you can move up more slowly and still be in a position
to shoot if the ball comes back to you.
5. Dealing
with a giant
If I play against a big player, I
play the ball quickly on the ground. Playing a quick one-two is also very
effective as bigger players are slower to react and turn. I also keep a
distance from them so that I can turn quickly and we don’t find ourselves going
for the same ball. I only weigh 63 kilos so I don’t have weight to throw
around. If you can get the ball past them a few times using a one-two they will
be more reluctant to rush in and tackle, so you have more space to play. Barça
is a small team, so we use our height well. It’s good for me to take corners,
not just because I’m unlikely to win the ball in the air.
6. Shooting
from distance
I’m not a natural scorer, but if I
see an opening, I’ll shoot. I shoot if I think I can score and I’ll aim for the
part of the goal that’s most difficult for the goalkeeper. That’s what I did in
the World Cup final – the corner near the post. And against Chelsea too
[Champions League semi-final in 2009], because I saw a space through a crowd of
players. Opposition players in front make it more complicated – for me but also
for the goalkeeper – because they can’t see properly. And if there’s someone in
a better position, I’ll pass. So you need to know who is around you all the
time and where they are.
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