With a less
expensive squad, fraught with injuries, suspensions and high-profile summer
departures, River Plate took Tigres to a war of attrition -the previous three
matches between them had ended all leveled- and finally broke the stalemate to prompt
their rivals' collapse and collect their third Copa Libertadores. They did so
basically by persisting in fielding two classic number nines, capitalizing the
only one-on-one situation with the Tigres backline, and being clinical at
set-pieces just as they were against Atlético Nacional in Copa Sudamericana six
months ago.
For large
spells of the first half -and considering the heavy rain- both teams didn't
retain meaningful possession and the game became finals-like and dull: River
couldn't because Ponzio and Kranevitter aren't gifted passers and Tigres
weren't willing to because preferred counterattacking. In such a scenario the
quick transition game of the Mexican side proved once again to be delivering
when Funes Mori got attracted to Rafael Sobis and deflected poorly just for the
Brazilian forward to make an equally poor reception and waste a clear chance. A
few moments later, the Tigres right winger Jürgen Damm wreaked havoc in River's
left flank only for André-Pierre Gignac to waste yet another chance for the
visitors. For those very spells River Plate and Tigres became good reflections
of their respective leagues: Liga Mx with play quicker and more incisive;
Argentine First Division, more physical and strategic.
River
netted the opener with an unexpected combination that goes against the locals'
traditional flux of play: left full-back Leonel Vangioni took on Damm and
crossed for Lucas Alario to head home between the Tigres center-back duo. As
the above graphic shows, both Marcelo Gallardo and Ricardo Ferretti lined-up
similar formations that appeared to cancel each other out as every field player
had a direct cover reference. When Vangioni got past Damm, he suddenly enjoyed
good time and space, but that successful challenge doesn't explain in itself
why the Tigres four-man defensive line appeared so static. That has to do with Gallardo's persistence
on fielding two classic number nines.
After
Alario's goal, Mexican media claimed that the Argentine striker should have
been sent off for two reckless tackles on Mexican full-back Jorge Torres Nilo
and on goalkeeper Nahuel Guzmán. Alario's nasty maneuvers, however, were done over
each one of Tigres' flanks: on the right corner first and on the left corner
later, hence illustrating Alario's mobility and coordination with his attacking
partner Fernando Cavenaghi. For River's first goal, the latter pulled wide to
attract Juninho's cover and to open space for the former's header in a one-on-one situation against José
Rivas. Credit should be given to Marcelo Gallardo who persisted in his system despite the fact of having neither Teo Gutiérrez nor Rodrigo
Mora.
The second
goal was simply a sloppy tackle from Javier Aquino to his cover reference
Carlos Sánchez, and the Uruguayan himself converted the resulting penalty kick.
The third goal was pure Gallardo's River insofar as El Muñeco introduced Leonardo Pisculichi -whose left foot is well
renowned after assisting for the goals of the Copa
Sudamericana final- to curl in a corner kick for Ramiro Funes Mori to head home.
It's truly noteworthy how River's goals against Atlético Nacional resemble the
last one against Tigres and it makes one wonder whether Gallardo would have
relied only on Pisculichi's magnificent set-pieces to maintain his side
cohesive had the match gone towards extra time.
The attrition war proposed by River worked out as the Argentines brought the Mexicans onto a field of physicality and strategy. Tigres, nevertheless, did enjoy good chances when they managed to exploit their pace at counterattacks: incisiveness and clinical finishing is what they missed. River had both of them and thus we can fairly say that they pounced and subdued their expensive rivals to get continental silverware.
The attrition war proposed by River worked out as the Argentines brought the Mexicans onto a field of physicality and strategy. Tigres, nevertheless, did enjoy good chances when they managed to exploit their pace at counterattacks: incisiveness and clinical finishing is what they missed. River had both of them and thus we can fairly say that they pounced and subdued their expensive rivals to get continental silverware.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario