sábado, 14 de noviembre de 2015

Argentina 1-1 Brazil: Dunga beats Martino

Such was the intense play that broke lines at peaks during the first clash between Argentina and Brazil for World Cup qualifiers, that one is left wondering whether the insipid countless friendlies that take South America's ultimate derby elsewhere across the globe taint the quintessence of the rivalry. In what is dramatically becoming the watermark of Gerardo Martino's tenure, Argentina indulged in its raw talent (even without Messi) producing vibrant counter-attacking football which must have created a bigger lead than 1-0, only to fade near to collapse when Dunga introduced Douglas Costa, Brazil equalized, and must have got the three points from Buenos Aires before David Luiz's red card.

Both managers used roughly the same formation, 4-2-3-1. Mystifyingly enough, Dunga resorted to Brasileirao names in key spots with mixed results: Santos FC's reborn Ricardo Oliveira and Lucas Lima were picked ahead of Costa himself and Oscar, thus meaning Neymar was deployed in the very same channel occupied by Ángel Di María. Barring some sparks from both, however, their contribution was rather scant in spite of the fact that having the two superstars on the same side of the field implies a gamble that was barely tested throughout. It was people like Willian, Dani Alves, Ever Banega or the Argentina central defenders -Funes Mori and Otamendi- who were most willing to ride their luck over the slippery turf.

A game of identical formations means identical duties and identical liberties. The full-backs (Alves, Filipe Luis, Roncaglia and Rojo) should cover the wingers (Willian, Neymar, Di María and Lavezzi) and the wingers should track back the full-backs. For this case, the free men were located in the holding midfield and in that number ten spot behind the lone striker. That is, the nominally free in either side were Lucas Lima and Éver Banega; the dominance of Argentina in the first stages of the match is thus explained by Banega's ample expertise over young and still untested Lucas Lima. While this latter made way more passes than the former, the bulk of his passes were backwards as the Sevilla FC man dropped deep and launched incisive through-balls to the front. Argentina's goal came after Banega cleared the ball from deep towards Di María forcing Luiz Gustavo out of the center and opening space for Lavezzi's run.



Lima, on the other hand, remained as isolated as Ricardo Oliveira upfront and this appeared explicitly instructed by Dunga, for this "immobility" was the key factor for Brazil's equalizer when Lima caught a rebound from the bar following a Costa's header inside the Argentine box. Had Lima dropped deep like Banega the whole match, he wouldn't have been fresh enough to be in the right place at the right time. The Canarinha rallied back and Neymar got activated attempting target twice within Argentine chaos. In that moment, Dunga subbed Lima off for Renato Augusto and modified from 4-2-3-1 to the 4-3-3 Corinthians normally use (with the same shuttlers: Elias and Augusto) in order to slow down the tempo and control the midfield.

Martino perhaps realized that he had awaited far too much for refreshing his side when he made a late double substitution (Paulo Dybala and Erick Lamela on for Higuaín and Banega). Having too little time to introduce a new tactical plan, the only two sources of hope for Argentina to get the first victory were set-pieces and David Luiz being sent-off for reckless tackles. Although this was a fair draw, Dunga departs reinforced from Buenos Aires and Martino is now more weakened than ever. 

The Argentine boss now heads to Colombia in a match that promises deep emotions and dire consequences for hosts and guests.

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