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Brett Emerton more effective as a fullback?

Roar Pro
8th October, 2011
26
1248 Reads

Last night’s City Derby between Melbourne Victory and Sydney FC was a fitting spectacle for the A-League debuts of Harry Kewell and Brett Emerton.

While Kewell was effective playing as a trequartista, drifting from flank to flank in search of space and serving as the main conduit of the Navy Blues attack, Emerton’s performance on the right wing was much more muted, and Brett did not feature as prominently during the game as his national team colleague.

It wasn’t that Brett played particularly badly; it was just that Sydney never really strung together fluent attacking phases and Emerton’s performance suffered from the helter-skelter rhythm.

This might be remedied by affording Emerton time to settle-in and build a rapport with his team-mates; but perhaps there is another, tactical reason Emerton was so subdued last night.

Blackburn fans are nearly unanimous in their belief that Emerton, because of his stamina, awareness and accurate crossing ability, was always more effective as a fullback than as a winger. Perhaps there is some merit in that point of view.

If Sydney’s main priority is to properly utilise Emerton’s impeccable delivery from the right flank, (and the fact that he was given responsibility over corners goes some way to supporting this) then he would be in a more advantageous position to become a constant aerial outlet at fullback rather than on the wing, where he is closely marked by the opposition leftback, and compelled to provide close support for the lone forward.

Now I recognise that most people will think this is a controversial, even blatantly foolish opinion given that Emerton is almost certainly one of the most talented and experienced players in the hemisphere, never mind the Sydney squad (they’ll think Emerton at right-back is a waste; why hide him so far from the action?).

But consider this; fullback has become the most important and influential position in modern football, due to the fact that a fullback often has no direct opponent to contend against in a 4-4-2 or 4-3-3.

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Fullbacks frequently have the whole flank to patrol with the wide players ahead of them cutting-in to support the lone forward.

Consider last night’s match; with the midfield congested, which players had space to advance into and time on the ball to create situations to overman the opposition defence and launch crosses into the box – Jamieson and Cole, Fabio and Foschini; the fullbacks.

If Lavicka opts to deploy Bridge, Antonis or Petratos on the right wing, pacey and aggressive players, their cutting-in will drag the opposition leftback inside, leaving Emerton behind, free and clear, with acres of space and precious extra time to advance, assess the situation, pick out a friendly target, and unleash a pinpoint curling cross into the box – a facet of the game Emerton excels at, and it was noticeable and disappointing that he didn’t unleash a single cross all game against Melbourne.

In addition, consider Emerton’s defensive abilities; he has the physical stamina to patrol up and down the flank all game, the build to ensure he won’t be bullied off the ball, the experience and awareness to pre-emptively prevent opposition attacking forays through clever positioning, and adroitness in the tackle.

The fact that McFlynn, the Sydney captain and a tough-tackling defensive midfielder is regularly stationed on the right of the double pivot bolsters the argument; after the right winger cuts-in and Emerton at fullback overlaps, McFlynn can drift wide to occupy the space that Emerton has just vacated and the opposition would try to exploit.

For a relevant comparison, consider the performances of Luke Wilkshire for Australia; he is often the most regular outlet for crossing on the right flank, and the time and space he is afforded is created by Emerton drawing in the opposition leftback and allowing Wilkshire to advance and overlap.

Will Lavicka recognise the merit in this approach? Perhaps, though Vitja is infamous for dogged perseverance in a 4-4-2 diamond formation whose lack of width was repeatedly exploited and exposed last season.

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If Lavicka does recognise the possibility, will he try it? That is another matter entirely. Lavicka was fortunate to retain his position as Sydney’s manager, given the dog’s breakfast that was the Sky Blues campaign last season.

The majority of fans and the executive board would probably regard Emerton at right back as an illogical waste of money, even though it might just be the ideal way to make use of Emerton’s world class talents; endless stamina, defensive awareness, and superb crossing ability.

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