Breaking down the brilliance of Barca

By jorginho_94 / Roar Rookie

The dominance of European football by Barcelona since the 2005/06 Champions League triumph over Arsenal is one that goes beyond dry statistics.

The club’s dominance is one felt by many teams as they prepare to face the Catalans with equal measure of tactical acumen and hope.

But what tangible factors in this period conspire to make this team so apparently formidable? For a full tactical analysis I’d suggest consulting anything by Johnathan Wilson, but I offer just a few thumbnail sketches:

Messi and friends

Undoubtedly Barcelona’s success rate is proportional to the Argentinian’s presence. They win 82 percent of the time he plays, 54 percent when he doesn’t.

It is his slalom runs in the final third that open space, make defenders ball watch and create more havoc than a mouse in a burlesque show (thank you Foghorn Leghorn).

But equally dangerous are the duo of Xavi and Andres Iniesta, and the tiki-taka triangles with Messi to keep possession and then pounce when the spaces are ripe for attacking.

Behind these two lies the glue of Barcelona, Busquets, a man so dominant in the space between the back 4 (or 3) and the tiki-taka club that forget he’s there, given the few times the ball is lost there.

All of Barcelona’s defenders play the ball better than 90 percent of the EPL’s midfielders, and players like Alves and Abidal just add a further layer of fright to an already stretched and freyed defence. I often wonder just how further back Barcelona would be withoutf Messi.

Culture of fear

As is often the case, fear is heightened by the unknown, and the best results against Barcelona are achieved by fellow La Liga teams who know them well enough to face Barca without fear and stem the tide sufficiently such that any off day may be rewarded with a draw (like Villareal on Sunday), or if the Gods smile, a 1-0 win.

This begs the question: does psychology play more of a role than usual? Does the way that Barca plays instill enough fear so that any instilled plans are not followed through due to this fear of conceding?

Perceptions of bias

Adding to the perception of invincibility is the intangible perception of bias, a factor certainly promoted by Jose Mourinho, a character who has become European football’s version of Wile E Coyote with his eternal quest to knock off Barcelona at every clasico.

Though pre-Special One, we did have an assistant referee stripped of his duties after posing in a Barca strip prior to the 2006 Champion’s League final vs Arsenal for a Norwegian peper. UEFA acted, even if not swiftly.

Mourinho’s accusations of pro-Barcelona bias have worn thin to many, although given that he has to face Guardiola upwards of five times every calendar year, he could argue the greatest sufferance.

Far from suggesting that these perceptions exist, it adds to the aura surrounding the club. Mourinho loses, waits by the car for the referee for a last rejoinder, while all of Barcelona ignore it and celebrate their passage through another two-legged clasico.

On the negative side though, the way Xavi and friends pursue cards from officials is at best ugly to watch and not befitting a team this good.

Guardiola

Simple point. Pep lives and breathes the Barcelona high tempo possession ethos, is a local boy and has never faced any of the frictions encountered by Louis Van Gaal or Frank Rijkaard.

The best European club team of all time?

Ok, obviously a subjective question, but I can only think of one team in my own lifetime that could stand up to this Barcelona and possibly boss them at times.

I would submit that the best Milan team from 1989-93 would be more than a match. Their defence would not be suckered in by the creation of ‘negative space’ caused by the tiki-taka.

Rijkaard and Ancelotti would close down most of the interplay while the back four of Tasotti, Baresi, Costacurta and Maldini would have no fear of Messi, Villa or anyone else.

Any lapse in the final third would be punished by the duo of Gullit and Van Basten. It would be a game to savour.

Whatever the factors are that contribute to the rise and rise of Barcelona, it is clear they are revered and will take a special formula to offer up a successor.

The Crowd Says:

2012-02-02T13:39:51+00:00

Colin N

Guest


Xavi may be good, but he doesn't have a better pass completion rate than Leon Britton does he? Britton for England!!

2012-02-02T10:56:37+00:00

Janek Speight

Expert


Dominance since 2005/06 Champions League? Can't disagree more. While they were a good side and worthy champions then, the Barcelona that will be remembered as one of the best teams to grace the field did not start until Ronaldinho and Deco were shown the door at the start of 2008/09. In my opinion the signing of Pique was the masterstroke. A real ball-playing defender, he was the man that allowed Guardiola to play the way he envisaged.

2012-02-02T06:26:29+00:00

TheSaint

Guest


BTW...the last Classico was as tight ad it gets and all the diving and rolling around came from PeePee the Ugly. This occurre multiple times on plays where the contact was negligible yet he dropped like a chubby chicks bra. When Barca chewed Man U. up and spit her out I don't recollect and of the aforementioned behaviors...despite Valencia's 7 hard fouls before he finally received a yellow. Then again your caveat was "in tight games late" and as I said, Man U was well back in the rear view admiring the best players in the world. Quite similar to how the English National team of lion cubs views La Furia Roja!!!

2012-02-02T06:18:25+00:00

TheSaint

Guest


Do you people even watch Barca play or do you just parrot talking points of the jealous and defeated teams in Barca's wake? Messi received a yellow in the last Copa del Rey match against Real Madrid. On the replay you could clearly see that he got ball before contact with Pepe the Ugly. That was about a minute after Lass was about a minute shins the ball and hip checked Messi as though he were an ice skater (no card at all). This year Barca has had at least a 1/2 dozen clear penalties in the box which were neglected (Iniesta was actually yellow carded for "diving" about two weeks ago when he de-panted an opposing defender before having his leg kicked out from underneath). MORONiho and the clout of Real Madrid have clearly had an effect on La Liga (just look at how many PK's Real has had this year compared to Barca - CR7 would have as many goals as Higuan without all the PK's). Barca has had 1/5th the amount despite playing a brand of football which should clearly lead to more. Barca may have had the breaks in years past (just as all dominant teams tend to receive in all sports) but Madrid is flexing her monetary muscle and political influenc (see the complete lack of punish dealt towards Pepe the Ugly when the EPL and Bundesliga have suspended players for 6 games for similar behaviors). La Liga better check themselves or we will miss out on the most beautiful team playing the most beautiful game.

2012-02-02T01:34:18+00:00

Samuel Candido

Roar Rookie


It's stupid how much better Messi is than everyone else.

2012-02-02T00:26:09+00:00

Bondy

Guest


I tend to agree that other La Liga clubs no how to play Barca better than say a Man Utd or Arsenal .The statistic with Messi off the pitch is staggering .I feel Andrea and Xavi are the dangers more so than Leo and I enjoy watching Pique more than the rest of the team . But if big matches get close in the Camp Nou thats when they have a bit of a role around (feign) and then go to work on the ref, they dont need to do that .

2012-02-02T00:13:34+00:00

Futbanous

Guest


Heres 2 interesting video clips. First one one how Xavi,Iniesta & Messi create space ,very informative. Apart from how they create space, what it does for me is emphasise how much technique,in particular the automatic control of the ball by the inside & outside of the foot plays its part. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0AiyUfxId90 Second is the classic Real Madrid Vs Eintracht European cup final 1960. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_717RCKR1us The reason I put the second clip up is because I see similarities between the two eras in the way Real Madrid played & the modern Barcelona. Both creating space & utilising it in the most efficient way by superb technique on the ball.

2012-02-01T19:56:31+00:00

Sureli

Guest


You paint them like they are some kind is saints. Messi never gets a second yellow. Every time a barça player hits the turf, he must have been fouled. And don't forget the Van Persie incident.

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