Lesley (parler): Ugochukwu vs Newcastle

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Chelsea Twitter decided to have one, in the hugely frustrating 4-1 defeat to Newcastle.

8 goals in 2 games before the International break seemed to give postive signs that Chelsea was finally on the right track, mostly in terms of ability to put the ball into the net. However, the team is struggling to stay watertight for the duration of games. Chelsea Twitter is a polymorphous environment already saturated of futile and fickle $8 / month opinions that seemed to fix their never satiated expectations on player in particular: Lesley Ugochukwu.

“we want one six to sit” did they scream into the void all summer.

Context: First game after the international break, Caicedo is monitored after coming back late from the other side of the world. Lavia is still out injured.

Comes into the picture, backup midfielder Lesley Ugockukwu, strong of his 72 pro games, (and whose transfer was foreseen by your ITK’s favourite ITK)

Challenge: Be half competent in the air away at Newcastle United

Mauricio Pochettino picked the best lineup he had at disposal, taking into account this:

The rule of thumb is that you need 5 competent headers of the ball (more on that later)

This a 3D bar chart with the players’ height in relation to their position on the pre-game ceremony.

Purpose: Ugochukwu had decent/good game, especially out of possession.

Did a lot of things that don’t require tilting the TV upside down to notice, but require an informed eye to pick out as good pieces of defending.

If your mind is already made up, I suggest a better use of your time.

Otherwise, let’s look at Lesley’s (LU) involvement in chronological order.


How to piss off a Rennes native (which Ugochukwu is):

  • ask him if Nantes is in Brittany*.

  • associate him with anything Nantes.

Like a “petit LU”, the famous biscuit you need to crunch taking off all 4 corners first, if you’re not abnormal.

*: it’s not, thank you very much.

there’ll be other comments on game situations that might not involve LU directly, as I’m using this newsletter to highlight it

Enzo, we still have questions (on defensive coverage, calma)

Enzo’s defensive game need some more refining, positionally.

Getting drawn to one side of the ball is one thing

Second guessing wrongly on the cover and get beaten on a flick (stay between the ball and the goal, show wide so that central players can shuffle across and defend with the touchline) isn’t great

All these positional mistakes requires an extra effort from his team mates, notably Ugochukwu who needs to get across the pitch (and outlaps him) to make up.

Making sure players don’t have to clean up the coworker’s workspace as well as theirs is the best recipe to not have players being less composed at doing their initial job

How to handle runners beyond the defensive line

Defending is easy to coach, it answers to a playbook. There’s no improvisation

There’s a clear algorithm of decision making:

  • Fullback can pick the runner: he does

  • CB sees the runner: he picks the runner

  • CB doesn’t see the runner / or is commited already: CM (Lesley does)

Lesley checks his shoulder: sees Silva commited with Silva and Badiashile about to pick up Miley’s run in the channel.

Therefore stays in position

Enforcing your midfield enforcer

My very limited understanding of Ice Hockey is that there’s a player whose role is called “the enforcer” who’s role is to get into opponent players.
Any succesful football team has one, and it is only really about when coaches figure out when rather than if they’re gonna include one as well.

That’s a quick reaction time to a trigger: lame ass square pass, dinner is served

Knock Joelinton off the ball, notice how the right arm complements the tackle.

Arm half fold, therefore not a foul (at this level, Arsenal or not)


Something already covered in the Youssouf Fofanarticle


Track channel runners

For me that sequence is absolute madness, away at Newcastle and Sterling / Cucurella / Badiashile lunge in final third. Badiashile doesn’t connect with his interception-pass.

There should be composure that if you get drawn in final third, get the ball or the man. Don’t let anything (or don’t press final third)

Follow up on the previous sequence: CB / LB out of position.

Then the CM that is Lesley has to track the runner in the channel

Delaying (lateral footwork) whilst picking the farthest runner.
That’s good defensive behaviour and reading of the situation (he’s a “de facto” left back, with everyone out of position)

Same as the decision to spin and screen the pass, because the situation suggests to do so, and show Isak towards team mate.
Badiashile’s footwork is spot on too.

The situation is so that there’s a defensive rotation:

Badiashile is still CB, Ugochukwu is a makeshift situational left back.

An un-named individual, hard to notice on the following picture, has been let into the ground without a matchday ticket

Said oddly duckling, if he had any tactical awareness, would recognize that the defensive rotation brings him as having to do the “situational CM” duty in order to able to close down Bruno.

The problem with Cucurella is that, because he’s got no idea how to behave in defensive situations, team mates have no idea what kind of mess they need to clean up.

Play ends up as a token “lose ball recovery” by Cucurella, if you want any idea of how he scrounges his way to the top of spreadsheets.

Plays a give and go, carries for 20 yards and plays the ball to an opposition player, only missing Gallagher by a country mile.


Don’t serve me any of your self indulgent bullshit.
If Alex Matos (striker), and Josh Brooking can read a defensive situation (like any half decent academy player ought to), then so can the second most expensive left back in history after Kai Havertz.


One normal day of Barclays is all I ask

Chelsea find themselves in a 3v3, Sterling spreads wide, Palmer sort of looks on. Jackson’s left footed pass is lame, and the possession is turned over

Resulting in a counter, Trippier finds a good needle pass that goes around Enzo (that can happen)

But creates that very Barclays situation where the CM has to eat up space and handle a vast area

which is what competent PL CMs need to be able to do, now the goalposts have been moved back in place and Rice / Onana players are valued over players that don’t move the needle.

This time however, Lesley’s reaction time is a tad slow

Therefore is still at the second stage of

  • Sprint / slow down / footwork

When Miley is already on the third one

  • Separation / first touch / shift it

That’s definitely a situation where Rodri, Fernandinho just goes through, wave their hand and pick up their first foul out of 7 before refs even consider booking them.

Match up in midfield

For the most part of the first half, Chelsea’s defensive structure out of possession made sense. “matching up” against Newcastle’s midfield three and preventing potential receivers to get on the ball

Play continues with a Lascelles diagonal on Gordon

Lesley checks his shoulder and sees Silva tagging the runner

James goes through Gordon and wins the duel in the air

Bits of details, but the very point of this newsletter is to dispel the “Ugochukwu he’s uncooked for the level, see”

No he’s not, he’s doing what he should be doing in most situations.


Couple of moments later, Bobby Sanchez (he’ll be Robert or Rob when he’s a consistently serious goalie, until then Bob / Bobby will do) launches one

None of your 4 attackers are any decent in the air. Is it a concern?

Lesley is sprinting to eat up ground and get on the flash point

Slow down when Bruno is gathering control

Lesley changes direction and forces play backwards. Good stuff

With compliments of the Ugochukwhouse, after the pass is unleashed.


Side note: see how tactically intelligent roadrunner (one of this is wrong) Gallagher identifies that Ugochukwu is drawn closing down someone

Therefore screens Joelinton with one side step

No way to cross that line of zebras

What Chelsea found difficult was that Newcastle decided to defend with a flat narrow line of 5 to shut down intervals, force needle passes.

Tactical Zealots usually haven’t coached north of 600+ pro games like Edward John Frank Howe at only 45.

Football is a game of access to space. Prevent the opponent to access to dangerous zones; control the game.

(and access to dangerous zones yourself ofc).

Deep defensive line creating a gap behind midfield creates a different type of problem for Chelsea, familiar with some not great decisions after carries.

In other words: if Chelsea play through the screen, their current ability won’t turn that gap to their advantage as seen so far this season.

And putting a lot of emphasis on on Badiashile / Enzo finding needle passes.

Incidentally, for his first PL start in 6 months, and still jet-lagged respectively.

such as this play, Gallagher carries but the movement around is a little bit shit.

Sterling took himself out, Jackson’s not offering anything besides getting in the way, Palmer watches on

Gallagher has a go himself, it goes wide.

Who are ya

Pope sends a long goalkick, Joelinton at the drop point meets Ugochukwu

Palmer picks up the second ball.

Whatever that play is logged at (header, fell on his arse, second ball, tackle, or maybe nothing)

That’s 8’ of Lesley being generally in control of what he does in a PL away game, and sending Joelinton flying twice.

Something already underlined in the OG Ugochukwu article I thought nobody would ever read

Lesley tends to delay providing options, ball watching.

Take a yard off, back foot, Enzo, switch.

Tape, and starting meaningful games (as opposed as seeing out games to keep it ticking which he did for the majority of his Rennes outings at senior level)

Very vertical

That “very vertical” pass to Jackson is akin to what I liked from LU at Rennes

None of these fake diagonal progressive statpadding passes, that force fullbacks to play the ball back

Jackson makes it stick because Schär acknowledges the situation isn’t worth pursuing (nor a foul being commited).

That’s a good play, Chelsea play a serie of up-back to get out on opposite side through the press. One of the genuine satisfactions in the first half.

A play cocked up by Cucurella who then decides to play the ball in a different postcode straight onto Trippier, only missing Sterling’s back foot for a good 4 yards

Cucurella can pass, but he still can’t pass.


Players are the best judges for players.

You bet Almiron acknowledges the “affordance” that Joelinton is on.

However, he decides against this time, for whatever reason (lots of U, K and Ws)

Play a regista who can’t run, that’s a proper Barclays Barkley half turn reception to attack Thiago Silva’s backline having taken shelter below the midway line.

Ugochukwu tagging him? Maybe not, let’s recycle and play Schär

Float on

Midfielders get around the pitch by navigating between positions of “cover” “balance” (and closing down when they’re involved as the nearest to the carrier)

Eye contact with James. Newcastle have Joelinton and Livramento in the half

**SPACE BETWEEN CENTRAL AND WIDE PLAYER THAT ONLY EXIST AGAINST A BACK FOUR TEAM**

Livramento and Joelinton interchange

And Lesley stays switched on to close Joelinton

Again, nothing spectacular. Just a CM doing his job, communicating and floating between different duties the situation demands

Joelinton plays another progressive pass to Jamal Lascelles

Triple team outside as an observer

A situation managed very differently (compared to the situations mentioned above, that look straightforward and common sense with Lesley, and that somehow stop when he’s not involved)

Miley gets beyond Enzo, who doesn’t really communicate.

Cucurella goes in without caring whether he’s got a runner beyond.

Badiashile is caught in between,

Badiashile makes the most of his excellent ability to defend down the channel (he’s 6ft4 and #SayNoToTacticos)

Our attention is drawn to Lesley, at the penalty spot, an uncharted territory for most bang average midfielders.

Because that’s one thing Ugochukwu does.

When looking at midfielders,

Tacticos rate shoulder deception, football fans like flashy boots.
Football coachs rate behaviour on defensive cutbacks.


Another poorly managed triple team out wide. Cucurella taking liberties with the concept of defensive footwork, whilst Enzo doesn’t really communicate (language barrier maybe)

Runner gets beyond

but who’s alive and kicking at the penalty spot?

What you gonna do when things go wrong?
What you gonna do when it all cracks up?

Lesley Ugochukwu: –I’ll be at the penalty spot to defend the cutback”

Definitely not a footballing simple mind.


Breaking down the goal

For some reason, Lesley and Enzo switch on the next play.

Instruction? Adaptation?

Anyway that’s how you’d want this wide situation to unfold.

Whatever 1v2 or 2v3 is evened out by Lesley creating a 3v3

Closes down the carrier so that the left back picks up the overlap (as should)

Sterling joins in a couple yards below. That’s a 3v3.

Ugochukwu has a defensve footwork posture on toes.

Cucurella looks exhausted (so are we)

That being said, Sterling’s involvement stops at taking notes (the Hazard stance)

Problem is, 2v3 if you’re drawn there’s a free man.

and if you want to have a chance to prevent a quality pass, then close down the carrier.

It’s a lose lose situation

Cross is clipped at the far post despite Ugochukwu’s effort to block it

Gordon’s decision to let it fly over is either very clever, or James’ defending a bit suspect if we’re being honest. Bit of both

so is Palmer’s defending.

Situation is so that Ugochukwu, drawn at the corner flag, probably doesn’t rush out quickly enough to fill alongside Enzo

Miley receives possession, and it’s panic. Lesley should be closing down, Badiashile identifies someone should. 99% of players will shoot into a forest of players here.

Miley’s composure is exceptional, and reminiscent for a Ribéry assist for Bayern, where he faked to shoot and split the entire defence with a through pass.

Nevertheless

If Cucurella defends between the ball and his goal (what any debutant footballer is taught) and only closes down Almiron if

  1. The ball is ACTUALLY moving towards Almiron (sprint, slow down, footwork)

  2. His CB expressely tells him he’s redudant and his marker is taken care of

None of the conditions are met

Badiashile closing down is a decision

  • Close down the ball carrier to restrict time/space is correct emergency defensive behaviour. Covering players need to tuck in, that’s called the “defensive pyramid” which is frankly entry level defending 101

Cucurella decides to go take a walk in the adjacent park to the stadium in yet another disgraceful piece of defending at this level.

Put it differently

  • Ugochukwu should be able to close down better to restrict time and space. Badiashile marks Isak

  • Ugochukwu doesn’t close down, then Badiashile does

If Badiashile doesn’t, Miley carries and has the choice between playing Isak or shooting for himself. Again, most players shoot from there.

Why the fuck would Cucurella jump out of the structure (whilst playing everyone onside). Football, a weak link sport.

Adress your leaks first or you’ll be good at nothing as a team.

The more Cucurella starts over Colwill or Maatsen, the more we know where it comes from.

Winning headers in the trenches

Why would Ugochukwu start? because he wins headers.

Joelinton’s limb is, let’s say, spareheading.

Ugochukwu shows “bravery” (?) and wins the header

Lesley then chases Gordon’s square carry (which non space-eating midfielders hate, because they have to 1. run and 2. arc a run)

Some nudges to put Gordon off balance. Arms half fold, not a foul

To go to ground and win a solid clean tackle


Screening the back four

Team collective defensive gameplans are never relying on one individual (unless his name is N’Golo Kanté), there’s a succession of layers that generally need to:

  1. Screen and show the ball into traps (strikers, usually)

  2. Squeeze in and perform these pressing traps (midfielders, usually)

  3. Get the ball back via tackle / interception / lose ball (defenders, usually)

There’s a risk management framework to picture this, called the “Swiss Cheese” model (James Reason).

The first layers are latent conditions, and the latter layers are “active failures”

A salad of big words, but mostly to underline that any task not completed succesfully will end up to the coworker’s desk one floor below.

Enzo is in a covering position to Ugochukwu

The ball is won by Lesley, but the second ball isn’t

A small moment of ball watching / dropping off means Enzo loses Miley

Which “exposes” Badiashile into having to prevent Miley to turn, the foul might not be necessary but also it’s just below the midway line so referees are never gonna book him for that.


Set piece defending

Usually, team who defend in a zonal line put their best headers at 2-3-4 from the opposite side.
Lesley finds himself here, to prevent against the far side switch that is more prevalent in English football.

On the second phase of the set piece, Lesley is a bit late to come out of the structure

Sets his footwork too late resulting of not squeezing in quickly enough.


Lesley, why?

The Moneyball (2011) sequence is funny, just as it’s often mis-interpreted in the discourse. In the movie, Billy Beane (Brad Pitt) is trying to “re-create” a player that left “on the aggregate” by considering conjointly three skillsets in what is frankly, a different sport (football is an individual sport played as a team, baseball ranks even lower on that).

Here, it’s not even about finding hidden value via the aggregate, but just designing a playing squad with the utmost basic fundamentals to perform in Premier League which is to be remotely competent in the air.

Which Ballack, Mikel, Matic, Bakayoko, Essien all were for Chelsea.

And Ugochukwu too, at the far post against one of the best headers in Premier League in Jamal Lascelles (career 3.5 aerial *won*, 67% success)

Obviously, if your left back is an absolute liability (and not even able to disrupt aerials like Azpilicueta did – career 2 aerial won per game, 60% success despite being 178cm – 5ft10, Cucurella is 1.72 and also just plain bad)

Then the second ball can’t be monitored because someone else is sucked into doing the fullback-who-can’t-win-a-header’s-job.

So, for sure, one or Enzo or Gallagher can be sucked into a deeper area that would just pile more pressure on Chelsea with numbers in their box and few outlets on the counter.

Tailoring the team to the lowest common denominator and worst player will never make a team any good.


None of this is new.

Field a bad player, expect the opposition to attack him at every opportunity.


A play followed up by yet another turnover at his own corner flag, and some vintage Cucurella: feet in cement, Almiron with no time to fuck around who just tilts him over.

As the play goes on, Ugochukwu stays focused to track Isak

With Badiashile forced to put out another fire by blocking the cross, stemming from a third man runner combination none of Cucurella / Enzo / Sterling / Palmer could disrupt


Float, Float, Float on

“Aries and my name is Lesley”

Eye contact with Badishile because Isak drops off the front

Gordon drops of the front, marking duties switched and he picks the runner to discourage Lascelles to play him.

Gordon exits his “zone”, Lesley’s focus goes back on his position

Lesley’s ability to perform a “mixed zonal” (not a big word, that’s just modern defensive structure: stay tight whithin a zone, or put it differently, man marking whithin a zone).

Preventing markers to turn is more important than perfect zonal distances, because there’s some absolue dragsters at the top level nowadays, not restricted to wide areas. And that players play games, not tactical systems.

Back at tracking Isak off the front.

None of this is rocket science, that’s just extending coache’s lifespan that their midfielder can pay attention and stay switched on off the ball.


This is something Lesley’s confortable with, as shown in detail here