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Kepa Arrizabalaga


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17 minutes ago, LAM09 said:
4 hours ago, manpe said:
Why didn't I see a red card given? Surely the goalie got one?

He got nothing for it and the ref actually awarded a goal kick.

So... was the ref fired or did he retire after this? I don't get it..

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6 hours ago, Fernando said:

Second time I noticed rudgier screaming at kepa. 

I don't know if that's good or bad.... 

Nothing new with keeper and defender screaming at one another during a match. This was after the game...

kepa-arrizabalaga-and-antonio-rudiger-of

The bigger question is...DOES KEPA SAVE ANYTHING?! It feels like the only meaningful save he's made in the league this season was against Ben Foster at Watford. 

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Nothing new with keeper and defender screaming at one another during a match. This was after the game...
kepa-arrizabalaga-and-antonio-rudiger-of-chelsea-after-their-sides-21-picture-id1196542525?s=2048x2048
The bigger question is...DOES KEPA SAVE ANYTHING?! It feels like the only meaningful save he's made in the league this season was against Ben Foster at Watford. 


Auba's goal is hard to save as a goal keeper. Emerson should have done better.


Gesendet von meinem SM-G920F mit Tapatalk

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On 12/30/2019 at 3:12 PM, Jason said:

The bigger question is...DOES KEPA SAVE ANYTHING?! It feels like the only meaningful save he's made in the league this season was against Ben Foster at Watford. 

Must have seen my post...

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  • 3 weeks later...

Inside Chelsea: £71m Kepa certainly has the attitude to be the club’s long-term No 1 – but does he have the ability?

https://theathletic.com/1535923/2020/01/16/kepa-arrizabalaga-chelsea-goalkeeper/

Kepa-Chelsea-No-1-e1579099515624-1024x682.jpg

Signing a striker is Chelsea’s top January priority, but it is becoming increasingly clear that one of the most important long-term decisions facing Frank Lampard may lie at the other end of the pitch.

Every elite team needs a reliable goalkeeper and Chelsea were confident that they had acquired a vital piece of their next great side when they paid Athletic Bilbao a club-record £71 million to sign Kepa Arrizabalaga, as successor to Thibaut Courtois, in the summer of 2018.

A little more than 18 months into his rollercoaster career in England, however, many inside and outside the club remain far from convinced that Kepa has justified being made the most expensive goalkeeper ever. Looking back at the 1-1 draw with Brighton & Hove Albion on New Years’ Day, having witnessed his No 1 make several crucial saves, Lampard’s praise came with the hint of a challenge.

“I think he has made good saves recently, notably (in that game),” Chelsea’s head coach said. “I’m always happy with that because that is what he is there for, but it is great to see Kepa maybe win us or save us points. Hopefully that can continue.”

For every eye-catching Kepa intervention this season, there have also been high-profile mistakes — most memorably the casual, wayward pass aimed at Kurt Zouma that led to Dominic Calvert-Lewin poking in Everton’s third goal in a 3-1 win at Goodison Park last month. The extent of the criticism that followed underlined just how little trust he commands from his own club’s fans.

Doubts about Kepa go beyond obvious howlers. He has been unable to shake the more general impression that in all three fundamental aspects of goalkeeping — shot-stopping, distribution and command of the penalty area — he falls short of the standard set by the position’s very best.

This season’s numbers make for ugly reading. Kepa ranks in the bottom three among Premier League starting goalkeepers for overall save percentage (57.4%), percentage of shots from inside the box saved (52%), and percentage of shots from outside the box saved (72.2%). All three are significant decreases on last season, while his pass accuracy has also dipped from 85.44% to 78.34%.

“It’s been a funny season for him, hasn’t it?” Rob Green, who acted as back-up to Kepa and Willy Caballero last season, tells The Athletic. “I think when you’re playing so many games as a keeper, the fluctuations are going to be there.

“What he’s got (in his favour)… he’s got fantastic feet, a lot of power. He has big thighs, a lot of muscle and that gives him a big spring. He is very fast as well, comes with a lot of speed.”

Chelsea’s defensive problems are bigger than Kepa, and it is reasonable to argue that Lampard’s frequent tweaks of defensive systems and personnel this season have had a destabilising effect on the man between the posts. That is certainly the view of Mark Schwarzer, who spent two years at Stamford Bridge backing up Petr Cech and Courtois.

“At Chelsea there are a lot of players at the back who are still trying to come to terms with a new system, and with the pressure of playing regularly,” he tells The Athletic. “At times they will play not quite the right type of ball, or they’ll receive the ball in the wrong position. They know they have to be willing to receive it, and they’re just hoping other players will make movements and allow them to lay it off. At times that doesn’t happen so they’re playing a rushed ball back to the goalkeeper.

“All those aspects come into play, and Chelsea are a team that’s still trying to find its feet. You’ve got a changing of the guard, a lot of young, inexperienced players who are being given a chance to step up, and that’s been challenging for them. That has an effect on the goalkeeper, no matter how good he is with his feet. I feel for Kepa a little bit in that regard.”

But more advanced metrics, which better isolate a goalkeeper’s performance from those of his defenders, paint a worrying picture.

Kepa has conceded 29 goals in the Premier League this season, almost six more than Chelsea’s expected goals against (xGA) figure of 23.21. Using expected goals on target (xGOT) — which factors in how difficult shots on target are to save — it emerges that Kepa has allowed 7.45 goals more than the average goalkeeper would have been expected to.

The only Premier League goalkeepers with comparable under-performance are Burnley’s Nick Pope (8.09 more goals than expected) and Southampton’s Angus Gunn (7.38 more goals than expected), who was dropped after conceding nine times in one match against Leicester in October.

Kepa had a better impact in his debut season at Chelsea, though still marginally negative — conceding 1.86 goals more than the average goalkeeper would be expected to — and Statsbomb analysis of his 2017-18 campaign with Bilbao revealed that he had allowed 37 goals from an expected goals against figure of 31.35.

In short, the statistics suggest Kepa’s overall performance level so far in his senior career has been significantly below that attained by the world’s best goalkeepers. There have been enough flashes of quality on the pitch, however, to offer hope that he can get there — and those who have worked with him on a daily basis at Cobham have no doubts about his work ethic or desire to improve.

“As a person he’s a really nice lad, and he’s got a fantastic attitude,” Green adds. “He does have this side of him which is arrogant, or certainly very confident in his own ability. It’s that fine line and he has that. He carries the fact that he is the most expensive keeper in the world with him.

“There is that edge to him in training. We used to have these races. I was the slowest by a long, long way. He was so much quicker than all the keepers, but he still had to cheat (and get a head start). He would have won anyway, but he still had to cheat. I would cheat just to keep up.

“We’d end up with (coach) Hilario going through the footage after training and seeing who cheated and where. I tried to do the drill where the camera couldn’t pick me up! But it was all good fun.

“Another thing he’d do in training is suddenly he will stop and say, ‘We’ve done all that. OK. Now I want this particular drill. This is what I need.’ It was fair enough. He is the one out on the pitch. But it shows a strength of character to speak up like that.”

Kepa’s less positive displays this season have prompted some to question Hilario’s credentials for the role of senior goalkeeping coach. Chelsea opted to promote from within after Massimo Nenci followed Maurizio Sarri to Juventus last summer, and Lampard has publicly denied reports that he wanted to bring Shay Given with him to Cobham from his previous job at Derby County.

Schwarzer, however, does not see an issue. “Hilario has been at Chelsea for a long time, so he knows the club inside out,” he insists. “I think he’s in a really good position to pass on a lot of knowledge.

“I know how the system works at Chelsea. Christophe Lollichon is in the background as well — very much involved in goalkeeper recruitment and scouting. Hilario worked under Christophe for a long time, so I think they’ve got a good system in place. It’s more about Kepa himself adjusting to the Premier League and finding some consistency.”

Kepa admits that his adaptation to the game in England has not been seamless. “It’s a little bit different to playing in La Liga,” he said in an interview with Chelsea’s official website this week. “The players, and the goalkeeper also, are less protected by the referee. You need to be stronger in some balls, because the referee doesn’t say it’s a foul. You need to learn a little bit these situations.

“You also need to understand English football is very quick, can have less control or less touches, but more opportunities. The ball can be far away, but in two touches it’s in the box, so I need to be ready for 90 minutes. The games are very good to watch, with a lot of goals, speed. You need some time, but then it’s fun to play.

“Of course you work on it with your team-mates and the goalkeeper coach, but also you keep your time after training: to try some passes, try some situations that can happen in the game. The final target is to improve and be better.”

Chelsea are heavily invested in Kepa’s continued improvement, and there is no suggestion yet of another high-profile goalkeeper being brought in to compete with him. But his price tag and status as Spain’s No 1 goalkeeper dictate that his performances will continue to be measured against the world’s best, at Cobham and beyond.

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