Jump to content

Timo Werner


Captain Ahmed
 Share

Recommended Posts

50 minutes ago, killer1257 said:

Werner is in his prime and not performing, while he is one of the greatest Bundesliga players to ever play Bundesliga, even though I never rated him. We just lack world class players. We only have Silva and Kante, who are truly world class

Is 25 years old considered being in prime?

And where are your comments on your boy Ziyech? 👀

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He really pissed me off today, he has no composure, has also been a tad unlucky but still, he fucks up each time you count on him. Hope he improves next season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, Jas said:

Is 25 years old considered being in prime?

And where are your comments on your boy Ziyech? 👀

He also does not perform, but at least he rarely plays and was injured couple of times. Werner plays every match

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, killer1257 said:

He also does not perform, but at least he rarely plays and was injured couple of times. Werner plays every match

But there's a reason why he rarely plays... 👀

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Seen some of the highlights. If we do sign another attack next season we will do better. If not, we are fucked. Also, wtf was Timo doing at the corner for Traore’s goal, I get its not his man but he just watches him run past him basically. 

Edited by OneMoSalah
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, OneMoSalah said:

Also, wtf was Timo doing at the corner for Traore’s goal, I get its not his man but he just watches him run past him basically. 

You kinda answered your own question there? It seems like Werner was tasked with keeping an eye on late runner into the box? Who was even marking Traore at the back post anyway?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Justo ahora, Jas dijo:

You kinda answered your own question there? It seems like Werner was tasked with keeping an eye on late runner into the box? Who was even marking Traore at the back post anyway?

Aye but does he not think he should maybe try follow him no? Considering the ball rolled into him. Its not rocket science surely. Abysmal goal by all accounts

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, OneMoSalah said:

Aye but does he not think he should maybe try follow him no? Considering the ball rolled into him. Its not rocket science surely. Abysmal goal by all accounts

If he was tasked to watch any late runner into the box, then not sure if he could be fully blamed for being caught in two roles. 

If anything, who was supposed to mark Traore? Why was he allowed to run free and unmarked from the far post?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

hace 12 minutos, Jas dijo:

If he was tasked to watch any late runner into the box, then not sure if he could be fully blamed for being caught in two roles. 

If anything, who was supposed to mark Traore? Why was he allowed to run free and unmarked from the far post?

Its not a huge issue but surely someones got to see the danger there no? More so Werner considering he ran right past him. No idea who lost him originally but abysmal and avoidable either way

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The other day i was looking at Werner's xG and below are the results for his last seasons.

2020/2021:  6 goals (xG 11.63)

2019/2020: 28 goals (xG 20.80)

2018/2019: 16 goals (xG 15.49)

2017/2018: 13 goals (xG 13.39)

2016/2017:  21 goals (xG 12.61)

He's been extremely unlucky at times, he touched the woodwork 5 times this season (!), and very clumsy in some situations, but he never lost the energy and the hunger which is why i think he deserves our patience.

We can hopefully expect him to go back to his old goalscoring standards. I truly hope he does, the fanbase won't stand two seasons like this in a row.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, OneMoSalah said:

Hoping he has his shooting boots on for the final.

You could say the same for the other attackers as well really. Our last 4 goals have been scored by two different WBs, CB (OFF HIS THIGH!) and midfielder from the penalty spot. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

hace 3 minutos, Jas dijo:

You could say the same for the other attackers as well really. Our last 4 goals have been scored by two different WBs, CB (OFF HIS THIGH!) and midfielder from the penalty spot. 

That is true. But I just think on Saturday, its going to be a game of few chances and undoubtedly one will fall Timo’s way.

Edited by OneMoSalah
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, OneMoSalah said:

That is true. But I just think on Saturday, its going to be a game of few chances and undoubtedly one will fall Timo’s way.

I actually think we will get a ton of chances and half chances with their high line and our pace but we will sure as hell botch most of them with the final ball or penultimate ball. Mount will spray the ball out wiede instead of playing it through, Havertz will undercommit on the force of his shots and passes, Werner will be offside and miss his shots, taking the ball to impossible positions, Pulisic will try doing everything on his own and shoot the ball over.

Edited by Magic Lamps
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Magic Lamps said:

I actually think we will get a ton of chances and half chances with their high line and our pace but we will sure as hell botch most of them with the final ball or penultimate ball. Mount will spray the ball out wiede instead of playing it through, Havertz will undercommit on the force of his shots and passes, Werner will be offside and miss his shots, taking the ball to impossible positions, Pulisic will try doing everything on his own and shoot the ball over.

So play Ziyech? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Timo Werner exclusive: My confidence was gone but I will never hide 

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2021/05/27/timo-werner-exclusive-confidence-gone-will-never-hide/

Timo Werner paused momentarily as he thought about whether or not he will volunteer to take a penalty if Chelsea’s Champions League final against Manchester City goes to a shootout.

“That’s a good and hard question, but in the end I think... yeah, I would,” said Werner. “Because maybe it’s worse that you don’t shoot and say, ‘ah no, I have fear’, and let your team-mates down. That’s worse than to take a penalty and to miss it in the end. Because you take the responsibility and you try.”

Werner has scored three penalties in Chelsea’s run to the Champions League final, but missed the last spot-kick he took for the club in the FA Cup against Luton Town back in January.

And given the nature of Werner’s first season at Chelsea, during which, by his own admission, he suffered a crisis of confidence in front of goal, it would be understandable if the German decided to stand aside in the event of a shootout.

But that is not Werner and his reply underlined his determination to keep going, to keep putting himself in position, to never hide and his refusal to give up on his Chelsea career. As did his willingness to fulfil a request to undertake his first extended English interview at the end of what he described as “in terms of scoring, the worst season”.

“When you don’t try, you will never come back to the feeling of how to score and your confidence will never come back,” said Werner. “I could say, ‘OK, I stay away from the goal and I stop trying to score. And then next year I maybe go to another club and I will try there from zero’. But that’s not my ambition, I want to be a very good striker at every team where I play so I want to be a good striker now at Chelsea. 

“That’s my ambition to say, ‘I want to score, I want to go there where the ball is dropping in front of the goal’. I never was like this, to say, ‘I’m scared now to score’. Of course, maybe, I was scared, but in the moment when I had the ball already on my feet to score. Then maybe this fear came because I was not self-confident enough.”

Werner was not short of self-confidence when he signed for Chelsea for £47.5 million last June, following a season in which he had scored 28 Bundesliga goals for RB Leipzig.

The early signs at Stamford Bridge were encouraging, as Werner netted eight goals in nine games after opening his Chelsea account against Tottenham Hotspur in the EFL Cup in September.

But the 25 year-old can identify the exact moment things started to go wrong, as he returned from an international break with Germany and went 14 Premier League games without scoring.

“I had these two or three games after the international break where I missed a lot of chances and that was in my head, and after this my confidence was gone,” said Werner. “It was like a period where in my head I was going crazy because I missed those chances.

“Sometimes when you come to a new club, you know that everybody has big expectations for you and they want you to score the goals for the club. So maybe that was too much in my head, that I have to score every game, or be the man who scores all the goals.” 

Things got so bad for Werner that he revealed how a missed chance early in a game could write off an entire match for him, but he also believes that the Champions League semi-final second-leg victory over Real Madrid, in which he scored, proves that he is overcoming his problems.

“I had one game, I can’t remember the exact game but it was in the middle of the season, where I missed a chance in the third minute. The game was gone for me,” said Werner. “Now, for example, Real Madrid in the semi-final, I scored a goal and because my shoulder was offside, they disallowed the goal. Two or three months ago, it would be in my head, ‘why, why, why’, and the game would be gone. Now, I play my game and 15 minutes later, I scored. 

“That’s the thing I learned and that’s the thing for the next season. Maybe I should put a tick next to this season and now the Champions League final is like a bonus game. So it’s something different and I’m glad that the season is over, that the things are gone now and next season I know where I have to improve and what I have to do to be better.”

Coronavirus restrictions made it hard for Werner to try to relax and forget about his bad run in front of goal, and head coach Thomas Tuchel stopped him from staying behind to do extra finishing practice at the club’s training ground.

“No he didn’t (let me do extra practice),” said Werner. “I had a lot of managers when it was not so easy to score say, ‘OK, come, we practice outside to give you a better feeling’. But also there is Thomas who says, ‘you scored your whole life. But it doesn’t come because you practice every day, it comes because you were calm, you had your head free and you know what you do because you have this instinct to score’.

“It’s maybe the worst thing that you think too much, ‘OK, when I get the ball now, I want to hit it in the right corner’. No, when you get the ball, you shoot the ball and you know exactly where it goes. Maybe that’s the point he wanted to get through to me, that I don’t have to practice all the time to get the feeling back, that the instinct works.

“I was not alone at home in lockdown because I live with my girlfriend, but it was just us two and, of course, then you think more about it. Because when you go out, for example, with your friends or some players in the evening and you eat something, it’s something different to sitting at home and taking Deliveroo in front of your TV, and then you think about it again because you have no other distractions or things to change it. Maybe it made it worse, but still it should not be an excuse.”

Part of the difficulty of judging Werner’s first season at Chelsea is that it has not been a write-off. He became the first player since Eden Hazard to hit double figures for goals and assists in his first campaign for the club and Tuchel’s side are unquestionably more dangerous with him in it.

But Werner does not dispute that he will ultimately be judged on goals and is honest enough to admit that, in that area, he has fallen short of what was hoped of him.

“I think a lot of people’s expectations for me, outside the club but also inside the club, were very high because of my goalscoring record,” said Werner. “I also assisted many goals last year in my old club, but I think the main reason why they brought me here in the club is to score and maybe at the end 12 goals and six goals in the Premier League, that’s not good enough. 

“You have to say that I have 12 goals and 15 assists or something like that in every competition and 27 goal contributions, that’s not so bad in what’s maybe my unluckiest season, maybe my worst season I’ve had for many years. If I’m scoring next season, hopefully, maybe people will become happier with me.”

Chelsea fans demonstrated their appreciation of Werner in the last home game of the season, for which 8,000 supporters were allowed into Stamford Bridge, by singing his name to the tune of Depeche Mode’s Just Can’t Get Enough.

That support put an extra spring in his step and Werner is adamant that he will not look to leave Chelsea this summer, even though the club will attempt to sign a new striker.

“I heard the fans singing a song for me and that gives me a lot of power and I think that’s what you miss in the times where you have difficult periods where you don’t score,” said Werner. “That helped me a lot and it really gave me a push in the game. I thought it was much easier to run, to go into duels, to keep the ball, to try to score. Of course, it gave me that little bit of power that maybe I had lost in the last few months.”

Asked if he wants to stay at Chelsea, Werner replied: “Of course. In terms of scoring and missing chances, it was the worst season. But in the end I still have 27 goal contributions. I think I’m the first in our team for that, so it was not everything bad and I don’t think about leaving the club this year, for sure not. 

“And also for the next year because I think we have a very good team and I hope to come back to scoring and that I can do everything that’s expected of me.”

Werner is careful not to say that winning the Champions League would make up for all his missed chances, but it would write his place into Chelsea history and offer a different perspective on his first season at the club.

“That would be the best ending of the season, for me, to win this trophy,” said Werner. “I don’t care if I score at the weekend if we win. Yes, I help the team and if I score, I’m very, very happy. If not, then I try to give my best to make maybe an assist for another guy. But, at the end, we have one goal, to win this final, to win this trophy because it’s the biggest trophy in Europe and everybody wants it. 

“I don’t want to say the rest (of the season) would not mean anything anymore, but, yeah, at the end when you win this cup, I think no fan or no supporter would say, ‘ah, but this guy had a bad season’. No, at the end, they say, ‘we won the Champions League and this is a f****** great team’.”

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • 0 members are here!

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

talk chelse forums

We get it, advertisements are annoying!
Talk Chelsea relies on revenue to pay for hosting and upgrades. While we try to keep adverts as unobtrusive as possible, we need to run ad's to make sure we can stay online because over the years costs have become very high.

Could you please allow adverts on this website and help us by switching your ad blocker off.

KTBFFH
Thank You