Blue Armour 4,439 Posted August 21, 2022 Share Posted August 21, 2022 I knew he had his shortcomings (you should see his stats about how often players can dribble past him, compared to other CBs in this league)....but at least have some common sense, being an experienced CB? 2nd yellow was totally avoidable. Still...don't want to throw him under the bus, because it's just his 3rd PL game. Silva has had his moments too after arriving, and he's adjusted well. Hopefully KK can do the same. Β Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nero 1,874 Posted August 21, 2022 Share Posted August 21, 2022 Remember when people said he's better than RΓΌdiger? I guess this are the same people who said Willian is better than Hazard when we bought him Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OneMoSalah 8,886 Posted August 22, 2022 Share Posted August 22, 2022 4 hours ago, Nero said: Remember when people said he's better than RΓΌdiger? I guess this are the same people who said Willian is better than Hazard when we bought him Knives out after 2 or 3 games. Embarrassing. Get a grip. Hes a good player. All of them were shite against Leeds.Β James and bigbluewillie 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blues Forever 1,232 Posted August 31, 2022 Share Posted August 31, 2022 (edited) Poor performance so far, my fear is Koulibaly already starting to decline. I didn't like we paidΒ β¬40m and gave him 4 + 1 years contract. Edited August 31, 2022 by Blues Forever bigbluewillie and Vesper 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Magic Lamps 11,692 Posted August 31, 2022 Share Posted August 31, 2022 6 minutes ago, Blues Forever said: Poor performance so far, my fear is Koulibaly already starting to decline. I didn't like we paidΒ β¬40m and gave him 4 + 1 years contract. He sure as hell is no RΓΌdiger. While he too has weaknesses he fitted us way better.Β i was very sceptical about his age and beginning decline as well when we signed him. Anyway I just hope he just needs abut more time to get used to the leagueΒ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blue Armour 4,439 Posted August 31, 2022 Share Posted August 31, 2022 2 hours ago, Magic Lamps said: He sure as hell is no RΓΌdiger. While he too has weaknesses he fitted us way better.Β i was very sceptical about his age and beginning decline as well when we signed him. Anyway I just hope he just needs abut more time to get used to the leagueΒ In my view Koulibaly was never a Rudiger replacement. I always viewed him as the 2nd CB signing we needed, in addition to a world class CB like Skriniar. Koulibaly was there to fill the squad and take on Silvas role after he retired ( and probably won't be anywhere near that level IMO). Β Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blue Armour 4,439 Posted September 7, 2022 Share Posted September 7, 2022 Looking more like a dud to me. Still prepared to give him more time to settle, but that was mainly to adjust to the pace of the PL. Amateurish defending for the Zagreb goal, and every game he looks like he came out from a sauna, just 10 mins into the game.Β If Tuchel has sense, he would drop him for Chalobah or just stick to playing 2 CBs bigbluewillie 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blue Armour 4,439 Posted September 7, 2022 Share Posted September 7, 2022 On 30/08/2022 at 22:09, Blues Forever said: Poor performance so far, my fear is Koulibaly already starting to decline. I didn't like we paidΒ β¬40m and gave him 4 + 1 years contract. Only just found out that we actually gave him a 4 year contract. No idea why. I mean its not like we'll have to fend off other clubs in 2 years time for his signing. No wonder he's just been phoning it in.Β Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vesper 30,185 Posted September 8, 2022 Share Posted September 8, 2022 On 31/08/2022 at 07:16, Magic Lamps said: i was very sceptical about his age I wonder is he is actually older than his documents say easy to fake shit in Senegal Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vesper 30,185 Posted September 18, 2022 Share Posted September 18, 2022 Kalidou Koulibaly: The weaknesses Chelsea need Graham Potter to fix urgently https://theathletic.com/3589412/2022/09/18/kalidou-koulibaly-Chelsea-defence-problems/ WhenΒ Kalidou KoulibalyΒ was figuratively unveiled at Cobham in August, he tried to manage expectations. βI will need time, because I canβt be the player everyone wants (me to be) from the first game,β he said. βI will take my time and in two or three months, I will be the one everyone is waiting for.β ADVERTISEMENT Β It wasnβt known then that head coach Thomas Tuchel did not have time to wait. TheΒ SenegalΒ internationalβs steep learning curve in a new team, tactical system and league after eight years in Italy with Napoli was a notable subplot of the underwhelming results that immediately precededΒ Chelseaβs new co-owners Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital deciding thatΒ a change in the dugout was required. Arriving at Stamford BridgeΒ with a reputation as one of the most revered centre-backs of his generation, Koulibaly was viewed by Tuchel as being capable of helping Chelsea re-establish their Champions League-winning defensive standards from day one. Under the German, he started six of seven matches, only missing the other through suspension. But Chelsea kept just one clean sheet in those games, and Koulibalyβs assessment of his own readiness proved more accurate than Tuchelβs hopes. There have been enough flashes of preternatural defensive instincts and ability on the ball to encourageΒ new head coach Graham Potter, but also occasions where the 31-year-oldβs aggressive instincts and aerial fallibility have got his team into trouble. Koulibaly has spoken about how he relishes individual duels with attackers. His desire to impose himself at every opportunity makes him an easy fit for a high-pressing system, as do his speed and his comfort with defending in space. Such a proactive style, however, means any miscalculation potentially carries a high price. The last goal of the Tuchel era offered a prime example of that. Dinamo Zagreb, playing out of a low block, punt a high ball up towards Bruno Petkovic. Having allowed the striker to drift away from him, Koulibaly rushes forward intending to make an interception or pressurise his opponentβs first touchβ¦ β¦but he is too late to do either, and Petkovic simply cushions a header into the path of Mislav Orsic, who does brilliantly to beat a now isolatedΒ Wesley FofanaΒ and finish coolly beyondΒ Kepa Arrizabalaga. ADVERTISEMENT Β On other occasions, Koulibalyβs failed attempts to win the ball high up the pitch have led to him committing unnecessary fouls as he scrambles to recover his position. Here he is on the opening weekend againstΒ Everton, trackingΒ Anthony Gordonβs diagonal run. Gordon doesnβt pose any immediate threat and Chelsea have the numbers behind the ball to cope with the counter, but Koulibaly still bundles him to the turf. The following weekend at home toΒ Tottenham, Koulibaly moves out towards Chelseaβs left touchline to trackΒ Harry Kane, who has drifted across to receive a pass fromΒ Emerson Royal. He initially does well, forcing Kane to take his first touch away from goal to protect the ballβ¦ β¦but then runs straight through him, conceding a free kick in a threatening position. The most egregious examples came another week on at Elland Road, where Chelsea found themselves rattled early and often byΒ Leeds Unitedβs relentless running. Koulibaly in particular got himself into compromising defensive situations that ultimately led to his dismissal in the 84th minute. An avoidable yellow card in the ninth minute left him walking a disciplinary tightrope. He simply gets too close toΒ Brenden AaronsonΒ as the American receives a pass near the touchline. Aaronson manages to use his forward momentum against him, spinning around him with a sharp first touch and tempting Koulibaly into grabbing him around the waist so he doesnβt drive into a dangerous area. Koulibalyβs second booking was for a similar offence, albeit at a stage of the game where Tuchel had sacrificed all semblance of tactical balance by substituting his entire starting midfield in search of an equaliser. As Leeds find themselves on a promising counter-attack,Β Joe GelhardtΒ lays the ball into the path ofΒ Sam Greenwoodβ¦ β¦and rather than simply running with his man, Koulibaly (perhaps out of frustration) wraps an arm around Gelhardt and pulls him down. At that unveiling in August, a player who was voted ontoΒ Serie Aβs Team of the Year four times during those eight years in Naples identified the main challenge of adapting to theΒ Premier League, saying: βI have to think faster, go faster, and move my eyes faster. ADVERTISEMENT Β βIn Serie A, everything is more with the brain, calmer. You have to think of every movement. Here, you have to think very fast, and this is the first thing I have to change.β Potter will be hoping Koulibaly can get up to speed in that sense sooner rather than later. It has not been all bad for Koulibaly so far at Chelsea. Against Tottenham, he showcased many of the attributes that can make him immensely valuable to an elite team β beyond his sensational volley from aΒ Marc CucurellaΒ corner that opened the scoring. His technical quality with the ball at his feet played a big role in Chelseaβs ability to beat the Spurs press, pin them back and play through their low block. Here, he shapes to play a pass with his left foot, assessing the options in front of him asΒ Dejan KulusevskiΒ moves to block his route forward toΒ Mason Mountβ¦ β¦ but Koulibaly sees this and quickly runs around the ball, creating an angle to whip a pass with his right foot behind Kulusevski, into the space he just vacated. This way, he finds Mount in space. On the occasions when Tottenham tried to press high, Koulibaly kept his head and trusted his technique. Here, he threads a low pass out of his penalty area through three opponentsβ¦ β¦directly onto the left foot ofΒ Kai Havertz, who can instantly re-direct it to Mount on the left flank and get Spurs running back towards their own goal. In the opposition half, Koulibaly also found the right balance between safe, sideways passes and more incisive ones that took several opponents out of the play. Here, he caps a one-touch passing sequence β Mount to Cucurella toΒ Raheem SterlingΒ and then back to him β with a sharp, first-time pass through a narrow gap back in to Mountβs feet. There was even a moment in the second half when Koulibalyβs aggressive ball-winning instincts looked to have won the match for Chelsea. He pins Kulusevski against the right touchline from behind, withΒ NβGolo KanteΒ cutting off any escape from the other side. Koulibaly manages to win the ball cleanly and send it spinning free to Kante, who plays a pass infield to Sterling. This sequence leavesΒ Reece JamesΒ wide open on the overlapβ¦ β¦ and he scores to give Chelsea a 2-1 lead. Once he re-tunes his instincts to the particular nature of Premier League football, Koulibaly will surely have plenty to offer Potterβs team in and out of possession. Perhaps the most surprising issue in the final matches of Tuchelβs tenure wasΒ Chelseaβs sudden inability to defend set pieces successfully. Last season, onlyΒ Manchester CityΒ (one goal) conceded fewer Premier League goals from dead balls than Chelseaβs four but in their opening six matches of 2022-23, Tuchelβs men let in four set-piece goals. Only promotedΒ BournemouthΒ (five) have allowed more, and Koulibaly has undeniably been part of the problem. He has often too easily become a spectator as events play out, rather than using his formidable frame and athleticism to impact them for the benefit of his team. For the shambolic corner-kick equaliser Chelsea conceded in stoppage time against Spurs, his starting position is fineβ¦ β¦but by the time the ball loops into the six-yard box, he has retreated towards the goal line rather than moving forward to attack the delivery, contributing to a situation where any one of three Tottenham players could meet it with a free header. Back in that opening win over Everton, Koulibaly fails to react to the trajectory of a high, arcing corner towards the back post, watching it sail over his headβ¦ β¦and forcingΒ Edouard MendyΒ to try to catch the ball while being swarmed byΒ Yerry MinaΒ andΒ Dwight McNeil. He does at least take up a good position on the line when the ball ends up at the feet ofΒ Abdoulaye DoucoureΒ but this is a shot at goal Chelsea shouldnβt be letting happen in the first place. West Hamβs opening goal at Stamford Bridge in the most recent Premier League game two weeks ago also reflects poorly on Koulibalyβs set-piece defending. He is tasked with man-markingΒ Tomas SoucekΒ at the near post, but the Czech Republic international darts away from himβ¦ β¦ and by the time Mendy is challenged to make another aerial intervention under severe pressure, Koulibaly has drifted away from the goal line, watching the ball rather than anticipating what could happen, and so isnβt in a position to preventΒ Michail AntonioΒ convertingΒ Declan Riceβs low cross. Itβs fair to note that all of the examples listed here are the result of multiple points of failure by several Chelsea players. In that sense, singling out Koulibaly might be a little harsh, but the reality is that as one of the tallest, most physically imposing players in the squad, Potter needs him to be better than weβve seen so far. This is where Koulibalyβs broader aerial duel numbers are a cause for concern: FBref.com ranks him in the bottom third of centre-backs in Europeβs top five leagues for aerial duels won per 90 minutes over the past 12 months. The arrival of fellow centre-back Fofana (who ranks in the top quarter in the same metric) fromΒ LeicesterΒ should help Chelseaβs set-piece defence under Potter, but Koulibaly has to deliver on his considerable physical tools in the air. Defensive success or failure is collective, not individual. You only need to look at how much more fallibleΒ Virgil van DijkΒ suddenly looks in aΒ LiverpoolΒ team which so far this season is lacking the blistering intensity and tactical cohesion of previous years. Koulibalyβs early difficulties must be viewed not only in terms of him adapting to English football but also through the prism of Chelseaβs broader defensive decline in the end times under Tuchel. Replacement Potterβs most urgent task is to find a tactical framework that makes the most sense for Chelsea in every area of the pitch, with a pressing system that allows them to defend from the front first. This is now a significantly different group to the one Tuchel inherited in January of last year, so the solutions to those issues may take the team down a different path. But if Potter can find the right structure, there is plenty of reason to believe a fully-adapted Koulibaly would offer more than he takes away. manpe and Blue Armour 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blue Armour 4,439 Posted September 18, 2022 Share Posted September 18, 2022 8 hours ago, Vesper said: Kalidou Koulibaly: The weaknesses Chelsea need Graham Potter to fix urgently https://theathletic.com/3589412/2022/09/18/kalidou-koulibaly-Chelsea-defence-problems/ WhenΒ Kalidou KoulibalyΒ was figuratively unveiled at Cobham in August, he tried to manage expectations. βI will need time, because I canβt be the player everyone wants (me to be) from the first game,β he said. βI will take my time and in two or three months, I will be the one everyone is waiting for.β ADVERTISEMENT Β It wasnβt known then that head coach Thomas Tuchel did not have time to wait. TheΒ SenegalΒ internationalβs steep learning curve in a new team, tactical system and league after eight years in Italy with Napoli was a notable subplot of the underwhelming results that immediately precededΒ Chelseaβs new co-owners Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital deciding thatΒ a change in the dugout was required. Arriving at Stamford BridgeΒ with a reputation as one of the most revered centre-backs of his generation, Koulibaly was viewed by Tuchel as being capable of helping Chelsea re-establish their Champions League-winning defensive standards from day one. Under the German, he started six of seven matches, only missing the other through suspension. But Chelsea kept just one clean sheet in those games, and Koulibalyβs assessment of his own readiness proved more accurate than Tuchelβs hopes. There have been enough flashes of preternatural defensive instincts and ability on the ball to encourageΒ new head coach Graham Potter, but also occasions where the 31-year-oldβs aggressive instincts and aerial fallibility have got his team into trouble. Koulibaly has spoken about how he relishes individual duels with attackers. His desire to impose himself at every opportunity makes him an easy fit for a high-pressing system, as do his speed and his comfort with defending in space. Such a proactive style, however, means any miscalculation potentially carries a high price. The last goal of the Tuchel era offered a prime example of that. Dinamo Zagreb, playing out of a low block, punt a high ball up towards Bruno Petkovic. Having allowed the striker to drift away from him, Koulibaly rushes forward intending to make an interception or pressurise his opponentβs first touchβ¦ β¦but he is too late to do either, and Petkovic simply cushions a header into the path of Mislav Orsic, who does brilliantly to beat a now isolatedΒ Wesley FofanaΒ and finish coolly beyondΒ Kepa Arrizabalaga. ADVERTISEMENT Β On other occasions, Koulibalyβs failed attempts to win the ball high up the pitch have led to him committing unnecessary fouls as he scrambles to recover his position. Here he is on the opening weekend againstΒ Everton, trackingΒ Anthony Gordonβs diagonal run. Gordon doesnβt pose any immediate threat and Chelsea have the numbers behind the ball to cope with the counter, but Koulibaly still bundles him to the turf. The following weekend at home toΒ Tottenham, Koulibaly moves out towards Chelseaβs left touchline to trackΒ Harry Kane, who has drifted across to receive a pass fromΒ Emerson Royal. He initially does well, forcing Kane to take his first touch away from goal to protect the ballβ¦ β¦but then runs straight through him, conceding a free kick in a threatening position. The most egregious examples came another week on at Elland Road, where Chelsea found themselves rattled early and often byΒ Leeds Unitedβs relentless running. Koulibaly in particular got himself into compromising defensive situations that ultimately led to his dismissal in the 84th minute. An avoidable yellow card in the ninth minute left him walking a disciplinary tightrope. He simply gets too close toΒ Brenden AaronsonΒ as the American receives a pass near the touchline. Aaronson manages to use his forward momentum against him, spinning around him with a sharp first touch and tempting Koulibaly into grabbing him around the waist so he doesnβt drive into a dangerous area. Koulibalyβs second booking was for a similar offence, albeit at a stage of the game where Tuchel had sacrificed all semblance of tactical balance by substituting his entire starting midfield in search of an equaliser. As Leeds find themselves on a promising counter-attack,Β Joe GelhardtΒ lays the ball into the path ofΒ Sam Greenwoodβ¦ β¦and rather than simply running with his man, Koulibaly (perhaps out of frustration) wraps an arm around Gelhardt and pulls him down. At that unveiling in August, a player who was voted ontoΒ Serie Aβs Team of the Year four times during those eight years in Naples identified the main challenge of adapting to theΒ Premier League, saying: βI have to think faster, go faster, and move my eyes faster. ADVERTISEMENT Β βIn Serie A, everything is more with the brain, calmer. You have to think of every movement. Here, you have to think very fast, and this is the first thing I have to change.β Potter will be hoping Koulibaly can get up to speed in that sense sooner rather than later. It has not been all bad for Koulibaly so far at Chelsea. Against Tottenham, he showcased many of the attributes that can make him immensely valuable to an elite team β beyond his sensational volley from aΒ Marc CucurellaΒ corner that opened the scoring. His technical quality with the ball at his feet played a big role in Chelseaβs ability to beat the Spurs press, pin them back and play through their low block. Here, he shapes to play a pass with his left foot, assessing the options in front of him asΒ Dejan KulusevskiΒ moves to block his route forward toΒ Mason Mountβ¦ β¦ but Koulibaly sees this and quickly runs around the ball, creating an angle to whip a pass with his right foot behind Kulusevski, into the space he just vacated. This way, he finds Mount in space. On the occasions when Tottenham tried to press high, Koulibaly kept his head and trusted his technique. Here, he threads a low pass out of his penalty area through three opponentsβ¦ β¦directly onto the left foot ofΒ Kai Havertz, who can instantly re-direct it to Mount on the left flank and get Spurs running back towards their own goal. In the opposition half, Koulibaly also found the right balance between safe, sideways passes and more incisive ones that took several opponents out of the play. Here, he caps a one-touch passing sequence β Mount to Cucurella toΒ Raheem SterlingΒ and then back to him β with a sharp, first-time pass through a narrow gap back in to Mountβs feet. There was even a moment in the second half when Koulibalyβs aggressive ball-winning instincts looked to have won the match for Chelsea. He pins Kulusevski against the right touchline from behind, withΒ NβGolo KanteΒ cutting off any escape from the other side. Koulibaly manages to win the ball cleanly and send it spinning free to Kante, who plays a pass infield to Sterling. This sequence leavesΒ Reece JamesΒ wide open on the overlapβ¦ β¦ and he scores to give Chelsea a 2-1 lead. Once he re-tunes his instincts to the particular nature of Premier League football, Koulibaly will surely have plenty to offer Potterβs team in and out of possession. Perhaps the most surprising issue in the final matches of Tuchelβs tenure wasΒ Chelseaβs sudden inability to defend set pieces successfully. Last season, onlyΒ Manchester CityΒ (one goal) conceded fewer Premier League goals from dead balls than Chelseaβs four but in their opening six matches of 2022-23, Tuchelβs men let in four set-piece goals. Only promotedΒ BournemouthΒ (five) have allowed more, and Koulibaly has undeniably been part of the problem. He has often too easily become a spectator as events play out, rather than using his formidable frame and athleticism to impact them for the benefit of his team. For the shambolic corner-kick equaliser Chelsea conceded in stoppage time against Spurs, his starting position is fineβ¦ β¦but by the time the ball loops into the six-yard box, he has retreated towards the goal line rather than moving forward to attack the delivery, contributing to a situation where any one of three Tottenham players could meet it with a free header. Back in that opening win over Everton, Koulibaly fails to react to the trajectory of a high, arcing corner towards the back post, watching it sail over his headβ¦ β¦and forcingΒ Edouard MendyΒ to try to catch the ball while being swarmed byΒ Yerry MinaΒ andΒ Dwight McNeil. He does at least take up a good position on the line when the ball ends up at the feet ofΒ Abdoulaye DoucoureΒ but this is a shot at goal Chelsea shouldnβt be letting happen in the first place. West Hamβs opening goal at Stamford Bridge in the most recent Premier League game two weeks ago also reflects poorly on Koulibalyβs set-piece defending. He is tasked with man-markingΒ Tomas SoucekΒ at the near post, but the Czech Republic international darts away from himβ¦ β¦ and by the time Mendy is challenged to make another aerial intervention under severe pressure, Koulibaly has drifted away from the goal line, watching the ball rather than anticipating what could happen, and so isnβt in a position to preventΒ Michail AntonioΒ convertingΒ Declan Riceβs low cross. Itβs fair to note that all of the examples listed here are the result of multiple points of failure by several Chelsea players. In that sense, singling out Koulibaly might be a little harsh, but the reality is that as one of the tallest, most physically imposing players in the squad, Potter needs him to be better than weβve seen so far. This is where Koulibalyβs broader aerial duel numbers are a cause for concern: FBref.com ranks him in the bottom third of centre-backs in Europeβs top five leagues for aerial duels won per 90 minutes over the past 12 months. The arrival of fellow centre-back Fofana (who ranks in the top quarter in the same metric) fromΒ LeicesterΒ should help Chelseaβs set-piece defence under Potter, but Koulibaly has to deliver on his considerable physical tools in the air. Defensive success or failure is collective, not individual. You only need to look at how much more fallibleΒ Virgil van DijkΒ suddenly looks in aΒ LiverpoolΒ team which so far this season is lacking the blistering intensity and tactical cohesion of previous years. Koulibalyβs early difficulties must be viewed not only in terms of him adapting to English football but also through the prism of Chelseaβs broader defensive decline in the end times under Tuchel. Replacement Potterβs most urgent task is to find a tactical framework that makes the most sense for Chelsea in every area of the pitch, with a pressing system that allows them to defend from the front first. This is now a significantly different group to the one Tuchel inherited in January of last year, so the solutions to those issues may take the team down a different path. But if Potter can find the right structure, there is plenty of reason to believe a fully-adapted Koulibaly would offer more than he takes away. Interesting read (thanks for the share),- the article raises more alarm bells for me., with regards to Koulibaly. Apart from his ability on the ball, there's not been much to shout about, especially when it comes to his defending. The article highlights even more mistakes than what I've noticed from watching the games. Maybe Potter could somehow get more from him, but at the same time he needs to get the team winning again from the very next game and I'm not sure I'd I would risk starting Koulibaly in order to do that. I would either bring him back for a lower tier cup game or only after we hit a strong run of form (hopefully). Β Β Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Reddish-Blue 2,506 Posted September 19, 2022 Share Posted September 19, 2022 20 hours ago, Blue Armour said: Interesting read (thanks for the share),- the article raises more alarm bells for me., with regards to Koulibaly. Apart from his ability on the ball, there's not been much to shout about, especially when it comes to his defending. The article highlights even more mistakes than what I've noticed from watching the games. Maybe Potter could somehow get more from him, but at the same time he needs to get the team winning again from the very next game and I'm not sure I'd I would risk starting Koulibaly in order to do that. I would either bring him back for a lower tier cup game or only after we hit a strong run of form (hopefully). Β Β He'll definitely get caught out alot more in the Premier League (part of the reason why the other top clubs in PL never really pushed for his transfer) as his eagerness to get forward and put pressure or close down the opposition's attackers will lead to plenty of fouls in dangerous areas.Β Will be interesting to see how Potter utilizes him, maybe he settles down once we get an actual defensive midfielder in place.Β Just look at City with Rodri doing the dirty work in midfield, their CB's don't have to deal with that much and they can sit back and take risks as required rather than having to compensate for a midfield that needs reinforcements! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MΓ‘rio CΓ©sar 1,273 Posted October 16, 2022 Share Posted October 16, 2022 much better nowΒ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vesper 30,185 Posted October 19, 2022 Share Posted October 19, 2022 (edited) Top of the league, and he will only get better, I have hope. Laugh at me if you want, I am going to be Postive London Stockholm GirlΒ π Β Edited October 19, 2022 by Vesper Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheHulk 2,457 Posted January 1, 2023 Share Posted January 1, 2023 This player is fecking garbage. No way Badiashile is so bad even if I don't rate him. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OneMoSalah 8,886 Posted January 1, 2023 Share Posted January 1, 2023 Been a bust. Looks like Benitez was right about him, his concentration levels are so so so poor for somebody of his age and experience. Just seems to get sucked in and done far too often. Massively disappointing.Β Laylabelle 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pizy 18,916 Posted January 1, 2023 Share Posted January 1, 2023 Man, I was so excited about this signing. And out of all of the players we brought in last summer he was the one I was least worried about. Figured weβd get Thiago Silva like performances and ease of adjusting to the PL. Even when he was struggling earlier in the season I was urging patience.Β But he hasnβt gotten any better. Today was perhaps the most worrying sign. Thiago Silva was visibly angry and frustrated with him. Yelling at him, throwing his arms up in annoyance, and as the game wore on he straight up started not passing it to KK out of fear heβd make a mistake. And then KK himself became terrified of making a forward pass because his confidence is so poor. Just donβt understand how such an experienced, top level CB can be a total bust virtually overnight. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blue Armour 4,439 Posted January 1, 2023 Share Posted January 1, 2023 (edited) Back when we signed him in the summer, I saw this article from the mail comparing his stats against other CBs. How does Koulibaly compare to Chelsea stars and Big Six stalwarts?Β https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-11010037/How-does-Kalidou-Koulibaly-compare-Chelsea-stars-Big-Six-stalwarts.html At the time, I was a bit shocked because he was objectively worse in nearly every department. (Especially the number of times he has been dribbled past by) I mean, a defender who has been praised to the moon by his former managers. And now, reality hits. Terrible at tracking back, unimaginative in attack. The only thing he does is press upwards to defend, and almost gives up a foul in the process. And he is just gassed every game. Silva is nearly 6 years older than him and plays with great tempo. Β Edited January 1, 2023 by Blue Armour Laylabelle 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vesper 30,185 Posted January 1, 2023 Share Posted January 1, 2023 10 minutes ago, Blue Armour said: Especially the number of times he has been dribbled past by Sarr's rate is 50% higher than KK's on a per minute played basis Blue Armour 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vytis33 1,272 Posted January 1, 2023 Share Posted January 1, 2023 He's been shocking so far Spurs game aside.Β Constantly lunging in on challenges Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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