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Go Home The Queiroz Problem

WORLD CUP JUNE 29, 2010

The Queiroz Problem

How to score when you don't have the ball? Portugal conceded the ball to Spain, who stroked it around for long periods waiting to penetrate the Portuguese defense and then they did. The Queiroz approach was to wait for a Spanish mistake and then punish them. For that to work, you have to have a perfect game where no one makes a mistake and everyone does everything they supposed to do. Portugal was not able to play a mistake-free game. But Paraguay did. The problem with Queiroz approach is that he has players far better than his tactics acknowledge. It was painful to watch Ronaldo, overrated though he may be, starved of a ball that would allow him to do his fancy footwork. He has survived another major competition without even approaching the justification of his celebrity status. The Queiroz approach--ten players without the ball perfectly defensively positioned--is the riskiest one. It entirely depends on not allowing the other team to score. If the other team scores, the Portuguese are entirely helpless. Paraguay is the best team playing that way, because they're entirely aware of the hopelessness of conceding a goal--they know they could never equalize, so they indeed play a perfect defensive game. Today against Japan they made no mistake, waiting for Japan to make one. And they did, very late. Hard to watch, but entirely admirable.

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I was entirely indifferent regarding tonight's winner. On the one hand, I'd like to see Spain win the cup, and at least get to the semis. Not least because they're easy on the eye and it's a footballing crime that they don't have at least one WC. On the other hand, I like Portugal, which is a much better place to visit and the people seem generally more relaxed and less formal than the Spanish. Then I saw Ronaldo's pre match ear rings and Queiroz's chest hair and had to endure both men's wild gesticulating and antics as Queiroz's sad attempt at doing a Mourinho came to a predictable end. Thank god we don't have to endure them anymore. Bravo Spain.

- IggyPop

June 29, 2010 at 6:24pm

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I couldn't be more mad at Queiroz and at Cristiano Ronaldo, for that matter. Everytime he had the ball he simply wasted it, leaving our right wing in pieces. But I will surely miss Eduardo (only one goal in in 4 games, including one against Brazil and one against Spain) and Fabio Coentrão, so far, the revelation of the World Cup. I guess we got ourselves another Figo (see the following episodes in 2012 and 2014). As for now, I'm so sad...

- Ideaot

June 30, 2010 at 8:06am

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