2019/20 Richarlison

Status
Not open for further replies.
The blunt refrain from the supporter sitting just behind the press box at Goodison Park on Sunday was a familiar one — “get up, you bloody idiot” — but the difference on this occasion was the target of the invective.
This was not an irate Everton fan letting off steam at a Tottenham Hotspur player, but one utterly exasperated by the antics of Richarlison, the Everton forward, whose insistence upon falling to the floor in a heap almost every time he was touched became an embarrassment — not to mention counter-productive.
There was a moment in the 60th minute when, with the match goalless, Davinson Sánchez scurried across his penalty area to close down the Brazilian attacker and looked to have impeded Richarlison who, it seemed, could not help but take a tumble.
Yet the referee Martin Atkinson was not interested, there was no VAR review, and it is not a leap of faith to suggest that Richarlison had paid the price for the theatrics, which were not just prevalent in this game but have been a feature of recent matches also.
The horrific setback suffered by André Gomes, his season in tatters due to the fracture dislocation of the right ankle which required surgery yesterday, is a sobering reminder of the perils footballers face. But the regularity with which Richarlison drops to the turf has become so prevalent that Marco Silva, who, frankly, has enough issues to contend with, must now intervene and call him into account.

It has been noted that Richarlison’s own team-mates now invariably play on when the 22-year-old rolls around, holding his face or another body part, clearly unconvinced that he has been hurt.
In Everton dressing rooms in the past, senior players would have already taken matters into their own hands and spelt out exactly how the behaviour was actually harming their chances of securing a result. If that has happened, and it is doubtful given this is a squad lacking leaders, then he is patently not listening.
Richarlison’s propensity to go down earlier in the match could have contributed towards him not being awarded a penalty
Richarlison’s propensity to go down earlier in the match could have contributed towards him not being awarded a penaltyOLI SCARFF/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Plenty of Premier League players find themselves at the centre of diving debates. There was scrutiny on Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah last season and Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola called out Sadio Mané at the weekend, claiming he goes to ground too easily.
Richarlison has to nip it in the bud now. He has to channel his skills more effectively, putting the team first, at a point when Silva’s reign lurches from game to game with Southampton at St Mary’s next Saturday the next fixture likely to shape his future. It could well be win or bust.
Silva has provided a platform for the player having brought him from Watford for a club-record £45 million fee in 2018 and has now started deploying him again in his favoured central striking position.
There have been four goals this season from Richarlison — including strikes for Brazil he reached the threshold of 20 last term — and there is plenty to like about his talent when he focuses on harnessing it properly.
His work rate can be unstinting and that harrying of defenders is a useful weapon for an Everton side that does not have too many strings to its bow.
He doesn’t need to indulge in dark arts in the mistaken belief he is going to earn a free kick and then smash the set piece in the top corner.
Silva will now be without Gomes for the rest of the season, having seen Idrissa Gana Gueye leave for Paris Saint-Germain for £30 million and hopes of securing Kurt Zouma permanently from Chelsea in the summer flounder. They were arguably Everton’s three most influential players in the second half of last season. Jean-Philippe Gbamin, recruited to replace Gueye, is out until the new year having managed only 135 minutes so far this season.
Moise Kean, the £25 million striker brought in from Juventus by director of football, Marcel Brands, is not equipped to propel Everton forward at present.
As a result the club sits in 17th in the league, three points above Southampton, with a December schedule which includes games against Leicester City (a), Liverpool (a), Chelsea (h), Manchester United (a), Leicester (Carabao Cup, h) and Arsenal (h) up to Boxing Day.
The opportunity is there for Richarlison to be the hero should he accept, rather than abdicate, responsibility and repay the manager who has placed so much faith in him.
Against Southampton, there must be no repeat of the tomfoolery scarring recent outings. More than ever Everton — and Silva — need Richarlison to stand up and be counted



pretty accurate to be fair, but I do understand the frustration Richarlison must feel, he got given NOTHING even when he wasn’t as fast for falling over. He’s going the wrong way to fix the problem though.
 
Love it in here, he's good enough to start for Brazil but not good enough for us or people hating on him for doing what just about every footballer does and he does get fouled, a lot. He just needs to get on with it.
Think for me is you don’t win anything in football for being honest and nice. Yes he does go down easily but all top players do. The way he goes down probably needs to be put back and make it look natural. But I go every game and he does get fouled and kicked and not get anything at times. The one problem I have his fans slating him and call him names at times it’s pathetic. One incident where him and Toby Alderweireld went for the ball both got caught in he head, both holding the heads and difference being it’s more sore to get a whack on the back then the Front. Well the abuse he got around by me was a joke they stopped once I said shut the hell up. It’s just toxic to our own players and that won’t help ever. But it’s right he won’t get decisions of refs because he goes down even when it’s a obvious foul.
 

The blunt refrain from the supporter sitting just behind the press box at Goodison Park on Sunday was a familiar one — “get up, you bloody idiot” — but the difference on this occasion was the target of the invective.
This was not an irate Everton fan letting off steam at a Tottenham Hotspur player, but one utterly exasperated by the antics of Richarlison, the Everton forward, whose insistence upon falling to the floor in a heap almost every time he was touched became an embarrassment — not to mention counter-productive.
There was a moment in the 60th minute when, with the match goalless, Davinson Sánchez scurried across his penalty area to close down the Brazilian attacker and looked to have impeded Richarlison who, it seemed, could not help but take a tumble.
Yet the referee Martin Atkinson was not interested, there was no VAR review, and it is not a leap of faith to suggest that Richarlison had paid the price for the theatrics, which were not just prevalent in this game but have been a feature of recent matches also.
The horrific setback suffered by André Gomes, his season in tatters due to the fracture dislocation of the right ankle which required surgery yesterday, is a sobering reminder of the perils footballers face. But the regularity with which Richarlison drops to the turf has become so prevalent that Marco Silva, who, frankly, has enough issues to contend with, must now intervene and call him into account.

It has been noted that Richarlison’s own team-mates now invariably play on when the 22-year-old rolls around, holding his face or another body part, clearly unconvinced that he has been hurt.
In Everton dressing rooms in the past, senior players would have already taken matters into their own hands and spelt out exactly how the behaviour was actually harming their chances of securing a result. If that has happened, and it is doubtful given this is a squad lacking leaders, then he is patently not listening.
Richarlison’s propensity to go down earlier in the match could have contributed towards him not being awarded a penalty
Richarlison’s propensity to go down earlier in the match could have contributed towards him not being awarded a penaltyOLI SCARFF/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Plenty of Premier League players find themselves at the centre of diving debates. There was scrutiny on Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah last season and Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola called out Sadio Mané at the weekend, claiming he goes to ground too easily.
Richarlison has to nip it in the bud now. He has to channel his skills more effectively, putting the team first, at a point when Silva’s reign lurches from game to game with Southampton at St Mary’s next Saturday the next fixture likely to shape his future. It could well be win or bust.
Silva has provided a platform for the player having brought him from Watford for a club-record £45 million fee in 2018 and has now started deploying him again in his favoured central striking position.
There have been four goals this season from Richarlison — including strikes for Brazil he reached the threshold of 20 last term — and there is plenty to like about his talent when he focuses on harnessing it properly.
His work rate can be unstinting and that harrying of defenders is a useful weapon for an Everton side that does not have too many strings to its bow.
He doesn’t need to indulge in dark arts in the mistaken belief he is going to earn a free kick and then smash the set piece in the top corner.
Silva will now be without Gomes for the rest of the season, having seen Idrissa Gana Gueye leave for Paris Saint-Germain for £30 million and hopes of securing Kurt Zouma permanently from Chelsea in the summer flounder. They were arguably Everton’s three most influential players in the second half of last season. Jean-Philippe Gbamin, recruited to replace Gueye, is out until the new year having managed only 135 minutes so far this season.
Moise Kean, the £25 million striker brought in from Juventus by director of football, Marcel Brands, is not equipped to propel Everton forward at present.
As a result the club sits in 17th in the league, three points above Southampton, with a December schedule which includes games against Leicester City (a), Liverpool (a), Chelsea (h), Manchester United (a), Leicester (Carabao Cup, h) and Arsenal (h) up to Boxing Day.
The opportunity is there for Richarlison to be the hero should he accept, rather than abdicate, responsibility and repay the manager who has placed so much faith in him.
Against Southampton, there must be no repeat of the tomfoolery scarring recent outings. More than ever Everton — and Silva — need Richarlison to stand up and be counted



pretty accurate to be fair, but I do understand the frustration Richarlison must feel, he got given NOTHING even when he wasn’t as fast for falling over. He’s going the wrong way to fix the problem though.

Understand your writing and made good points, AS regards the photo should have the image before that one to see more clearly how Richie was impeded and how quick the hands went up for innocence.
 
Think for me is you don’t win anything in football for being honest and nice. Yes he does go down easily but all top players do. The way he goes down probably needs to be put back and make it look natural. But I go every game and he does get fouled and kicked and not get anything at times. The one problem I have his fans slating him and call him names at times it’s pathetic. One incident where him and Toby Alderweireld went for the ball both got caught in he head, both holding the heads and difference being it’s more sore to get a whack on the back then the Front. Well the abuse he got around by me was a joke they stopped once I said shut the hell up. It’s just toxic to our own players and that won’t help ever. But it’s right he won’t get decisions of refs because he goes down even when it’s a obvious foul.
You hit the nail on the head at the end. B/c of his antics, he's not getting fouls called that truly are fouls. He's Chicken Little with the sky falling and all that.

Richy's a strong, tough lad. Plays hurt and finishes matches a lot when he's digned up - remember that game last year he rolled his ankle in like the 20th minute and I thought he'd be out a month (it looked awful in slo mo)- instead he scored a brace after that. Which is why it's so cringey to watch him act like he's been shot every time a guy gets near him. Look, I'm no Richy hater, I think he's been our most consistent player of the Silva era. But I'd really like to see the theatrics get out of his game.
 
It's a bit funny to come out with that article when he should have had two penalties in 2 weeks, Both clear and obvious, He gets ragged around a lot by big tall players and the refs do nothing it's not just 1 or 2 game it's nearly every game, What more does he need to do? Of course I'm not 100% blue tinted specs, On occasion he does milk the foul or go down a bit too easy when he doesn't need to but multiple players are like this in the league.
 
Richarlison can't play down the middle effectively because as soon as there's a bit of contact he's down. Considering that the central defenders are always close to the forward, and there is likely to be contact when he goes down the ball is lost and the opposition comes straight back. Part of a CFs role is to hold the ball up and bring other players into play, when he goes down too easily our attacks then stop. He needs to be moved back onto the wing.
 

Was that article written by Joyce by any chance? Strange that he should produce it shortly after Pep suggested that Mane dives.
FWIW I think Richarlison makes a 3 course meal when he feels contact but I can't recall an incident were he has dived.
 
Richarlison getting the Andy Johnson treatment now...

Fact is that if refs / VAR were doing their job we would have had more free kicks, penalties, red cards and likely goals thanks to Richarlison.

Should be getting way more protection.
You reap what you sow though mate., Stay on your feet a bit more and those penalties will be given. Same as Zaha and yes, AJ,.
Only has himself to blame.
 

Status
Not open for further replies.
Top