Ross Barkley

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He actually challenges for headers now which is good to see. It might seem insignificant, but I believe that headed goal was a monkey off his back. He had always been so poor at directing the ball, and ever since then I have seen a drastic improvement in his aerial play. He can still improve loads, but I actually see him getting into the air. He is not shying away anymore.
 

Both great young players and those stats back up nicely the difference in the 2 styles, ross is all about assisting his teammates to score and Alli is all about winning the ball giving it and bombing into the box.
The fact that he's ahead of Ozil on assists, and not far behind on chances created, is amazing, especially given that he's afforded much less freedom than Ozil is for Arsenal.

Barkley's actually playing much more of an important role defensively than people give him credit for. Sorry to keep throwing stats out (I'm an analyst at google so I can't help it), but this comparison of him this season and last season shows how much he's come on defensively. He's winning more tackles and more balls in the air, as well as creating more chances. All really promising stuff.

http://www.squawka.com/comparison-m...tackles_won/aerial_duels_won/interceptions#90
 
I'm sure someone has probably already mentioned it but looking back at the highlights, really like the 2 moments where he makes a good tackle on their man on the wing, and then gets a healthy round of applause from the stands. Great to see him adding to and improving his game in all areas of the pitch.
 
He actually challenges for headers now which is good to see. It might seem insignificant, but I believe that headed goal was a monkey off his back. He had always been so poor at directing the ball, and ever since then I have seen a drastic improvement in his aerial play. He can still improve loads, but I actually see him getting into the air. He is not shying away anymore.

I wonder if the heading issue is because he never had to work on it as a youth player - being much bigger and taller than his peers. First full game I saw him play was for England and he scored a cracking header but up against players his own size it was more of a problem.

Hallam Hope had the same issue. Awesome strength as a youth player but that ultimately cost him as a pro as he didn't have that advantage any more.
 

In his latest column, Dave Tickner celebrates a weekend that featured a great leap forward for football thanks to Ross Barkley

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Ross Barkley scores a gamechanging goal against Bournemouth

Two things were settled once and for all on Saturday. We now obviously know who will win the Premier League title, but some would say even more importantly we now also know the winner of the goal of the season award.

There's been plenty debate in recent weeks, with Manchester United fans adamant that Henrikh Mkhitaryan's scorpion kick should be goal of the season while everyone else correctly argued that Olivier Giroud's was better.

"Mkhitaryan did it first."


"Mkhitaryan was offside."

"Yeah, but Giroud did that daft Morecambe and Wise celebration instead of retrieving the ball in the next game at Bournemouth."

"Giroud is handsomer and gets bonus points for going in off the bar."

Valid points all.

But now a goal has come along to make scorpion kicks like shinned tap-ins from a centre-back after an undignified goalmouth scramble. A goal of such craft and audacity that all must bow before it.

skysports-ross-barkley-everton-football_3886079.jpg
"Now a goal has come along to make scorpion kicks like shinned tap-ins from a centre-back after an undignified goalmouth scramble"
Dave Tickner

I speak, of course, of Ross Barkley's vital late goal in Everton's nonsense 6-3 victory over Bournemouth on Saturday. It was genuinely vital as well; the way things had gone, that game had 5-5 all over it until Barkley sealed things by scoring a goal WHICH HE HAD ALREADY STARTED CELEBRATING.

This. Is. Huge. Every now and then sport produces a great evolutionary leap forward that changes things forever. Overarm bowling. The Fosbury Flop. The backpass rule. Walk-on girls and beer.

It's no exaggeration to say this belongs in that company. There have been pleasingly few people harrumphing about Barkley's chutzpah, with most rightly recognising that we are in the presence of greatness here. Ian Wright was absolutely delighted by it on Match of the Day, the only note of disappointment coming when he admitted he felt, like all those other old high-jumpers watching Dick Fosbury must have felt, gutted he hadn't thought of it himself.

Yes, like all great leaps forward, it seems obvious once it's happened.

And boy did the Premier League need it.

Sure, the relegation battle is shaping up nicely now Hull and Swansea have emerged from their apparent sleepwalk into the Sky Bet Championship, in so doing dragging Middlesbrough and, most enticingly, Leicester - the full extent of last season's Faustian pact becoming horrifyingly clear - into the mix.

But at the top of the table things are looking all too predictable. Chelsea, as we know, have the title in the bag after bullying Arsenal and stealing their pocket money in the most coldly predictable manner imaginable. Seems strange now looking back from here in the Post-Barkley world, but, way back then at Saturday lunchtime, Eden Hazard's goal that he didn't celebrate until after he'd scored really did seem quite lovely. In the same game, Cesc Fabregas scored a goal and didn't even celebrate it afterwards. A match quite literally from a different age.

For the Gunners, meanwhile, February is in full swing. The league title is gone, top-four hopes hang in the balance, Arsenal Fan TV is in open dignity-shedding revolt and Arsene Wenger's position as manager is being questioned by everyone except those with the power to do something about it. Arsenal now just need to complete the formalities of a Champions League exit to Bayern Munich before focusing themselves fully on the inevitable eight-match winning run to secure a top-three finish and with it the wrongheaded belief that next season they really could win the title you know.

While the other members of the Big Five trying to reel in the Bigger One have done so by relentlessly beating the Small Fourteen and scraping together a few points here and there when competing among themselves, Liverpool have embarked on a bold, noble but mathematically-flawed attempt to do things entirely the other way around. Hull join Bournemouth and Burnley on the list of teams to beat a Liverpool team still yet to lose to any of the other Big Six. The good news for Liverpool fans watching their season seemingly unravel before their eyes is that it's Tottenham up next. Three points in the bag.

Ah yes, Tottenham. They're still there or thereabouts by virtue of Mauricio Pochettino's witchcraft in turning Tottenham - Tottenham! - into the league's most consistent and reliable defensive performers. The final-day hilarity at Newcastle remains the only game in the last two Premier League seasons in which Spurs have conceded more than two goals. They've only conceded twice in three out of 24 matches this season, and taken four points from those games anyway. That is a solid framework on which to build a Premier League campaign.

And while Saturday evening's vaguely uninspiring 1-0 win over Middlesbrough doesn't, as Pochettino would later claim, keep them in the title race it does make them look good things for second place. Start celebrating now, nothing can possibly go wrong.

And that, truly, is the brilliance of Barkley.

His celebragoal is a wonderful achievement and spectacular moment in its own right. But more importantly, Barkley's goal means that right now there is a Premier League player, and that Premier League player is almost certainly an Arsenal player, and that Arsenal player is almost certainly Olivier Giroud, who is now destined to become the first player to make a complete mess of the Pre-Celebration. That, truly, is Barkley's gift to the world.

http://www.sportinglife.com/footbal...w-a-procession-but-ross-barkley-a-gamechanger
 
He actually challenges for headers now which is good to see. It might seem insignificant, but I believe that headed goal was a monkey off his back. He had always been so poor at directing the ball, and ever since then I have seen a drastic improvement in his aerial play. He can still improve loads, but I actually see him getting into the air. He is not shying away anymore.
Interesting point, I'd say the aerial side of the game is more overwhelmingly psychological than any other area of football, genuinely tough players who back themselves are usually at least decent in the air, speed, cahill, dunc etc. Like you say a good sign of where Ross see's himself recently
 
Interesting point, I'd say the aerial side of the game is more overwhelmingly psychological than any other area of football, genuinely tough players who back themselves are usually at least decent in the air, speed, cahill, dunc etc. Like you say a good sign of where Ross see's himself recently

Still think Lukaku hasnt regained the level of aggression in the air he had initially after he clattered first season for us into (i think Lloris)
 

....let's not forget that he was poor against Stoke. He played fine at the weekend and perhaps he's starting to realise what a top midfielder has to do but he needs to positively impact games on a week by week basis.
 
....let's not forget that he was poor against Stoke. He played fine at the weekend and perhaps he's starting to realise what a top midfielder has to do but he needs to positively impact games on a week by week basis.

No Eggs.

Very few players do it every single week. Even some of the best in this league have plenty of off days.

He is a very good footballer, he is a blue and he will have his off days. I'm alright with that. If he gets better still and those off days become fewer and fewer then fantastic, but if he only ever kept his current level he would still be a very good Everton player. I'm alright with that.

It's the problem with some fans, constantly judging him against this idea that he could have been one of the best in the world or something. How about just appreciating what he does do.
 
No Eggs.

Very few players do it every single week. Even some of the best in this league have plenty of off days.

He is a very good footballer, he is a blue and he will have his off days. I'm alright with that. If he gets better still and those off days become fewer and fewer then fantastic, but if he only ever kept his current level he would still be a very good Everton player. I'm alright with that.

It's the problem with some fans, constantly judging him against this idea that he could have been one of the best in the world or something. How about just appreciating what he does do.

You're right. But I think he's got the talent to be one of those players. Just need him to believe it and become consistent .
 
Well obviously we all want that, and I'd say many of us think that is possible.....but in the meantime he shouldn't be judged for NOT being that player.

It's not about becoming a world beater week on week I'm talking about. It's about improving his normal standard and making the real poor performances a real scarce thing. He just needs to learn how to cope better when he's not quite firing, keep doing the basics and not let his game completely disintegrate.
 

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