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The Tao of Eriksen

Bus-Conductor

SC Supporter
Oct 19, 2004
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50,713
THE TAO OF ERIKSEN


So, Christian Eriksen is the top scoring midfielder in the EPL. Nice. But why has this seemed to come at the cost of his ability to directly create for others ?

Last season he was eighth in the EPL assists table, which doesn’t sound brilliant until you realize he played much less than most (and fairly illustrious list of names it was too) ahead of him and was having his first season in the EPL

From one of the best attacking midfielders in the EPL, you would hope for more than one assist from the last 6 months of football wouldn’t you ?

His first season produced a very respectable 8 assists, added to his 7 goals, and bearing in mind he only played 1983 minutes of football, a pretty healthy combined return (for a first season in the EPL) of a goal/assist every 132 minutes (just less than a game and a half).

You would hope that having settled in and now become Spurs most played outfield player, he would be really into the swing of things, and that the combined rate would be at least as good this season.

As of today he’s played 1908 minutes, just under a game shy of the whole of last season, and while his scoring rate has edged up a notch, managing 9 in less pitch time, his assist rate has plummeted to a humble 1 all season, giving him a combined goal/assist every 191 minutes (just over two games).

So on those two naked stats, and even allowing for the fact that the assist stat can be a bit vague, his overall “end” productivity has dipped.

The question is why? And is this the full picture?

It was suggested to me that perhaps his creative productivity has dipped due to a more rigid tactical application by Pochettino than under the rather more Redknappesque laissez-faire of Sherwood. I felt that this wasn’t the case, that from watching his games he was playing with as much or even more freedom than at any time with us. I also remembered Pochettino saying in an interview a few weeks back that it was important that Eriksen had freedom within his system.

One of the ways we can test this is by looking at the matrixes for where Eriksen was receiving the ball in games under the two and compare, to see if this gave us any clues.

rScVhe.png



PTgBFa.png


The three under Sherwood were played as LM (442) in the Stoke and Palace games and wide left forward (433) v Everton.

The three under Pochettino as ACM (4231) QPR and Chelsea and as ALM (4231) v WBA.

The patterns suggests that there were no more restrictions on his movement under Pochettino than there were under Sherwood.

I quick look at his starting position is a little more informative. Or is it?

Nearly all his goals (7) and assists (7) under Sherwood came from a default starting position on the left (the role frequently given under Sherwood).

Under Sherwood he played 14 games as LM/ALM/LF in 442/4231/433 formations, 2 games as ACM in 4231, 2 games as a CM.

6 goals and 6 assists came from the left attacking positions, 1 goal and 2 assists came from 2 attacking central positions.

So in pure numbers, more came from the left, but as a percentage he was more productive from the right. Albiet from a very small control sample.

This has been almost exactly reversed this season. Under Pochettino he’s started 14 games as an ACM, 6 games as ALM, 2 games as ARM.

He’s scored 5 when his starting position has been central (ACM), 3 when it’s been left (ALM) and 1 from the right (ARM – he only started there once against Sunderland at home). But one of those “left” goals was a free kick which has no relevance to where he plays and one was against Hull, where he started left, was moved to CMR, then moved again to ACM from where he scored (so this technically belongs in the “right” stats. The one assist came form the left.

The bottom line is one season he was played predominantly left, the next predominantly centrally and both seasons he scored goals, but from the left last season he did create more goals for others. 5 of those assists last season were crosses into the box from wide positions, as opposed to clever through balls which accounted for 1 assist.

I checked the stats for his final couple of seasons a Ajax, and it turns out he was pretty unproductive in terms of assists (0 for last two league seasons) but, at Ajax, this could be explained by the fact that he did frequently play a deeper role in the middle three of their 433.

In terms of scoring, it really doesn’t seem to matter where he starts. In terms of assists, he definitely produced more from the left last season – 6/14 (3 LM, 2 ALM, 1 ACM) but this season has only produced 1/6 so the left magic seems to have worn off in terms of assists.

Here are some other stats comparisons for the last two seasons:



-------------------------2013-14 ------------------------------------2014-15


Minutes ----------------1983 ------------------------------------1908


Goals---------------------- 7 ----------------------------------------8

Assists ---------------------8 ---------------------------------------1

Combined ----------------15--------------------------------------10


Shots ----------------------- 48 -------------------------------------65

On target ----------------- 22 --------------------------------------18


Attempts created -------- 60--------------------------------------53


Passes ------------------- 1109------------------------------------1181

Accurate Passes --------- 908 -----------------------------------993


Tackles -------------------- 19 ------------------------------------------27



They tell us perhaps how Eriksen’s scoring rate has gone up, as he’s clearly having more shots per game, the thing we don’t know is whether this is because Pochettino is encouraging him to be more selfish, more often, when in and around the box. They also tell us that Eriksen is pretty much creating as many chances for others and, even better, is seeing more ball and making more tackles than last year. Which may not be translating into direct assists, but is almost certainly contributing to the team cause.

In terms of how much he sees the ball, he receives it an average of 59 times per game in the 6 games he’s started ALM this season. He receives it an average of 43 in games he’s started ACM. That figure could be slightly skewed by the disparity in the amount of the two control samples.


The Conclusion

Where have last season’s assists gone?

The honest answer is, I don’t have a clue. And the stats don’t really shed too much light on it either. But the stats do possibly tell us what the problem isn’t. It doesn’t seem to be tactical. Either in terms of the rigidity of his role or the location he starts from.

Last season’s stats suggest playing from the left might have been the answer but a rate of I assist every 2.3 games has turned into 1 assist every 6 this season, playing from the left.

I wondered if playing the orthodox Left Midfield of Sherwood's 442 helped, but only 3 of his 6 assists last season came from this position.

He’s definitely shooting more this season, but he’s also seeing more of the ball this year, so you’d hope he’d have still produced more than 1 assist all season.

This season we are seeing a harder working Eriksen who is seeing more ball, making more tackles and scoring more goals, he seems to be creating, or trying to create as many chances, according to the stats, but for whatever reason they are not resulting in assists.

This season, the players playing in those wide attacking roles more often have picked up the creative baton, with Chadli and Lamela wading in with 11 between them. This season Eriksen has played a far more central role, even when played left he has invariably drifted inside where space is tight and creativity gets stifled. For half the season two of our strikers were woefully out of form in front of goal, and that almost certainly hasn’t helped.

Eriksen’s talent and technique have never been in question, but there were times last season and the beginning of this when questions were being asked about his ability to cope with the robustness of the EPL, to contribute more in the tougher games and more consistently in general. I think we have seen him grow as a player this season, become better equipped to contribute more consistently, and even if he’s not providing assists, he’s contributing more to the overall team dynamic and is probably the single biggest individual influence on our season this year so far.
 
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Strikeb4ck

Well-Known Member
Aug 8, 2010
4,483
9,409
Personally I'm still very unconvinced of our style under Poch, we struggle greatly to score goals in open play against any team that isn't playing open football - our best attacking performances came against the likes of Chelsea, even Man City. We are largely reliant on set pieces and Kane/Eriksen solo play for our goals. I think had Eriksen been injured til now and Soldado/Adebayor been playing we would be down in mid table.

I think Eriksen is creating less as far as assists because he has taken it upon himself to score more and we still just don't have a system that unlocks teams that park the bus. Every time we play a team that puts 11 back we look fairly clueless.

Too many of our players are just scared to make runs into space too. It seems to be a remnant of the AVB era, who's philosophy was keep possession and let Bale shoot - saw how well that worked when Bale left. There's just so much sideways passing and so little attacking movement behind the defense.
 

allpaths

Well-Known Member
Oct 31, 2014
3,178
8,392
think his lack of assists are not that big of a concern as u can see the amount of chances he is creating is relatively similar while he got off to a slow start and at the beginning of the season our play was being funneled through lamela
 

TheAmerican

Well-Known Member
Aug 30, 2012
6,913
18,761
I'd be curious to how many secondary assists he has, as I think he is still involved in the majority of our scoring. We may just be a bit more direct this year, as well, not always needing a metronome player like Eriksen to create all the chances.
 

whatislifewithoutspurs

Well-Known Member
Dec 29, 2011
253
1,308
Well I would call it the modric syndrome in terms of assists. Although eriksen do not have much assists but he is helping in terms of general play and buildup similar to modric
 

DaSpurs

Well-Known Member
Jan 20, 2013
11,816
13,655
Personally I'm still very unconvinced of our style under Poch, we struggle greatly to score goals in open play against any team that isn't playing open football - our best attacking performances came against the likes of Chelsea, even Man City. We are largely reliant on set pieces and Kane/Eriksen solo play for our goals. I think had Eriksen been injured til now and Soldado/Adebayor been playing we would be down in mid table.

I think Eriksen is creating less as far as assists because he has taken it upon himself to score more and we still just don't have a system that unlocks teams that park the bus. Every time we play a team that puts 11 back we look fairly clueless.

Too many of our players are just scared to make runs into space too. It seems to be a remnant of the AVB era, who's philosophy was keep possession and let Bale shoot - saw how well that worked when Bale left. There's just so much sideways passing and so little attacking movement behind the defense.

Completely spot on.

If I had things my way, I'd ditch this double pivot and go to a 4-3-3 with a "six and double-eight" setup in central midfield. With our current squad, this would be Bentaleb or Stambouli at the six, and Eriksen playing slightly higher in the left spot and Mason playing as a true box to box No 8. I think this would a) allow Eriksen more freedom and more space to drift in as @Blake Griffin is right that he does well drifting in from space, and b) forces a defensive mid into a specific role of shielding the back line. I think the double pivot is a good idea, but I don't think it works for us with how deep teams sit back and that it consequently chokes off Eriksen or any other CAM we have as we don't open up enough space from deep, and more importantly I think the double pivot actually creates too many gaps for us as neither player accepts enough defensive responsibility.

But back to Eriksen, I think this is a compromise as it affords him more freedom without sacrificing a pacier option on the wing. It also allows him to sit higher in general than both playing No 10 and LM, as when playing CAM in this current setup he's forced to check very deep to receive the ball, and at left mid he's having to defend and so we've lost our most creative outlet in an attacking position upon countering.
 

DaSpurs

Well-Known Member
Jan 20, 2013
11,816
13,655
Good post @Bus-Conductor and it's strange phenomenon that I agree with you that there's just no simple answer for. It is important to note that last season he supplied much more crosses especially when playing from the left, and that's a significant portion of how he got his assists. I'd be interested to see the numbers, but I'd be very surprised if he's crossing even remotely as much as he did last season. That's good IMO, as I prefer to keep the ball on the ground and look for a way through rather than hopefully cross in and consequently more likely expose ourselves to a counter, especially with the high line.

But I think the best answer for now is just an unusual combination of poor luck (as you point out, he's already almost met his tally of created chances from all of last season), poor finishing (considering a significant portion of the season he's been having to supply Soldado), and that to my eyes it seems like even more teams have figured out to sit deep against us because they know we struggle for a way through and that we lack enough pace, aggressive dribbling ability in tight spaces, and shooting ability from range to pry them back open. One could also even argue that part of it is due to the fact he's playing so often, and is therefore more keen to maintain possession rather than try riskier and more difficult attempts. In fact, to reinforce this, his passing accuracy is higher this season and his average pass length is also almost 2m shorter.

So I would predict that were we to bring in a better striker alternative to Kane, get better playmaking from deep in midfield, and place less fitness demand on Eriksen, that his assist tally would actually rise.
 

Ionman34

SC Supporter
Jun 1, 2011
7,182
16,793
THE TAO OF ERIKSEN


So, Christian Eriksen is the top scoring midfielder in the EPL. Nice. But why has this seemed to come at the cost of his ability to directly create for others ?

Last season he was eighth in the EPL assists table, which doesn’t sound brilliant until you realize he played much less than most (and fairly illustrious list of names it was too) ahead of him and was having his first season in the EPL

From one of the best attacking midfielders in the EPL, you would hope for more than one assist from the last 6 months of football wouldn’t you ?

His first season produced a very respectable 8 assists, added to his 7 goals, and bearing in mind he only played 1983 minutes of football, a pretty healthy combined return (for a first season in the EPL) of a goal/assist every 132 minutes (just less than a game and a half).

You would hope that having settled in and now become Spurs most played outfield player, he would be really into the swing of things, and that the combined rate would be at least as good this season.

As of today he’s played 1908 minutes, just under a game shy of the whole of last season, and while his scoring rate has edged up a notch, managing 9 in less pitch time, his assist rate has plummeted to a humble 1 all season, giving him a combined goal/assist every 191 minutes (just over two games).

So on those two naked stats, and even allowing for the fact that the assist stat can be a bit vague, his overall “end” productivity has dipped.

The question is why? And is this the full picture?

It was suggested to me that perhaps his creative productivity has dipped due to a more rigid tactical application by Pochettino than under the rather more Redknappesque laissez-faire of Sherwood. I felt that this wasn’t the case, that from watching his games he was playing with as much or even more freedom than at any time with us. I also remembered Pochettino saying in an interview a few weeks back that it was important that Eriksen had freedom within his system.

One of the ways we can test this is by looking at the matrixes for where Eriksen was receiving the ball in games under the two and compare, to see if this gave us any clues.

rScVhe.png



PTgBFa.png


The three under Sherwood were played as LM (442) in the Stoke and Palace games and wide left forward (433) v Everton.

The three under Pochettino as ACM (4231) QPR and Chelsea and as ALM (4231) v WBA.

The patterns suggests that there were no more restrictions on his movement under Pochettino than there were under Sherwood.

I quick look at his starting position is a little more informative. Or is it?

Nearly all his goals (7) and assists (7) under Sherwood came from a default starting position on the left (the role frequently given under Sherwood).

Under Sherwood he played 14 games as LM/ALM/LF in 442/4231/433 formations, 2 games as ACM in 4231, 2 games as a CM.

6 goals and 6 assists came from the left attacking positions, 1 goal and 2 assists came from 2 attacking central positions.

So in pure numbers, more came from the left, but as a percentage he was more productive from the right. Albiet from a very small control sample.

This has been almost exactly reversed this season. Under Pochettino he’s started 14 games as an ACM, 6 games as ALM, 2 games as ARM.

He’s scored 5 when his starting position has been central (ACM), 3 when it’s been left (ALM) and 1 from the right (ARM – he only started there once against Sunderland at home). But one of those “left” goals was a free kick which has no relevance to where he plays and one was against Hull, where he started left, was moved to CMR, then moved again to ACM from where he scored (so this technically belongs in the “right” stats. The one assist came form the left.

The bottom line is one season he was played predominantly left, the next predominantly centrally and both seasons he scored goals, but from the left last season he did create more goals for others. 5 of those assists last season were crosses into the box from wide positions, as opposed to clever through balls which accounted for 1 assist.

I checked the stats for his final couple of seasons a Ajax, and it turns out he was pretty unproductive in terms of assists (0 for last two league seasons) but, at Ajax, this could be explained by the fact that he did frequently play a deeper role in the middle three of their 433.

In terms of scoring, it really doesn’t seem to matter where he starts. In terms of assists, he definitely produced more from the left last season – 6/14 (3 LM, 2 ALM, 1 ACM) but this season has only produced 1/6 so the left magic seems to have worn off in terms of assists.

Here are some other stats comparisons for the last two seasons:



-------------------------2013-14 ------------------------------------2014-15


Minutes ----------------1983 ------------------------------------1908


Goals---------------------- 7 ----------------------------------------8

Assists ---------------------8 ---------------------------------------1

Combined ----------------15--------------------------------------10


Shots ----------------------- 48 -------------------------------------65

On target ----------------- 22 --------------------------------------18


Attempts created -------- 60--------------------------------------53


Passes ------------------- 1109------------------------------------1181

Accurate Passes --------- 908 -----------------------------------993


Tackles -------------------- 19 ------------------------------------------27



They tell us perhaps how Eriksen’s scoring rate has gone up, as he’s clearly having more shots per game, the thing we don’t know is whether this is because Pochettino is encouraging him to be more selfish, more often, when in and around the box. They also tell us that Eriksen is pretty much creating as many chances for others and, even better, is seeing more ball and making more tackles than last year. Which may not be translating into direct assists, but is almost certainly contributing to the team cause.

In terms of how much he sees the ball, he receives it an average of 59 times per game in the 6 games he’s started ALM this season. He receives it an average of 43 in games he’s started ACM. That figure could be slightly skewed by the disparity in the amount of the two control samples.


The Conclusion

Where have last season’s assists gone?

The honest answer is, I don’t have a clue. And the stats don’t really shed too much light on it either. But the stats do possibly tell us what the problem isn’t. It doesn’t seem to be tactical. Either in terms of the rigidity of his role or the location he starts from.

Last season’s stats suggest playing from the left might have been the answer but a rate of I assist every 2.3 games has turned into 1 assist every 6 this season, playing from the left.

I wondered if playing the orthodox Left Midfield of Sherwood's 442 helped, but only 3 of his 6 assists last season came from this position.

He’s definitely shooting more this season, but he’s also seeing more of the ball this year, so you’d hope he’d have still produced more than 1 assist all season.

This season we are seeing a harder working Eriksen who is seeing more ball, making more tackles and scoring more goals, he seems to be creating, or trying to create as many chances, according to the stats, but for whatever reason they are not resulting in assists.

This season, the players playing in those wide attacking roles more often have picked up the creative baton, with Chadli and Lamela wading in with 11 between them. This season Eriksen has played a far more central role, even when played left he has invariably drifted inside where space is tight and creativity gets stifled. For half the season two of our strikers were woefully out of form in front of goal, and that almost certainly hasn’t helped.

Eriksen’s talent and technique have never been in question, but there were times last season and the beginning of this when questions were being asked about his ability to cope with the robustness of the EPL, to contribute more in the tougher games and more consistently in general. I think we have seen him grow as a player this season, become better equipped to contribute more consistently, and even if he’s not providing assists, he’s contributing more to the overall team dynamic and is probably the single biggest individual influence on our season this year so far.

Ever thought of doing your own blog BC? Or is this actually one that you've posted here too?

Good read. I did have a chuckle when, after all of the analysis, the conclusion you came to was "no idea."

Good effort though, I enjoyed reading it.
 

Everlasting Seconds

Well-Known Member
Jan 9, 2014
14,914
26,616
Very well written. Very very well.
The overall goal tally for Spurs is 35 now vs. 30 at the same point last season. Thus, fewer assists when his team has scored more goals.

I think the explanation lies in his shooting. He shoots far more but he is less on target. Ergo, utlimately, Eriksen wastes the ball far more, which I think goes for almost the entire team.
 
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Jody

SC Supporter
Sep 11, 2004
7,008
5,826
Interesting read. But the fact is he's on track to improve on last seasons overall impact, combined goals and assists, so that can only be a good thing.
 

adamthfc

Member
Jun 28, 2004
775
170
I'm hate the assist stat. The player is relying on the other player to score, if they set up a soldado tap in which he fluffs that player doesn't get a deserved assist in his stats
 

TaoistMonkey

Welcome! Everything is fine.
Staff
Oct 25, 2005
32,629
33,579
Attempts created is the telling stat. 60 vs 53. Not really his thought we are converting less of his passes.
 

spursfan77

Well-Known Member
Aug 13, 2005
46,684
104,964
I think it's because he's doing too much running.

Like the article, looks like lots of effort has gone into it.
 

DiscoD1882

SC Supporter
Mar 27, 2006
6,963
14,762
yeah. i agree a nicely written piece but as per usual stats dont really tell the full story. his tackles ratio clearly points to the fact he has more work to do within the team and his distance covered durting games is one of the highest in league (correct me if im wrong) Maybe he produced more assists last year as he was in the correct part of the pitch to do this. which probably means he wasnt doing enough for the team, Pocky is abot team. not individual. its a clear mantra. would be interesting to see what the rest of the teams stats are to see if other players are picking up the slack.
 

jonnyp

Well-Known Member
Jun 11, 2006
7,249
9,792
How many times has he assisted the assist or started a move with a clever pass that eventually led to a goal? Just looking at assist stats in a vacuum is pretty pointless.
 

Spurs_Bear

Well-Known Member
Jan 7, 2009
17,094
22,286
Totally agree with those about the useless insight that the 'assist' stat apparently gives. He's not being any less creative, the lad that he is passing to just isn't sticking it away. But fair play for having the time on your hands to look into it.
 

Kendall

Well-Known Member
Feb 8, 2007
38,502
11,933
I think generally we've been poor at creating chances as a team because our movement of the ball is slow and our player movement off it is shit and predictable.

A bunch of Eriksen's goals have come from exceptional individual technique outside the box. We are just very fortunate to have players like Eriksrn and Kane that can create goals for themselves out of very little.
 

dudu

Well-Known Member
Jan 28, 2011
5,314
11,048
I think generally we've been poor at creating chances as a team because our movement of the ball is slow and our player movement off it is shit and predictable.

A bunch of Eriksen's goals have come from exceptional individual technique outside the box. We are just very fortunate to have players like Eriksrn and Kane that can create goals for themselves out of very little.

And Chadli. He is very good at stretching defences and making runs across the back 4 making space for others as well as himself.
 
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