Aaron Ramsey
No one can say at Arsenal that players are pigeon-holed, but in a sense for Aaron Ramsey, that might have been the case. When he joined Arsenal in 2008, tiki-taka, following Spain’s triumph in the European Championships and then subsequently Barcelona’s domination, was in vogue at the time. Arsenal too, were going through a transitional phase and players comfortable in possession would become a key factor of their game: Cesc Fabregas would be symbolic of that. Youngsters coming in would continue that tradition and as such, Ramsey’s progression to a play-making, pass-master midfielder was obvious. Except over time, Arsene Wenger realised that Ramsey need not be a master of anything, but simply good at all things.
Actually, when Wenger signed Aaron Ramsey, he described the Welshman as an “offensive Roy Keane”, indicating he wasn’t putting any limit on the player Ramsey could be. Playing Ramsey out wide was to help him achieve his potential as Wenger says, by deploying a central player wide, it allows him to “get used to using the ball in a small space, as the touchline effectively divides the space that’s available to him by two; when you move the same player back to the middle, he breathes more easily and can exploit space better.”
Ramsey has never looked back and since the start of 2013, he has progressed into an accomplished number 8, winning possession, finding team-mates and a game based on non-stop running. The next step will surely be to become the complete midfielder – and that means also becoming a master of the pass in the process.
Of course, Ramsey’s evolution follows the trend in football where players need to be all-rounders, no more so than in midfield – the heart of any given team. Manchester City play with two central midfielders who can’t really be described as holding midfielders or playmakers. Even across the border, Tottenham Hotspur’s muddled attempt at playing progressive football has seen them discard the destroyers.
In Arsenal’s midfield, there’s also Mikel Arteta who has had to adapt his game and learn how to steal the ball off opponents. Indeed, that’s one part of Ramsey’s evolution – more than his goalscoring – that has impressed me most: his tackling. He’s one of the highest rated midfielders in the Premier League at regaining possession back. This after Sam Allardyce says that teams nowadays “train players to intercept rather than tackle – because most tackles are fouls now”. Ramsey is really becoming a master at everything.
No one can say at Arsenal that players are pigeon-holed, but in a sense for Aaron Ramsey, that might have been the case. When he joined Arsenal in 2008, tiki-taka, following Spain’s triumph in the European Championships and then subsequently Barcelona’s domination, was in vogue at the time. Arsenal too, were going through a transitional phase and players comfortable in possession would become a key factor of their game: Cesc Fabregas would be symbolic of that. Youngsters coming in would continue that tradition and as such, Ramsey’s progression to a play-making, pass-master midfielder was obvious. Except over time, Arsene Wenger realised that Ramsey need not be a master of anything, but simply good at all things.
Actually, when Wenger signed Aaron Ramsey, he described the Welshman as an “offensive Roy Keane”, indicating he wasn’t putting any limit on the player Ramsey could be. Playing Ramsey out wide was to help him achieve his potential as Wenger says, by deploying a central player wide, it allows him to “get used to using the ball in a small space, as the touchline effectively divides the space that’s available to him by two; when you move the same player back to the middle, he breathes more easily and can exploit space better.”
Ramsey has never looked back and since the start of 2013, he has progressed into an accomplished number 8, winning possession, finding team-mates and a game based on non-stop running. The next step will surely be to become the complete midfielder – and that means also becoming a master of the pass in the process.
Of course, Ramsey’s evolution follows the trend in football where players need to be all-rounders, no more so than in midfield – the heart of any given team. Manchester City play with two central midfielders who can’t really be described as holding midfielders or playmakers. Even across the border, Tottenham Hotspur’s muddled attempt at playing progressive football has seen them discard the destroyers.
In Arsenal’s midfield, there’s also Mikel Arteta who has had to adapt his game and learn how to steal the ball off opponents. Indeed, that’s one part of Ramsey’s evolution – more than his goalscoring – that has impressed me most: his tackling. He’s one of the highest rated midfielders in the Premier League at regaining possession back. This after Sam Allardyce says that teams nowadays “train players to intercept rather than tackle – because most tackles are fouls now”. Ramsey is really becoming a master at everything.
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