Why cutting down on crosses isn’t the answer for Liverpool – Opinion

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There are a whole host of potential reasons as to why Liverpool’s usual method of producing goals just isn’t working out for them at the moment.

Ranging from the injury to key man Virgil van Dijk to Trent Alexander-Arnold’s poor form, there are a mire of excuses that the club could bury themselves in, but the fact of the matter is that something has to change.

Our current approach of pinging hopeful crosses into the box, as if we had former signings Andy Carroll and Christian Benteke looming over the keeper, just isn’t going to cut it – or so some claim.

The closest the Reds came to scoring in the Burnley defeat – beyond Origi’s one-on-one with Nick Pope – was when Andy Robertson and Bobby Firmino linked up with a lovely one-two in the 18-yard box, offering the Brazilian a generous sight of the goal.

It’s a moment in which you’d have expected a top Premier League striker to at least hit the target, but sadly the No.9 fluffed his effort and the ball fizzled harmlessly out of play.

Now, can you remember a situation in that match in which a cross led to a genuine goalscoring opportunity? It’s a somewhat unfair question, of course, given that our right-back had a particularly torrid time with his crosses on the night.

Nonetheless, you’d find few who’d argue against the fact that Liverpool’s fullbacks remain two of our most potent threats going forward.

That being said, recent critique has boldly claimed that we can’t continue to rely on crossing going into the second-half of the season, particularly against sides who play the low block as effectively as Sean Dyche’s Clarets.

Advising Liverpool to cut out crossing from its style of play is virtually akin to asking a leopard to change its spots – the two are very much part and parcel, as is demonstrated by the club’s stats from the current and prior season.

This term, Klopp’s men have registered 461 crosses, 36 more than West Ham, who come second in the list; in 2019/20, we were just under Manchester City’s winning total of 914, only 18 crosses shy, according to the Premier League’s statistics.

Last term, Alexander-Arnold (382) and Robertson (210) were responsible for over 66% of the side’s crosses, a figure that has admittedly dropped (52.36%) this season.

But let’s dive a little deeper into this: in 2019/20, the English fullback (81) and Robbo (41) registered a combined total of 122 successful crosses, according to figures from Kickest, meaning that only 20.6% of that 66% figure actually found their target (or at least one of their teammates).

That shouldn’t frighten you, as according to research conducted by Soccerment, “the average cross accuracy [across Europe’s top five leagues] is 23.5%.”

Now, I know what you’re thinking: that’s a hell of a lot of numbers you’ve just thrown so recklessly at us there. But hear me out.

Given the seemingly inexplicable impotence of our forward line in recent weeks – and the much-celebrated importance of our fullbacks to our attacks – you’d be forgiven for thinking Trent and Robertson are to blame.

Fast-forward to this season, however, and the numbers are quite intriguing, to say the least.

Our No.26 (40) has nearly reached his total from last year, whilst Alexander-Arnold (26) has floundered at the halfway mark, producing a combined total of 66 successful crosses… from 310 attempted (174 and 136 respectively) – that comes to 21.29%.

The percentage score is actually higher than the score amassed last term; even more intriguing is the fact that Trent’s success rate for crosses has dipped ever so slightly from 21.20% in 2019/20 to 19.11% in 2020/21. Fascinatingly, our Scot’s rate helped pick up the slack, rising from 19.52% in 2019/20 to 22.98% in 2020/21.

For a player undergoing his worst spell at the club, savaged for his allegedly limited impact from the wing this term, you’d have thought that Trent’s crossing accuracy would have taken a more notable hit, no?

Let’s compare these figures more broadly.

If we combine the success rates of both fullbacks’ crosses, season-to-season, we end up with a score of 20.6% in 2019/20 compared to 21.29% this season!

Robbo may be picking up the slack, but our fullbacks have actually improved, in combination, from the prior term.

I’ll be the first to say that their value is indicated by more than just their crossing ability of course, but it does arguably dispel the myth around Trent and Andy’s crossing success and, in turn, raises questions about what our forwards have been doing with the balls sent their way.

It’s a lot to take in, and even then I still feel like I’m just scratching the surface of the statistics and the alternative questions that arise.

For instance, is it possible that the successful crosses haven’t been placed in as dangerous areas as the prior season?

Paradoxically, statistics can be massively illuminating whilst also blinding one to the truth of their eyes.

We’ll be paying close attention to our crossing this Sunday, though I have a feeling the tie with Manchester United will only serve to further prove that the flaw in Liverpool’s approach is largely unrelated to our propensity for crossing.

More Stories Andy Robertson Liverpool Trent Alexander-Arnold

1 Comment

  1. I am ever so glad this topic is coming up in a popular blog like EOTK. I am a member of the Sky TV Skype group for Liverpool and I have been hammering on this same point since last season.

    Even as we won the league last season, I fell we underachieved in terms of goals scored. We have a pattern of play, but we are not making the most of it.

    What’s my point? Just like your opening remark, we don’t have a target man to convert a myriad of the crosses we make. We have 2 of the best most consistent crossers in the league, yet we don’t have a target man; that’s the biggest mistake of our lives.

    Target men don’t just score goals, they know positioning within the box. They can act as decoy, draw all th defenders to themselves while freeing others to receive the crosses. If over manhandled, they can win many penalty kicks for us.

    Now, I am not saying we should change our pattern to accommodate a target man, No! But we can make do with getting a 5th striker who is a target man and stick him on the bench for a few games when we will need him during a season.

    For 2 seasons, we have been on this system, it’s only natural for coaches to analyse us and come up with solutions. We have to evolve.

    Our front 3 are not target men, yet we keep pinging balls to them. It’s a waste. If you analyse those successful crosses, you will agree with me that very few were direct goals. Most could be drop downs for the final scorer.

    The solution? Get an aged target man. Yes an aged person who knows he is 5th choice behind our front 3 and Jota. Strikers in their prime will not accept to be 5th choice and I don’t advocate we change our system to suit another 1 player.

    He knows he is playing for his retirement benefits in a top team. Get him, stick him on the bench and he only comes in when we are desperate plus when Klopp wants to make him happy as a human. Make the best out of his for 2 seasons and then get another old man to replace him.

    2 seasons ago, Sturbridge almost sat out the season, last season Origi almost sat out the season. So that goes to show that we can afford to keep players we don’t use and still pay them.

    At Chelsea, Giroud was always on the bench until recently. Saints have the Irish boy on the bench always. There are many clubs that have strikers they rarely use sitting on the bench.

    Examples? Imagine what Giroud would do if he had Robbo and Trent. Imagine Andy Murray, Llorente, Mandzukic, Algeria’s Baghdad Bounedjah.

    These are some good old target men who can still give you 15-20 minutes 10 times a season. The best part is we only get to call on them in desperate situations when we’ve already got teams camped in their side of the pitch. So such old plaher won’t have much ground to cover.

    We are raving about Robbo and Trent, yet we have no target man, just imagine what could have been if we did. I hope Klopp reasons towards this angle. Those type of games will surely come up again. Teams will surely come to defend and plan to go home with a point. We have to plan for them. Thank you.

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