@Regulus Arcturus Black Yet again, you're just pointing to numbers or awards without
any descriptive analysis of his game that made him "excellent".
He was picked solely on the back of his goals, nothing else. Just like how these awards usually go. Who usually wins MOTM? The guy who gets the goal, not necessarily the player who actually plays the best overall.
This happens all the time in football. It's a phenomenon called outcome bias. Most people just look at who's got the goals, and that's where all the plaudits go.
And that's probably why you're over in the Jack Grealish thread, with no chance of grasping how monumentally beneficial a winger like him is to improving possession and control in a team. Grealish will never be the goal threat Rashford is, yet he is such a more pivotal and instrumental player than Rashford can ever be. Why? Because he rarely gives away the ball, and constantly creates space and positional superiority for his team. Pep didn't sign Grealish to score goals or entertain. He signed him to keep control in matches, because that's what ultimately brings you trophies. Control (Possession and positional superiority) is by far the number one metric that most consistently correlates to a lot of goals, and not many conceded. And you will never truly understand how or why, until you learn to look beyond just surface level stats like goals.
Football is a team sport. Just because Rashford got about 18 Premier League goals last season, it didn't make us any better as a team.. We still scored almost exact same amount of goals we had the year before with Ronaldo, and we are right on track to score just as many goals this season (avg. of 1.5 goals per match, to be precise).
We need players who make sure we keep possession. That's the only way we can consistently create more and better chances, whilst also reduce shots against. You can still be good on the counter if you like, but possession needs to improve or it is impossible to actually control games. Look at Liverpool. They blend high possession with counterattacking football. It's not as effective or sustainable as Pep's more controlled approach. But it's a lot better than letting Bruno and Rashford kick and run. And that's exactly why a player like Grealish is so much better and more important to success than Rashford. He will improve the team by providing control, thus leading to more goals for the team, regardless of who actually happens to score them. In the end, it doesn't matter who scores a goal. It's the team that needs goals to climb the table, not individual players.
You seem completely incapable of understanding his. And just keep spouting out non-arguments like lists of goals or awards. Instead of pointing to yet another list of goals or awards, tell us exactly how Rashford improves us tactically. What skills does he have that makes us play better as a team, with more possession and control? You know, the type of football that actually is necessary to win the Premier League on a consistent basis.
Players like Shaw (when fit), Martinez (also when fit, sadly) and Mainoo... Those are the types of players we need. That's the sort of players with attributes that improve our control and possession, and actually make us a better team. Or in other words, the direct antithesis to the type of players Rashford and Bruno are.
It's quite absurd how you (and some others) can't seem to grasp this, no matter what. Yet you still manage to see that Mainoo is a fantastic player... That's baffling. Maybe try thinking about exactly how and why Mainoo is so good? What is it exactly about him that makes him so special in our team? You know, besides the obvious: He is a young academy graduate. It's his attributes. And what are his attributes? His press resistance, his ability to dictate tempo, and his ability to keep it simple and recycle possession. Just the very opposite of Bruno and Rashford. And not coincidentally, the exact same attributes that makes players like Jack Grealish and Declan Rice so damn good as well.
I swear, there are 12 year olds who can grasp this. Yet there are so many grown men who can't seem to analyse football beyond counting numbers of goals. Staggering.