Agenda headsI thought he had an excellent game. Much better than Ter Stegen who looked nervous and average.
It's noticeable that some posters just regularly giving negative comments after every fecking game.
Mistakes can and will happen with all keepers. But De Gea's issues are about what he can't do as a keeper. And when you're weak at commanding your area and with the ball at your feet, there will always be big question marks surrounding your ability as a keeper.
Ter Stegen got beaten on the near post and that's a mistake and mistakes can happen. But as a goalkeeper with a well rounded skillset he's comfortably better than De Gea.
Erik ten Hag is a proponent of vertical positional play and De Gea is a big weakness in that regard.
Yes we could have lost without him because we would have 10 men? because we wouldn’t have a goalkeeper?He saved our arses in the last minute. Could have lost without him.
I can't believe some actually want to replace him. People acting as if this will be easy or something.
He's a great keeper with few unimportant flaws really and one of our most reliable players. Replacing him will be damn hard and it's the least thing we need to do now considering there're more important positions to reinforce in the team.
De Gea can give us many more solid years.
It's only irrelevant if you're completely clueless when it comes to understanding the principles of vertical positional play and how a keeper impacts the first phase of the build up in the mid to long-term.I don’t think there’s anything more irrelevant than posting first half goalkeeper stats for a 0-0 HT game that ended up 2-2.
The amount of criticism after a game where he had so many big saves just goes to show how much blind bias he has against him. Absolutely ridiculous.
Seeing Ter Stephen ce out and play first time passes that broke lines, compared to De Gea who either punted the ball forward, pass it 5 meters away to Varane or lost it, was difficult.It's only irrelevant if you're completely clueless when it comes to understanding the principles of vertical positional play and how a keeper impacts the first phase of the build up in the mid to long-term.
The game tonight ended up being a battle of high regains and Ter Stegen was again the better and more rounded keeper.
It's only irrelevant if you're completely clueless when it comes to understanding the principles of vertical positional play and how a keeper impacts the first phase of the build up in the mid to long-term.
The game tonight ended up being a battle of high regains and Ter Stegen was again the better and more rounded keeper.
It was difficult mate and it would be beneficial for the collective if we had a more commanding goalkeeper imo.Seeing Ter Stephen ce out and play first time passes that broke lines, compared to De Gea who either punted the ball forward, pass it 5 meters away to Varane or lost it, was difficult.
Totally agree. I was even happy with Henderson, who is far from what we truly need but still an upgrade on multiple levels.It was difficult mate and it would be beneficial for the collective if we had a more commanding goalkeeper imo.
And there's nothing modern about replacing De Gea. Expecting the keeper to be more proactive isn't a modern concept and neither is the concept of playing the ball out with your feet a modern innovation.
The first half stats weren't posted due to the scoreline but rather due to how Ter Stegen was a net positive when it came to progressing the play. He made some good save too, but it's also about what else you can do as a keeper which is very important for managers who expect the keeper to create the first superiority.I’m not suggesting for a second that De Gea is better than Ter Stegen with the ball at his feet. We struggled in the first half massively playing out from the back. I said in the match day thread that if we had Barca’s keeper and striker we’d have demolished them.
I’m just laughing at posting first half keeper stats from a game that had no goals in the first half and four in the second.
On the Ter Stegen near post goal being a mistake, that has to be one of the most annoying myths in football. The notion that it’s easier to save a near post shot is so fecking dumb. And it’s maddening when former players and commentators keep trotting it out. Because if it really is easier to score at the far post then the keeper is standing in the wrong position! The perfect position for a shot should always make it equally difficult to score at either post.
Criticising him for the second goal is a bit weird - would be ridiculous for him to predict Lewa was going to completely miss the ball and dive early to save Raphina's cross/shot
Honestly that is the only question. It really is quite easy to sign a keeper who has been comfortably better than De Gea for the last few years. The only issue is that for most of them there is the question of how will they handle the step up in pressure?The simple concept being sometimes it's better the devil you know. There is no guarantee that anyone we bring in will a better shot stopper (assuming they are better at distribution), however for me by far the biggest question mark on any new GK we bring in is actually handling the mental side of things. What we have with DDG for any of its flaws is worlds better than what we had between Schmikes and VSD.
Completely agree.Honestly that is the only question. It really is quite easy to sign a keeper who has been comfortably better than De Gea for the last few years. The only issue is that for most of them there is the question of how will they handle the step up in pressure?
Nick Pope is an easy example. He's been miles better than De Gea for a few years now and was available for cheap. However he has been poor whenever given the chance for England (I didn't watch the games but from what others said), so that definitely raises the question of can he handle pressure? He stepped up to Newcastle this season and has once again been much better than De Gea so he's shown an improvement in that aspect, but obviously Newcastle isn't Man Utd.
Ultimately we can't let that question hold us back though. We always have to seek improvement else we'll never move forward, and goalkeeper is one of the most notable areas in our team that can be improved. If we get it wrong we just have to try again (like both Pep and Klopp did).
Also, it should be noted that De Gea has hardly been great under pressure himself the last five years. He's had a fairly big tendency to make mistakes in a lot of our bigger games in that time, which has directly led to us being knocked out of cups or out of the top 4.
One for the cameras.De Gea had a good game yesterday and his save on Raphinas shot was beautiful
One for the cameras.
Decent hands I suppose, but the strike was fairly central. He made two or three decent saves yesterday, but nothing that you wouldn't expect a keeper to stop. It's what he doesn't give you that is more worrying.Every save he does is for camera's according to people
Him saving certain shots like Fati's was because his positioning was excellent. His overall positioning gets overlooked too much so thats why shots always look like they are easier to save
I don't get this idea. He makes saves I would expect any keeper to make, he just does it in more "flashy" way, what makes it look like it was a difficult shot to defend.Every save he does is for camera's according to people
Him saving certain shots like Fati's was because his positioning was excellent. His overall positioning gets overlooked too much so thats why shots always look like they are easier to save
One for the cameras.
The save itself was very easy. Any keeper who let that in would be considered to have made a huge mistake. Holding it was definitely impressive though. Most keepers (including De Gea himself) would normally have just pushed it out wide either for a corner or back into play.He made it look like it was easy. A keeper doing that will have an influence on that opposition player.
Schmeichel used to do these kind of theatrics a lot. Its all part of the game.