The 1-1 draw between
Kaya and Loyola: That gaping hole in the back and the heart for a comeback.
by rick olivares
After a thrilling 1-1 draw between Kaya and Loyola,
Santi Araneta, president of the former asked me, “So, do you think we still
need a coach?”
Araneta’s grin was from ear to ear. Why not? It was a
well-deserved result for Kaya that outplayed Loyola for much of the match
before coming back with about 10 minutes left to grab a badly needed draw and a
point in the standings.
My answer to Araneta was: “Of course.”
We laughed and I headed down toward the Kaya bench to
chat with Sean Illif and other players.
In the first 10 minutes of the match, Loyola
threatened to score. But Kaya began to assert itself on offense on a tactical
oversight by the Sparks.
It seemed that Loyola was so intent on attacking that
they forgot to track back and defend.
This play by Kaya accounted for nearly all their attempts in the match. |
The right side of Kaya (the left flank on Loyola’s
defensive half) saw them overload with one attacker (Alu Kigbu or Anton del
Rosario) taking on Roxy Dorlas. The wingback (Eddie Mallari) would run up in
support with another midfielder running in the middle to form a triangle.
If the first attacker broke past Dorlas, he would
launch a cross to the center of the box. If not, he would pass to the middle
where usually it was OJ Porteria.
Porteria had two options – a third was the pass back
– send another ball inside the box or make a lateral pass to the middle.
Think about it – Kigbu, Del Rosario, Porteria, and
Mallari. That’s speed on the wings. That is what made Kaya dangerous in the
2011-12 season.
The overload caused Dorlas to be left on his own.
Rodrigue Nembot would be engrossed with stopping Eric Dagroh. Matthew Hartmann
would drift too far in the middle that by the time he needed to recover, Kaya
was in a position to take a shot.
Practically 90% of Kaya’s attempts came from this
unprotected side. Even the free kick from Woody Ugarte came from a foul in that
area.
In my opinion, I thought that Loyola was slower on
defense. This should have been addressed at the half by maybe playing a 4-4-2
instead of their 4-2-3-1. Because of the hole on Loyola’s left side, they were
oft defending and having to clear the ball. This took away much from their
offense.
Masterful game plan by Kaya that they executed to
perfection. Even when they went down 1-0 from a brilliant scuffed shot goal by
Phil Younghusband, they stuck to what they were doing and equalized (off a
header by Sean Illif).
Illif, who has been playing great of late asked me, “Is
this where we turn things around?”
I smiled. “Let’s see what happens in the next game
then we can make that decision then.”
Great game. I hope they will find another great coach to hone their talent and mix it to perfection.
ReplyDeletewow. this is the type of blog entry I normally read on zonal marking. nice.
ReplyDeleteToo biased. If they game plan was so great, how come they could only do one goal.
ReplyDeletei guess you do not know anything about the game. good job.
DeleteRef Cuaresma (Loyola GK) was fantastic on tending the net except for that lone goal. If not, it would be at least 2-1 for KAYA.
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