Sergio Busquets - The Heart of Barcelona
While Lionel Messi will collect all the plaudits for
Barcelona’s magnificent 4-0 victory over AC Milan, there was one player that
was comfortably the best player on the pitch – Sergio Busquets. Long underrated
by most, who know him more as one of the masters of football’s dark arts, he is
an integral part of Barcelona’s style of play, and last night he showed the
world just why he is so important to the Catalan giants.
Since the turn of the century, the value of a world-class
holding midfielder has become apparent to most football fans. Claude Makelele
was the first to really be recognised as making the position his own. The “entire
engine” of the Real Madrid team, according to Zinedine Zidane, and “the most
important, yet least appreciated midfielder at Real” according to Steve
McManaman, he was a key part of Mourinho’s revolution at Chelsea.
However, Sergio Busquets can be seen as the evolution of the
Makelele role. He is the intelligent, tenacious and aggressive midfield
destroyer that Makelele and many holding midfielders since aspired to be.
However, he is also the deep-lying playmaker that is the start of virtually
every Barcelona attack. He makes what appears to be so simple, so simple. Even
when it is not as easy as you think.
Last night, only Xavi made more passes than Sergio Busquet’s
116, and Busquet’s 92% completion rate was higher than Xavi’s. Busquets was not
dispossessed once in the entire match, while his teammates Messi and Iniesta had
the ball taken off them five times. He recovered the ball thirteen times, ran
the midfield and disrupted Milan’s attempts to break on numerous occasions with
his pressing.
People might point to the fact that Busquets purely makes
simple passes. He does make simple passes, but effectively and intelligently.
He is a master at finding his teammates between the lines and in space. It was
Busquet’s pass that found Messi between the lines to play the one-two with Xavi
that led to the opening goal. A simple pass? Yes. A highly effective pass? Most
definitely.
In terms of holding midfielders, Xabi Alonso is possibly the
only player that is at the level of Busquets when it comes to finding players
between the lines. The difference is that Alonso takes his time to spot the
pass. Busquets plays it immediately. He can dissect midfields, casting them as
virtually useless, as he finds one of his attacking players in the space
between midfield and defence.
His passing is a key strength of his game. He seems to know
where he is going to pass the ball, even before the ball has even been passed
to him. In a team filled with gifted one and two touch players, Busquets is the
master. He does not hold the ball and slow down the play unless it is
absolutely necessary. In general, he spends less than two seconds between
receiving the ball and moving it on again.
He is also so calm in possession. With the fullbacks pushing
so far forward, one of Barcelona’s usual starting points is the ball from the
goalkeeper to Busquets, who then moves it on to a teammate. Teams know this,
yet do not seem to be able to do anything about it. Again, so simple, yet
seemingly beyond other players.
Against Malaga, Thiago Alcantara, a very gifted
young player, was in the same position. He received the ball from his keeper
with several Malaga players closing him down. He hesitated, was dispossessed
and Malaga scored. A scenario that would never have happened with Busquets,
despite being put in that position multiple times every match.
His closing down and tactical intelligence was outstanding
last night. When Niang looked to drop deeper to give Milan an option, Busquets
always anticipated the ball faster and reached the ball first. Whenever Milan
looked to escape their own half, Busquets was there to intercept or to force a
mistake. Again, it all sounds so simple. However, when Mascherano tried to do
the same, stepping up to make a quick challenge, he misjudged the ball and
Niang was able to get in behind and hit the post.
Most holding midfielders receive the ball and will often
give it back to the defenders. Simple passing to retain the football. However, the
ability that marks Busquets out as a level above is his ability to move the
ball forward, whilst still retaining the football. Michael Laudrup once said
that the most difficult thing when you start with the ball at the back is “to
give it somebody who is facing the opponent’s goal.” This is where Busquets
stands out.
He has played the majority of games this season, but there
is a noticeable trend is those games that he has been absent. He missed the 2-2
draw in the Copa del Rey against Malaga. He missed both Champions League
matches against Celtic. Without Busquets, Barcelona struggle. Put simply, there is no player in world football that could replace him in this Barcelona team.
A wonderful description of Busquets was given by Marti
Pernarau – “He is not fast or agile or flexible. He is not strong, nor
powerful, nor does he have a low centre of gravity to support himself. But he
is indispensible. You do not see him, but he is always there. He is the invisible
friend.”
He may be the invisible friend. However, his quality and
importance on the pitch for both Barcelona and Spain is becoming more and more
visible to fans worldwide. In the words of Spain’s Vicente Del Bosque: “If I
could be any player in the world, I would like to be Sergio Busquets. He does
everything…”
Good article. No doubt. Terrible footballer. No doubt.
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