The Great Wall of Turin

The Great Wall of Turin

Dominant defensive performances should cause fans to reconsider their assumptions about defensively-oriented football.

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Juventus advanced to the Champions League quarterfinals after beating Tottenham Hotspur 4-3 on aggregate.

Juventus have advanced to the Champions League quarterfinals after beating Tottenham Hotspur 4-3 on aggregate. The Bianconeri won the second leg at Wembley by a score of 2-1.

Naturally, as the scorer of the winning goal, Paulo Dybala received the majority of attention and commanded the most headlines.

However, he was not the Juventus player most responsible for their victory.

Juve defender Giorgio Chiellini played an absolute masterpiece of a game to lead the Italian club to victory.

In an utterly dominant defensive performance, he had four successful tackles, three blocks, and 13 clearances. He also won all four of his aerial duels.

His man-marking and positional play was on point all night long, and his outstanding defensive play almost completely shut down the likes of Harry Kane, Christian Eriksen, and Dele Alli.

On top of that, even though last week I railed against intentional fouling, in the context of the current rules even his yellow card was a positive play, as Alli was about to launch a dangerous counter-attack before he was ruthlessly chopped down by Chiellini.

In his 13 years at Juventus, it is unlikely that Chiellini ever produced a better individual performance.

In fact, I would go so far as to say that his performance against Tottenham was one of the best individual displays in a football match that I have ever seen, offensive or defensive.

This is why it’s such a shame that, because of his defensive role, his immense contributions will largely be overlooked.

Chiellini played an absolute masterpiece of a game to lead the Italian club to victory.
Chiellini played an absolute masterpiece of a game to lead the Italian club to victory.

Defenders  often receive much criticism if their team concede many goals, and rightly so.

However, if the team wins, the defenders almost never get the praise they deserve – that often goes to the “glamour” positions: attacking midfielders, wingers, and, of course, strikers.

Unfortunately for clubs like Juventus, who pride themselves on being defensive powerhouses, this works against them in the eyes of the public as their defence-first approach does not predispose them to public acclaim, regardless of the tremendous skill displayed.

Many people will criticise defensive-minded teams for playing “ugly football”, but this is an unfair categorisation.

Why shouldn’t a defensive approach be held in the same regard as an offensive one?

Great defence can be as exciting to watch as great offense.

Think of a last-ditch goal-line clearance, a fingertip save from a difficult position, or a ferocious, clattering tackle.

Are those not entertaining to watch?

Furthermore, some of the greatest football teams of all time favoured a defensive approach.

Think of Italy’s 1982 World Cup-winning team, the AC Milan team that won three Champions Leagues between 1989 and 1994, and, of course, the godfather of defensive-minded teams: Helenio Herrera’s legendary Grande Inter team of the 1960s, which won two European crowns by pioneering the iconic playstyle that came to be known as “catenaccio”.

But more important than that, defence is half the game. It’s not as if it takes more skill to excel in attacking play than defensive play.

No team in their right mind would say that attack is more important than defence.

Yet, that’s how the vast majority of fans act.

The more fans heap credit on goalscorers while at the same time ignoring defenders, the more this situation will be perpetuated.

FIFA is guilty of this too.

Not since Fabio Cannavaro in 2006 has a defender been named the world’s best player.

However, dominant defensive performances like Chiellini’s against Tottenham deserve to be lauded just as much as an outstanding offensive performance.

Chiellini set the tone for a dogged, determined Juventus team as they ground down a talented but tactically-lacking Tottenham.

His play clearly got into the heads of the Tottenham players, with players such as Harry Kane missing chances they normally would have had no problems converting.

Ultimately, that’s what great defenders do. It’s not about directly preventing opposing strikers from scoring, as much as it is about sowing the seeds of doubt in their minds every time they touch the ball.

That is exactly what Chiellini did.

It’s time to rethink what is considered “entertaining”, “beautiful”, or even the cliché of “good football”.

An approach that prioritises defence can easily be all those things and then some, as Chiellini and Juventus demonstrated.

It’s time for the unsung heroes of football to start getting their due.

Eu Weijun works at FMT.

The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of FMT.

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