Waiting for Georgia: Azzurri Looking at Major Defense Overhaul

I will make many changessaid Lippi after the Cyprus game. And that’s exactly what we’re expecting on Wednesday, when Italy receives Georgia at Stadio Friuli of Udine. Particularly we are looking at a big overhaul in defense, because the zone of the field which historically has made them famous is looking very shaky in the Azzurri at the moment.

And who would have thought? In their last two official matches (one unfriendly and one friendly also unfriendly) the Azzurri have conceded 3 goals, resulting in an alarming 1.5 goals per game average. In fact that statistic could have been even worse, had it not been for a certain Gianluigi Buffon keeping guard between the posts (especially on Saturday). Kinda ironic when you consider that not so long ago (ok, 2 years) the team coached by the same man conceded 2 goals in the entire World Cup tournament, one of them being an own goal and the other a penalty kick. Is it really time to sound the alarm, or do the Azzurri have extenuating circumstances?

The answer to that question is: well, a little bit of both. Certainly, the many injuries aren’t helping: Fabio Cannavaro, Giorgio Chiellini, and Marco Materazzi… these are just three of the names that missed out on one (if not both) of the matches in question (and you can say all you want about Matrix’s crappy Euro performance, he was solid against Sampdoria after his return from injury). In particular, the absence of Chiellini (aka the “Azzurri Euro 2008 Rock”) is currently the most problematic, as Saturday proved that even the presence of Fabio Cannavaro can be nullified when he is paired with someone like Andrea Barzagli in calamity-mode.

So, until Keyser Giorgio gets back (sometime in early October) what’s the plan for Wednesday? Andrea Dossena and Nicola Legrottaglie, that’s what.
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Andrea Dossena

A skilled wing-back with fast pace and good ball control skills, Dossena seems to be the perfect replacement for one of the Berlin heroes, and most definitely a starter for the Azzurri in the future. Beginning his career at Verona as a youth player in 2001, he was soon promoted to the senior squad in which he totalled 4 seasons before being brought to Serie A by Udinese (2005). The Bianconeri immediately loaned him to Treviso for a year, after which the player returned to Friuli in the 2006-07 season, was given the nº8 jersey and made 63 appearances in the following two years, scoring 2 league goals along the way.

Dossena has only been in England since July (being bought as a direct replacement for John Arne Riise), but he already has a sense of the difference between playing in the Premier League and plying his trade in Serie A. “The Premier League is more advanced in terms of atmosphere and culture, but the Italian way of life is better. Violence however, must disappear from our stadiums. Through a zero tolerance policy or other means, but it must go“.

Replacing the injured Fabio Grosso, the Liverpool defender claims this new starting role is a bittersweet experience. “I’m happy to be in the squad but not as Fabio’s expense,” said the ex-Udinese man. “However, I had always hoped to be playing in this match ever since the venue was first revealed. My old Udinese supporters will give us a big boost, especially when our fitness level drops.
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Nicola Legrottaglie

As for Legrottaglie, the Juve center-back has been one the nicest surprises of the 2007-08 season. Rising to defensive stardom during his time at Chievo (2002-03), Legrottaglie was bought by Juventus in 2003 to be the natural heir of Paolo Montero. A severe drop in form however pushed the player to the sidelines (and to a series of unproductive loan spells), at which point his Bianconeri career seeemed to have reached a dead-end, as not even Juve’s 2006-07 Serie B season was enough to promote him to a regular starting role.

In 2007-08, Legrottaglie started where he left off the previous season: on the subs bench. However, after the serious injury suffered by new signing Jorge Andrade, he was promoted to the starting eleven for the game against Reggina (September 26), and contributed to the final 4-0 scoreline with a goal. Until the season’s end Legrottaglie paired with Giorgio Chiellini in a starting center-back role, forming one of the best defensive partnerships of the year as Juve conceded only 9 goals in 14 games.

Legrottaglie has openly admitted he owes his recent “transformation” to religion. Indeed since “finding the faith” again, the player’s performances have radically improved: his behaviour on the field is more calm, he gets into less arguments with opposing players, (the number of his yellow cards have also substantially decreased) and more importantly: he’s become reliable. Oh, and also: apparently he hasn’t had sex for over 2 years… Whatever helps, right? I mean, “belonging to Jesus” didn’t stop Kakà from winning the Ballon d’Or, so…
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The Anti-Georgia Fantastic Four

Bottom line: we are looking at a Zambrotta, Cannavaro, Legrottaglie, Dossena Azzurri backline for Wednesday.

Gianluca Zambrotta (age 31)Fabio Cannavaro (age 34)Nicola Legrottaglie (age 31)Andrea Dossena (age 26)

As we await the return of Giorgio, let’s hope it will be enough…

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  • 8 Responses to “Waiting for Georgia: Azzurri Looking at Major Defense Overhaul”

    1. alessio says:

      Looks pretty solid to me.

      Legro is such a great story, but at age 31..he’s re-peaking too late. He could have had a great career. :( I find it funny that our center-back alongside Chiellini is Legro…replacing Cannavaro, who was signed after Legro was a bust! Funny how that works out huh? I was disappointed last summer when it seemed certain he was going to Besiktas, I was always a big fan, but I never imagined he’d have the season he did.

    2. alessio says:

      Here’s my preferred formation for Wednesday:

      Buffon
      Zambrotta Cannavaro Legrottaglie Dossena
      Camoranesi Aquilani De Rossi
      Del Piero
      Di Natale Iaquinta

      Can’t say enough about chemistry. Aquilani+De Rossi will have it, and Camo+ADP+Iaquinta will have it. Vincenzo is long overdue for a space, he has the pace, determination and grit it appears our current forwards are missing. And can ADP be finally fielded in his preferred position?

      Pirlo needs a break, he looks tired. Still.

    3. Me, I stopped believing after those crappy performances in his first Juve season. I was asking myself: “Whoa… where the hell did the great center-back from Chievo go? You know… the one scoring all those goals on corner-kicks and knocking on the Azzurri’s door?“.

      Then thankfully, 2007-08 happened. Viva la religión (hold on, that’s not how it goes… ah well, nm).

    4. Heh. You’d really put Toni on the bench? :)

      And I think ADP hates playing trequartista. They tried that before (during France 98 I think it was) and Del Piero rebelled to it. He probably likes it better than playing left midfield (I’ll give you that much), but his ideal role is pure forward (or second striker).

    5. alessio says:

      I know, that season was disappointing as hell. I still believed he had it in him, Chievo’s season wasn’t an aberation. I had given up on him after Serie B though, his injuries kept him out and I figured if he couldn’t secure a spot in Serie B, certainly couldn’t in Serie A. To think how close he was to Bestikas…what would we have done without him? Imagine if Chiellini had been sold too! The horror, the horror!

    6. alessio says:

      Yeah. Right now I’d prefer to see Gilardino up there over Toni. Toni is by no means finished, but he’s gotta get out of his current slump. I think Vincenzo can get it done.

      I see what you mean on Alex, I agree. I just want him to play second striker, slightly behind the others. I didn’t say 4-3-3 because either it’d be assumed he’d be on a wing or he’d be playing prima punta.

    7. Yeah, but playing behind the other two forwards is exactly the Totti-like role he doesn’t enjoy. He’ll play it out of necessity (if forced to), but it’s definitely not one of his favorites.

      And he definitely cannot play target man in a 4-3-3 formation. It’s either on the wing or on the bench.

    8. Milanista Doc says:

      Honestly, I’d be more shocked with Pirlo being benched than Toni. There just isn’t anyone able to dictate the geometries and set the pace of the game better than Pirlo.

      ANd I don’t think he’s tired. He played like crap against Cyprus just like everyone else , thats all.