How Flick has revived Rashford's career at Barcelona

10 hours ago 1

An image of Rashford celebrating and Hansi Flick gesturing in the backgroundImage source, Getty Images

By

Football tactics correspondent

When Barcelona agreed a loan deal for Marcus Rashford in the summer, they were backing themselves to spark a renaissance in a player who at his best was one of the world's most effective forwards.

So far, the gamble looks like paying off. The 27-year-old has scored five goals and contributed six assists in all competitions in the early days of his season-long loan from Manchester United.

Barca, who are two points behind Real Madrid going into Sunday's El Clasico, have the option to make the signing permanent at the end of campaign and Rashford seems keen on that happening.

So how has Barca coach Hansi Flick and his staff turned things around for him? We analyse how his role and Barca's tactics are combining to get the best out of a player who seemed lost last season at Old Trafford.

Freedom to move centrally

When analysing players a distinction must be made between positions and roles. On paper, Rashford's position is a left winger, but this does not tell the whole story.

In Ten Hag's debut season at Manchester United Rashford scored 30 goals and contributed 12 assists as he profited from taking up a position halfway between a winger and a striker.

Flick has tapped into this, and Rashford is allowed to float between playing wide left and moving centrally.

As a result, Rashford has found himself closer to goal, which has allowed him to take more shots from dangerous positions, taking advantage of his world-class ball-striking ability.

This freedom has allowed him to decide big games. His wonderful strike from outside the box against Newcastle United in the Champions League came when he drifted centrally - in fact closer to the right - from his left-wing position.

A screengrab showing Rashford's central position prior to his long range goal against Newcastle in the Champions League this season.Image source, BBC Sport

Image caption,

Barcelona's left side was vacated as the attacking players gathered in close proximity to each other in the lead up to Rashford's goal against Newcastle

Flick likes his attacking players to cluster together centrally, and Rashford rotating inside helps knit together Barca's attacking play.

A common pattern of play for Barca this season has been for him to move inside into the left half-space and be found by a midfielder with his back to goal.

Rashford will lay the ball off for a team-mate who is in space between the lines and facing forwards - in short, in a dangerous position.

A screengrab showing Rashford's central position back to goal as he passing the ball in-field to a nearby teammate. Image source, BBC Sport

Image caption,

Rashford's lay-offs to a team-mate facing goal have been a key source of Barcelona's goal threat

Dynamic full-backs elevate Rashford's game

Rashford moving inside has not imbalance the team however.

When he moves centrally, the full-back marking him usually moves in-field too. This leaves the flank open and allows the left-back to push into this wide-left space.

Usual left-back Alejandro Balde has a strong ability to get up and down the flank and put good crosses in, so having their left-side personnel combine in this way was impressive squad building by Barca.

A relationship with an overlapping full-back is something Rashford has enjoyed before, with some of his highlights for club and country coming when Luke Shaw complimented him in a similar way.

A screengrab showcasing Rashford inverting into the centre of the pitch dragging his fullback with him which makes space in the wide areas for Barcelona's fullback to exploit.Image source, BBC Sport

Image caption,

Rashford's movement opens up space in the flank for Balde to exploit

This off-the-ball movement from the full-back helps Rashford to cut inside into dangerous positions in space and enables him to play penetrative through-balls for the left-back.

Teams are wary of Rashford's threat centrally and can leave the flank exposed as they overcommit to defending the middle of the pitch.

As a result, Balde and Barca's other left-back Gerard Martin have often found themselves in dangerous crossing positions.

Their generally overlapping runs draw players away from Rashford, leaving him one on one against a defender.

In these isolated duels, Rashford is able to use his pace to beat his man, and has often gone down the line before crossing into the box.

A screengrab showcasing Rashford's reverse pass to an overlapping Alejandro Balde.Image source, BBC Sport

Image caption,

Balde's overlapping runs have made Barcelona dangerous down the left

The human part of coaching

Formations, roles and tactics matter, but there is naturally a human element to the performance of footballers.

Rashford seems to be a player who excels when he is confident and he perhaps would not have attempted the long-range effort against Newcastle if he had not already scored in the game.

He appears to have renewed confidence generally though, and that is likely to have been helped by Flick starting him the last six matches and primarily in the same position.

That level of consistency will have helped him find his rhythm while his delivery has impressed sufficiently for him to be trusted with Barca's corners.

His set-pieces have been impressive and have inflated his chance creation and assist numbers - which influence how fans, pundits and Rashford himself views his start to life in Spain.

A screengrab showcasing Rashford's outswinging corner assist in the league this season.Image source, BBC Sport

Image caption,

Rashford has two assists from corners this season boosting his overall statistics

How out-of-form players get back to best

A trend seems to be developing in former Manchester United players excelling after they have moved.

Some believe this is because the Premier League is football's most competitive league, but it can also be because new teams and coaches are maximising a player's strengths and minimising their weaknesses.

Players can go through a bad run of form but a footballer's quality is rarely lost without injuries, age or off-the-field issues.

When a player who has impressed starts to underperform, it is likely that giving them a more suitable role in an environment that empowers them will return much of that initial quality - and Rashford appears to be the latest example.

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