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Brigg, oh dear...

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I wonder who set him up for failure?🤔


View: https://x.com/LewisSteele_/status/2005962948938719560

View: https://x.com/BackseatsmanLFC/status/2005958307173769340



View: https://x.com/JamesPearceLFC/status/2005959298279518301
Liverpool have parted company with first-team set-piece coach Aaron Briggs.

Set pieces have been an area of glaring weakness for the Premier League champions so far this season and the decision was taken that a change was required.

Excluding penalties, no top-flight side has conceded more goals from set pieces this season than Liverpool’s total of 12 in the Premier League. Only West Ham (10) have conceded more from corners than Liverpool’s seven.

Liverpool are averaging 2.4 goals scored per 100 set pieces. Only Brentford in the Premier League is averaging fewer. In terms of conceding, Liverpool are averaging 8.2 goals per 100 set pieces — only Nottingham Forest average more.


In both of the past two matches against Tottenham Hotspur and Wolverhampton Wanderers, Arne Slot’s side were cruising at 2-0 before letting in a goal from a set piece changed the complexion of the games and left them hanging on.

Briggs, a former Manchester City analyst, joins Slot’s backroom staff in July 2024 as the club’s new first team individual development coach after Vitor Matos’ departure.

Liverpool initially advertised for a set-piece coach but were unable to find the right candidate they gave the responsibility to Briggs instead.


Last summer they brought in Brazilian coach Luiz Fernando Iubel as individual lead coach so Briggs could focus solely on set-pieces but the move has not worked out.
 
The reference to his involvement in analysis probably indicates why we gave him the job. Quite a lot of the work the analysis guys do is around set-pieces, although the focus tends to be more on exploiting weaknesses in the opposition defence rather than how we defend against them.
When I joined the club they did an open evening at Melwood at the end of my first week (never happened again, FWIW) and the analysis guys were very keen to highlight a goal we'd scored against City (Skrtel header) where they'd identified that City's set up left them vulnerable at the back post from corners. So we'd targeted the delivery and our most aggressive header of the ball to be in that space. It's noticeable because you normally expect to see the centre-halves in the middle of the box, but Skrtel was at the back post and made a run into the danger area.
The analysis guys were, understandably, quite pleased with themselves (in truth, I think this was a rare success, either because opposition teams didn't always set up the same way against us, or because the players didn't execute the plan properly on match day). Skrtel probably got a £20-30k goal bonus, the analysis team (many of whom were students from JMU earning minimum wage) got a few £100 each.
I remember wondering why we had inexperienced students doing this job rather than qualified coaches / former players who would have had a better eye for patterns of play and defensive set-ups. It just felt like an after-thought. Oddly, it looks like we're still way behind the curve more than a decade later.
 
Thank fuck, Arne then Hughes next please.

Also, the fuck is up with these lame arsed shitty fireworks and the old pervert at a brothel's mask for an avatar?
 
They’re all spoofers. Imagine any of those cunts going along with “yea Mac, you carry on being the one with Dan Burn. That’ll be sound.”
 
David Lynch

You did not have to be close to the inner workings of Liverpool Football Club to deduce that the club’s set-piece coach Aaron Briggs was under pressure this season.

Arne Slot could not keep himself from constantly mentioning in press conferences and embargoed briefings that his team would not have been in quite as bad a position were it not for their weakness from corners and free-kicks.

And the fact is he was right, given that no team in Europe’s top five leagues has conceded more than the Reds’ 12 goals from such situations, while their three scored is the second worst record in the Premier League.

It was considered controversial by some to point out that, ultimately, this wasn’t Slot’s responsibility, even if his title of head coach implies oversight of every aspect.

But the Dutchman found himself in a difficult position whereby any intervention on set-pieces might have left him open to accusations of not allowing a fellow coach to carry out his remit.

Instead, he almost had to let the situation deteriorate to this point before sporting director Richard Hughes - who, of course, appointed Briggs - would be forced to act.

That point has now arrived and, in truth, we should perhaps not be surprised by how this particular Anfield career has played out.

Briggs is said to be well-regarded behind the scenes at the AXA Training Centre and was part of a title-winning coaching staff last season but, in reality, his duties always felt somewhat cobbled together.

The Englishman initially arrived to replace Vitor Matos as a key link between academy and first team, but was then immediately given oversight of set-pieces almost as an afterthought.

And there was at least a whiff of sidelining in the decision to make the set-piece aspect full-time this summer as Luis Fernando Iubel was appointed individual lead coach.
 
Reminded me of our missing out on Etienne Reijnen:


Till date:

With Reijnen still working at Feyenoord under manager Robin van Persie, the Dutch outfit have scored eight non-penalty set-pieces this season; Liverpool have netted just three in the league.

Meanwhile, they have conceded just once from dead-ball situations compared to Liverpool’s 12.
 
Yeah, we would be in quite another state regards to set pieces if he had gotten a work permit. Quite insane that a guy from Holland can’t start working in the UK.
 
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