We have won 5 games in Premier League this season. In 2 and a half of them Szoboszlai played at right-back and was voted MOTM or close to it. Bradley and Frimpong's record is more mixed - unconvincing wins against Everton and Burnley and this utter shambles today.
The issue with Bradley for me is that he thrives in a specific type of game - a mad back-and-forth like that coming-of-age performance against Chelsea. He will not lock down his flank against a dangerous attacker and he doesn't quite have the finesse to open up the deep-seated defences. Unfortunately for him that combination of defending deep and catching us with speed on the counter is probably the most frequent type of tactic we will encounter this season, especially now that Palace showed everyone how it's done. And Slot is not likely to go back to Klopp-ball just to accommodate him.
Frimpong is even more of a mystery. To his credit, he has shown desire to get back and defend, but on the ball his quality has been surprisingly poor. It's early days and sometimes players look like they can't pass a ball to save their life when they are low on confidence - but I'm starting to have some doubts about his underlying quality. We have not seen his ceiling yet, but the floor is worryingly low.
I don't want to sound like sky is falling here. The combination of Bradley and Frimpong should still be enough to get by against most weaker opponents, which includes many CL teams (I have no concerns about playing Frimpong against Galatasarai or Frankfurt, for example), but anyone seriously looking to challenge us will immediately identify the right wing as a weakness to exploit. And this means poor old Szoboszlai will have to plug this hole until a real solution emerges.
The issue with Bradley for me is that he thrives in a specific type of game - a mad back-and-forth like that coming-of-age performance against Chelsea. He will not lock down his flank against a dangerous attacker and he doesn't quite have the finesse to open up the deep-seated defences. Unfortunately for him that combination of defending deep and catching us with speed on the counter is probably the most frequent type of tactic we will encounter this season, especially now that Palace showed everyone how it's done. And Slot is not likely to go back to Klopp-ball just to accommodate him.
Frimpong is even more of a mystery. To his credit, he has shown desire to get back and defend, but on the ball his quality has been surprisingly poor. It's early days and sometimes players look like they can't pass a ball to save their life when they are low on confidence - but I'm starting to have some doubts about his underlying quality. We have not seen his ceiling yet, but the floor is worryingly low.
I don't want to sound like sky is falling here. The combination of Bradley and Frimpong should still be enough to get by against most weaker opponents, which includes many CL teams (I have no concerns about playing Frimpong against Galatasarai or Frankfurt, for example), but anyone seriously looking to challenge us will immediately identify the right wing as a weakness to exploit. And this means poor old Szoboszlai will have to plug this hole until a real solution emerges.