Haha what. Passing at a world-class level is what Xabi Alonso and Xavi do. At best Allen passes at the level of a 2007 Michael Carrick.
Those two, actually three, players are more creative with their passing. What I am referring to is keeping the ball. Allen is as good as basically anyone I've seen in the EPL at popping up in very tight spaces and circulating the ball. He is a
very accurate passer. The point re the stat was to show that Allen, who usually has the prime role to play at helping us keep possession, was very crap. You can state it but the numerical difference in percentages for me paints a clearer picture.
Speaking of footballing stats, the term "key pass" seems like it's being used more and more but I've never really followed up on what it refers to. Is a key pass another name for "chance creation", meaning it would get upgraded to an assist if the bloke on the end of it scored, or is it something else?
Yes, basically they're interchangeable from what I gather.
Nah this definitely isn't true. Possession and creativity are both important, and stats are a crude way of showing either. But I suppose I'd probably have to admit that "he's good at keeping the ball, his pass completion is 95%" is at least marginally better than "he's good at keeping the ball because I say so". Better crappy data than none.
Yes, this is my take on it too. Stats, especially in football, can be notoriously misleading. But if you qualify it with context then it can be very helpful.
lol qualifying. Its a flippant post on an internet forum why the **** would I need to qualify it?
If you really do insist then you could at least do it yourself when you use terms such as 'world class passer.'
The reason 'maestro' needs qualifying is that passing for volume and possession's sake is different to passing in order to create chances. You can be a maestro/master of either (or rarer still both) really.
Anyone who has really seen/knows of Allen's play should know I am not confusing him with a Mata or a Cazorla.
I wouldn't hold your breath, my request for an explanation of what was meant by "an excellent recycler of possession" fell on deaf ears.
When was this? An excellent recycler of possession is basically what I wrote in the above for Allen. It is someone that is able to collect the ball in a phase of play where the potential to lose it is ripe (lack of space, options, or the existence of pressing) and to convert that into a phase where your team has the ball again comfortably and can reset/recycle the play.