chances created | 1 |
back pass % | 57.6 |
errant passes | 3 |
shots | 3 |
shot % | 0 |
dispossessed | 2 |
take ons | 4 |
unsuccessful to | 3 |
turnovers | 1 |
true turnover index | 13 |
He basically did two things good, albeit very good, he set-up England's only goal with a brilliant pass to Rooney and he treated the Italian defenders like orange cones, dribbling pass them at will. That's all fine and dandy, but most of it was all for nothing.
A back pass % of 57.6 for a winger is abominable. That means of his 33 pass attempts, 19 of them were toward his own goal and at least one of those fell into Italy's possession going in the direction they so desired. True turnover index takes in effect whenever a player gives possession over to the other team either by shots that lead to opposition possession, errant pass, dispossession, unsuccessful take on, or offensive foul (including offside). Sterling had the worst TTI of Englishman on the pitch. In comparison, Rooney had a TTI of 10, Henderson and Sturridge each had a 9, Gerrard had an 8, and Welbeck had a 7.
As I stated in my last post though, I'd much rather have a player who takes risk, but the results have to prove positive. Sterling's back pass percentage severely skews his stats and makes it seem that he is not as risky and turnover prone than he actually is. He is only 19 though and a whole lot of fun to watch: http://vimeo.com/98246489.
No comments:
Post a Comment