Paul Pogba's season keeps hitting the woodwork. The Manchester United
man has struck the bar or post eight times in the Premier League, more
than any other player, and so the metaphor feels like an obvious one --
his first year back at Old Trafford often seems mere frustrating inches
from being so much better. Frank Lampard recently suggested Pogba could be a £90 million problem,
in the sense he is not being played in his best position, and is
therefore struggling to be effective. Pogba could argue, given the above
statistic, that fortune has not fallen his way, yet that would only be
half true.
As has been well-documented, Pogba has not yet hit the heights that
he is expected to, leading several to believe he may not quite have it
in him to be a truly dominant player. His year so far has been an odd
mix of startling brilliance, apparent disinterest -- in a defensive
sense, at least -- and visible anxiety. Often those characteristics have
been present in the very same performance.
In many ways, it is difficult not to root for him. At a time when the
far-Right is rising all over Europe, the most expensive player in the
world is a black Muslim, who has built a career through determination
and no little bravery -- most notably, perhaps, in his decision to leave
Manchester United to forge a career at Juventus. He is an inspiration
to millions, merely because of who he is.
Yet this is the thing with Pogba. So much of the expectation around
him is what he symbolises, which is why his marketing appeal is so
broad. He is likeable, stylish and photogenic. You can imagine him being
equally comfortable playing football in the street and at the front row
in a rave. Like his friend Stormzy, the grime artist currently
conquering all before him, he is seen as someone to whom the keys to the
world have been thrown -- yet, unlike Stormzy, he seems currently
unsure as to how he should drive forward.
Of course, he is a player of exceptional gifts -- that will never be
in dispute. His accuracy of his long passing puts him in a select
category alongside Paul Scholes, Ruud Gullit, Xabi Alonso and Glenn
Hoddle. His feet are quicker than those of most centre-forwards. He has a
shot of fearsome power, as many aching crossbars can tell you. But at
present, when it matters most, he is forcing his game -- to its
significant detriment.
ESPN FC's Craig Burley says Manchester United rely on Zlatan Ibrahimovic too much.
We should not be revisionist about this. Pogba has always been a
player in a hurry -- last season, he took more attempts at goal, some
124, than any other midfielder in Europe's five major leagues. This
season, he is on target to end up at around that total. The unfortunate
thing is that his performances this season have followed a pattern --
which is his form seems to rise steadily in quality, until he comes to a
match where the stage is set for him to prove himself.
This happened against Liverpool in the Premier League and Southampton
in the League Cup final. Both times he began the game brightly, both
times he went close with a scoring chance where a goal could have
settled his nerves, and both times his confidence then seemed to
crumble. It is also notable that, in those games, Zlatan Ibrahimovic's
goals came to the rescue -- the late equaliser against Liverpool and the
late winner against Southampton spared him greater scrutiny than was
already at his door.
The next few games are therefore intriguing. Pogba will, at some
point in the years to come, become the leader of this team, and in
Ibrahimovic's absence through suspension he has the chance to assume
that mantle, albeit temporarily. He is an interesting character, in that
for someone so flamboyant in manner he does not seem to enjoy the
limelight all that much. The sight of him wrestling with Liverpool's
Jordan Henderson in the Premier League was a sign of a man who sensed,
more than a little desperately, that his chance to impress in that
particular match was quickly slipping away. It has been an up and down season for Paul Pogba at Manchester United.
His playing style, as it stands, needs some refinement, and probably
more structure. Steven Gerrard, a similarly free attacking spirit, had
two defensive midfielders behind him at his peak -- Xabi Alonso and
Javier Mascherano -- and so it appears that Pogba will need similar
reinforcements in the summer to be at his best.
He is probably already seeking out the advice of Patrice Evra,
another United player whose start at the club was extremely difficult,
given that Evra went on to become one of the finest full-backs to grace
Old Trafford.
And it is not as if it has all been bleak, far from it -- one of the
main reasons that United have gone so long unbeaten in the league is
that Pogba, during a two-month stretch or so, has been mostly sublime.
What we are seeing right now are Pogba's very public growing pains --
and there will surely come a time when those shots begin to dip just
beneath the crossbar, or swerve just inside the post.
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