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Author Topic: Unai Emery  (Read 1238475 times)

Offline SoccerHQ

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11415 on: April 22, 2025, 11:08:43 PM »
He needs to be braver on these big games away from home against the big teams. We very rarely hold on for draws and the shame is that we had such good momentum going into tonight.

He's got it right twice at Arsenal.

Liverpool and Chelsea I think were just bad times in the season for us to play them away. We were very weak in November and both were at their peak. I'd back us to get results at one of them if we were playing them in the run in.

This was probably his worst tactical call since Spurs away. 1-1 and think Romero gets injured and he got excited and put Duran on alongside Ollie and Spurs just stroll through our midfield at will.

Comical if on the last day we go to Man. United and just stand off them. Away days in Manchester are a total Bermuda triangle for us in we seem to lose all sense of mentality in terms of believing we'll get a result.

Online Brazilian Villain

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11416 on: April 22, 2025, 11:11:46 PM »
Rage sack him Nas!

I'll be surprised if he doesn't sack him on the coach, again.

Maybe a cheeky approach for Chris Davies. But would he take the step down to manage us?

On second thoughts, I've just remembered his record at Wembley.

Online Somniloquism

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11417 on: April 22, 2025, 11:15:28 PM »
He needs to be braver on these big games away from home against the big teams. We very rarely hold on for draws and the shame is that we had such good momentum going into tonight.

He's got it right twice at Arsenal.

Liverpool and Chelsea I think were just bad times in the season for us to play them away. We were very weak in November and both were at their peak. I'd back us to get results at one of them if we were playing them in the run in.

This was probably his worst tactical call since Spurs away. 1-1 and think Romero gets injured and he got excited and put Duran on alongside Ollie and Spurs just stroll through our midfield at will.

Comical if on the last day we go to Man. United and just stand off them. Away days in Manchester are a total Bermuda triangle for us in we seem to lose all sense of mentality in terms of believing we'll get a result.

Palace away was a bad selection, five at the back wasn't needed as we had to proper CB and instead he decided Bogarde should go there instead of shielding them just in front.

Offline SoccerHQ

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11418 on: April 22, 2025, 11:24:32 PM »
He needs to be braver on these big games away from home against the big teams. We very rarely hold on for draws and the shame is that we had such good momentum going into tonight.

He's got it right twice at Arsenal.

Liverpool and Chelsea I think were just bad times in the season for us to play them away. We were very weak in November and both were at their peak. I'd back us to get results at one of them if we were playing them in the run in.

This was probably his worst tactical call since Spurs away. 1-1 and think Romero gets injured and he got excited and put Duran on alongside Ollie and Spurs just stroll through our midfield at will.

Comical if on the last day we go to Man. United and just stand off them. Away days in Manchester are a total Bermuda triangle for us in we seem to lose all sense of mentality in terms of believing we'll get a result.

Palace away was a bad selection, five at the back wasn't needed as we had to proper CB and instead he decided Bogarde should go there instead of shielding them just in front.

Palace away isn't really a "big" away game though. Just like Wolves we're chronically terrible there whatever the respective form and happily donate them one of their 5-6 home wins for the season.

He overthought that night a fair bit so I very much doubt we're just going to change our formation again to match Palace.

Online brontebilly

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11419 on: April 23, 2025, 02:10:01 AM »
He needs to be braver on these big games away from home against the big teams. We very rarely hold on for draws and the shame is that we had such good momentum going into tonight.

He's got it right twice at Arsenal.

Liverpool and Chelsea I think were just bad times in the season for us to play them away. We were very weak in November and both were at their peak. I'd back us to get results at one of them if we were playing them in the run in.

This was probably his worst tactical call since Spurs away. 1-1 and think Romero gets injured and he got excited and put Duran on alongside Ollie and Spurs just stroll through our midfield at will.

Comical if on the last day we go to Man. United and just stand off them. Away days in Manchester are a total Bermuda triangle for us in we seem to lose all sense of mentality in terms of believing we'll get a result.

Spurs away - Cash went off. He brought on a (shite) centre back, switched Konsa to RB and we collapsed. I found the effort at Monaco was really bad when he tried Duran and Watkins up top with predictable consequences and talked about it afterwards how it didn't work. Palace was just a nightmare from the first minute that got increasingly worse.

But Emery is a top manager. He does learn from his mistakes. He is not afraid to make big decisions either, Carlos and Duran were let go pretty quickly for example. Watkins might well heed that as a warning too. Football can be funny, a few days ago he literally could do no wrong with maybe his best day at the club - with a much changed team from PSG too. Tonight when the game was there to be won, I thought key players like Kamara froze and arguably Emery did too on the sideline with daft decisions. 

Think his approach v Palace is going to be very interesting. Mings will come back in Id be fairly sure but after that it's hard to know. Rogers should come out but that's unlikely.

Online frankmosswasmyuncle

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11420 on: April 23, 2025, 02:33:07 AM »
Some really good points there bronte....I absolutely love Kamara but I thought he was caught out numerous times tonight and v PSG and actually made things worse for us than better. And SUE's decisions....agreed.
And with everything surrounding Saturday...selection, structure, formation, intent...
I thought ci£y were there for the taking tonight and we fu**ed it up....I think exactly the same about Palace but they've done us over more than a few times recently...respect yes, fear NO!
We need to go out to control the game eg Newcastle...simple tactics, higher tempo and we are outstanding!

Offline Percy McCarthy

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11421 on: April 23, 2025, 03:46:59 AM »
He needs to be braver on these big games away from home against the big teams. We very rarely hold on for draws and the shame is that we had such good momentum going into tonight.

He's got it right twice at Arsenal.

Liverpool and Chelsea I think were just bad times in the season for us to play them away. We were very weak in November and both were at their peak. I'd back us to get results at one of them if we were playing them in the run in.

This was probably his worst tactical call since Spurs away. 1-1 and think Romero gets injured and he got excited and put Duran on alongside Ollie and Spurs just stroll through our midfield at will.

Comical if on the last day we go to Man. United and just stand off them. Away days in Manchester are a total Bermuda triangle for us in we seem to lose all sense of mentality in terms of believing we'll get a result.

Spurs away - Cash went off. He brought on a (shite) centre back, switched Konsa to RB and we collapsed.

Funny how you obsess over that one, but not the many times it worked. Mind you, you’ve posted about Spurs away so often it’s ingrained in the membrane I suppose, especially when it’s all you’ve got. I’ll note your Spurs away and raise you:

Arsenal 1-0
Man City 1-0
Arsenal 2-0
Wolves 2-0 (Diaby, Konsa)
Bayern 1-0
Juve 0-0
Young Boys 3-0
Bologna 2-0.

Has the bloke who’s a “massive upgrade” on England’s Ezri Konsa managed to play his way back into the *checks notes* Poland squad yet?

To be fair, he had a decent six minutes until he fucked up last night. 5.6 on BBC Ratings but they’re not comedy ones like the laughable garbage you post. Hopefully the Poland manager left early.
« Last Edit: April 23, 2025, 05:46:56 AM by Percy McCarthy »

Online ChicagoLion

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11422 on: April 23, 2025, 09:08:33 AM »
Cash or Desasi at RB, not sure which is worse when up against a decent winger.
Konsa never seems to get skinned at RB as easily as these 2.

Online PaulWinch again

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11423 on: April 23, 2025, 09:11:26 AM »
Cash or Desasi at RB, not sure which is worse when up against a decent winger.
Konsa never seems to get skinned at RB as easily as these 2.


Really? It’s pretty evident which is worse.

Offline RamboandBruno

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11424 on: April 23, 2025, 09:21:08 AM »
Cash got skinned for the goal, but the goal was ultimately down to Emi. Im not sure that Cash did an awful lot wrong after that.

Offline eamonn

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11425 on: April 23, 2025, 09:47:07 AM »
Konsa has this habit of crouching down and sticking out his foot to block a cross or shot. It's ended-up deflecting in the opposition's favour twice in three games now - Baboushka's pass last night for the opener and Forest's goal last Saturday week.

Offline OCD

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11426 on: April 23, 2025, 06:06:02 PM »
Once Disasi got skinned by Doku, Konsa needed to come across and reduce Doku's options. If he had of done, he wouldn't have been able to play the ball that he did. The Forest away game had a similar ending and both have given Champions League rivals valuable points.

Online brontebilly

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11427 on: April 23, 2025, 10:31:56 PM »
Cash or Desasi at RB, not sure which is worse when up against a decent winger.
Konsa never seems to get skinned at RB as easily as these 2.

No...who was that mini messi at Ipswich that made a complete mug of him? that was the worst individual performance from a Villa player this season that I recall. Liverpool, RBL, Spurs, Forest, Brugge early in CL - Konsa was awful at RB in all those games. Have a read through a couple of those post game threads to jog your memory. He thankfully hasn't played there in a while so people have forgotten.

Sure Konsa has had some decent games there, apparently did very well in some friendly against Vinicus Jr too, but eventually he got found out. It's the same with Disasi, didn't he even get motm v Brentford at right back? Sitting in a low block like Konsa v Bayern, it's a different game. They can tuck in near their centre back, they can have someone like McGinn or even Bailey pushing out in front of them to engage the winger. But ask them to step out with the ball or if the opponent switches the play quickly to drag them out to the sideline then they are in big trouble.

It's harsh to have a go at Matty Cash after the week he had with his performances v PSG and Newcastle and by far his best season with us generally. Sure he made that same getting caught narrow mistake for the first goal but he recovered reasonably well, thought he seemed a bit tired in truth last night. But Disasi was a disaster of a sub, Guardiola sensed it nearly immediately, most supporters did likewise. Swap Cash for Garcia or leave him on.


Offline SaddVillan

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11428 on: April 24, 2025, 02:07:47 PM »
From The Athletic, a bit of a travelogue in parts, but worth a read nonetheless.

ASTON VILLA’S UNAI EMERY: FORMED BY A PLACE OF HISTORY, STRUGGLE, AND PRINCIPLE

Watching on from the balconies above, Unai Emery will return here, to Hondarribia, whenever his schedule allows.

Every September, provided Aston Villa do not have a game, he will celebrate his hometown’s biggest fiesta, Hondarribia’s Alarde (‘parade’).

Emery is intensely private and has a small circle of friends. Former colleagues, who had worked with him for several years, admit they know little about his personal life, with interactions geared towards total dedication on the pitch

Emery is a football obsessive. Staff at Villa’s Bodymoor Heath training ground describe him as friendly and affable with a work ethic that reaches unparalleled levels. The 53-year-old will open doors for staff, even if they are some distance away and require him to wait, allowing them to go through first and will always say hello.

“I’m sure he does, but I’ve never seen him go home,” says one Villa worker, who, like others in this piece, spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect relationships. “He’s always there.”

“He was a bit in his own world,” adds one former colleague. “He likes to talk strategy, work strategy and all of that — he is all about strategy, but he has a group of coaches around him that were like a safety net. He’s not a guy that could sit down and chat for hours with and find out about his private life. It’s all football.”

There have been tales of former staff at Sevilla joking that Emery would spend so long at the training ground that he would have breakfast, lunch and dinner there.

“I was born like this. The day I go and play golf, somebody should come and take me away because I’ll be good for nothing any more,” he once told reporters.

Emery’s life motto is unsurprising: “Con talento y sin talante no llegamos, pero con talante y sin talento tampoco,” which translates to, ‘With talent but not the will, we won’t get anywhere, but neither will we with the will and no talent’.

Sacrifice and commitment have driven Emery to become one of football’s most eminent coaches. Yet his character and approach to his profession were defined in the place he was raised.

It is why he will allow himself a brief return to watch the Alarde.

The Emerys are fiercely proud of their place of birth, situated in the Basque Country. “Born in Hondarribia” is the first sentence on Unai’s Instagram bio and he was close to tears when he received the town’s “gold badge” from the local council in November 2022 to commemorate his achievements in management.

Dancers dressed in traditional green and white colours welcomed him into a packed town hall, where family members — including his brother, Igor, who made a speech — watched him collect the honour.

“When we recognise high-level merit, the ability to improve and innovate. Leadership, excellence and success. Unai Emery owns all of these characteristics,” said Hondarribia mayor Txomin Sagarzazu.

Hondarribia, a coastal town with circa 17,000 residents as of 2021, offers an insight into Emery, the man. In football and life, Emery has held himself to a core set of principles, be it tactical structure on the pitch or integrity off it.

His Basque roots are because of Hondarribia, located in the Municipality of Gipuzkoa, and its bloody history. September’s fiesta is in gratitude to soldiers who resisted a siege on the town by French soldiers over the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries, ensuring the region remained a Basque community.
The annual festival reveres the Virgin of Guadalupe, Hondarribia’s patron saint and every year, vows to celebrate her victory against the French in 1638. Friends have told various media outlets that Emery comes to the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe to pray.

The shrine looks out to Hondarribia’s fishing port, with boats resting on the sea, which connects to a marina.

Men are out trying to catch fish, relying on traditional techniques and accompanied by their dogs. If you were to look at a map, they would be situated precisely on the French-Spanish border.

There are the flags of both countries against a mountainous backdrop and stunning views from the apartments on top of the hills looking out to the French border of Hendaye, which can be accessed by a bridge or a small crossing boat.

Villa help Emery organise a regular charter flight from Birmingham that he books and pays for himself whenever he wants to take a trip home.

Walking along the coast and football pitches come into view. The Hondarribia Turbo Elkatea stadium is home to the town’s local side and its academy, which happens to be playing when The Athletic visits.

Four decades earlier and Emery, albeit within less modern facilities, was playing here before joining Real Sociedad as a young, budding footballer.

A few hundred yards into the town is the Plaza de Armas, a meeting point, and the place Emery has been pictured watching from a balcony above. The plaza is where locals celebrate “Alarde de Armas” (‘weapons display’) in tribute to their trained militants.

Emery is the son of a Basque father, Juan, and an Andalusian mother, Amelia, who had three other sons: Koldo, Igor and Andoni.

They are proud Basques, growing up on the edge of the region, where the fighting took place hundreds of years before. The importance of the Alarde is not lost on them.

At its core, the town is brick and stone, decorated with many religious symbols on historic, medieval walls. There is vegetation growing on its outskirts, with chickens in coops on the sides of roads, paintings for sale in windows and on some streets, shops are exclusively for artists.

It is sufficiently quiet with so few cars that every dog can be let off lead.

It is not a tourist hotspot, nor does it intend to be. The language is predominantly Basque or Spanish, with few speaking English. The way of life is unchanging and methodical; the seafood and Basque restaurants do not open until 12.30pm and serve shrimps, grilled mussels, prawns and octopus a few hundred yards from the beaches. They then retire three hours later for a siesta.

Streets are lined with pollarded trees, with youngsters using them as goalposts. It is the weekend, yet the prevailing sound is wind. The old town is cheap, two euros can buy a coffee; a couple more euros is enough for seafood. It offers a serenity that can settle anyone, especially an obsessive such as Emery.

Still, there is enough to do.

Three kilometres east and intersected by San Sebastien airport is Irun. The neighbouring town is where Emery and his brothers watched football and their family club, Real Union, though it is a generally slower way of life compared to Hondarribia, which has better aesthetics and activities that kept the siblings occupied.

Stadium Gal hosts Real Union matches and is located on the left bank of the Bidasoa River and roughly a 10-minute drive from where Emery grew up. The club is in the family bloodline, with brother, Andoni, chief groundsman for the past two years and, Igor, the president.

“The reason we are here is because of those years,” Igor tells The Athletic. In June 2021, the siblings acquired a controlling stake in the third-division side. “We have family in the history of the club. My father (Juan), uncle (Roman) and grandfather (Antonio) played here. This is our home.

“I couldn’t see my father playing, because I was born in 1980 and even my brother, Unai (born nine years earlier), couldn’t. Our father died in 2015, but we know all about what he did at the club because of all the things he told me and my three brothers. We would come and watch Real Union all the time.”

Elsewhere in Hondarribia, there are basketball courts — the Emerys and his staff at Villa are enthusiasts, having had hoops installed at the training ground — with small-sided futsal and tennis courts, as well as padel, another of Emery’s favourite pastimes.

The hilly terrain can be sapping, but Emery developed a passion for long walks and bike rides to clear his thoughts.

Puerta de Santa Maria forms the main entrance to Hondarribia’s cobbled streets and through to the market square and, beyond, its beaches. The coat of arms above serves as the door for the ‘most noble, most loyal, most valiant and always loyal’.

Go through and there are medieval walls on either side of the uphill street, with wooden balconies and the 16th-century Iglesia del Manzano catholic church at the far end.

The church is quiet but vast and impressive. There is a smattering of locals sitting to pray, with candles lit and striking stained-glass.

Religion has formed a strand of Emery’s character. ‘Unai’ is among the most popular male names in the Basque Country and directly translates to ‘the Good Shepherd’.

“I believe in God,” he said previously. “He is with me every day: in my life, in my work, with my family, with my friends, with the people I love.”

Outside, a teenager on his bike whizzes past with a Real Sociedad shirt on. Hondarribia is along the coast from the city of San Sebastian, where La Liga side Real Sociedad is based. It was the team Emery identified with and would play for.

Juan and Antonio were both goalkeepers, with the latter conceding La Liga’s first goal in February 1929 while playing for Real Union against Espanyol. Coming from a line of footballers threatened to bring pressure to Emery and his brothers.

Growing up, Unai preferred Spanish cartoons and reading but played in midfield alongside his brother, in some ways breaking family goalkeeping tradition. Emery’s son, Lander, has restored the goalkeeping continuity and plays for Villa’s under-21s.

Emery was an industrious left midfielder or full-back, not blessed with innate technical quality but, to little surprise considering what he would achieve as a manager, enriched with a high work rate and an accomplished left foot. He made five appearances for Real Sociedad between 1995 and 1996 and scored once, yet largely lurched around Spain’s second and third divisions.

“I left home at 24 — Hondarribia, San Sebastian, Real Sociedad — and opened myself up to the world of football: carrying my suitcase, facing many difficult moments, leaving my comfort zone,” Emery told the Guardian in 2022.

He took short-term contracts at Leganes, Lorca Deportiva and Racing Ferrol until acknowledging, at 34, that coaching brought far greater enjoyment and purpose. Emery was fascinated by former Real Sociedad striker Roberto Lopez Ufarte, analysing the specific movements and craftsmanship in his game.

“I wasn’t born a coach; I made myself one,” Emery would later say. “I wasn’t born with a surname to allow me to play at the elite level, so I had to win for myself. Your credibility comes from results, cemented in the dedication I’ve transmitted. If I’ve got better and been successful, it’s because I’ve had a group determined to work as hard as me, and they feel the need to go harder when we fail.”

Emery began taking his badges but realised that to create change within a team, a coach must be able to resonate with players. As a youngster in Real Sociedad’s academy, he never forgot the advice of former manager John Toshack: to be a good coach, you must be the opposite of what you were as a player.

In Emery’s mind, he was a diligent, studious player, but could never quite reach the next level. He reasoned that “none of my managers could overcome my deficiencies as a player” or had the burning obsession to individually maximise his talents.

When he decided to go into coaching, he did so all in.

“My brother is a top manager,” Igor says. “I don’t say that because of the trophies he’s won but because of how he gets them: how he manages, the way he works and because he’s invested 200 per cent. He tries all the time to improve and to learn from other people. This may be the key thing. Everybody can say, ‘I would like to learn from him’, but he tries to learn from others because he really thinks he can keep on improving.”

Throughout his playing career, Emery battled with doubts. He would lean on his avid reading side, which increased as he became a coach.

“My doubts and fears helped me learn how to manage the pressures of being a manager and my work with the players,” he said, in an excerpt taken from the authorised biography, Unai Emery: El Maestro. “I’ve also relied a great deal on books about self-confidence and personal development.”

Books provide Emery with a certain equilibrium, and he has been known to give books to his players.

The Basque Country shares a remarkable array of elite football coaches, such as Emery, Mikel Arteta, Andoni Iraola and Xabi Alonso. They are products of their backgrounds, which have all meaningfully contributed to the men and managers they are.

Hondarribia is a place entrenched with history, struggle and principle. It has formed who Emery is.

Online brontebilly

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Re: Unai Emery
« Reply #11429 on: April 24, 2025, 07:27:42 PM »
Seems like liberal use of generative AI in that article

 


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