Install the app
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

2017/18 Yannick Bolasie

Status
Not open for further replies.
I think you'd have to be incredibly closed minded to not be able to acknowledge that he could offer us something. His pace alone frightens defenders and forces mistakes. Look at Niasse, not a great footballer by any means, but he makes things happen just by running around, makes defenders cack their pants. Let's not forget we have no right to believe this current crop of players is above Bolasie's level.
Perhaps I exaggerate due to the horror him turning up at Everton after years of me thinking that he was laugh out loud bad, and for an enormous fee no less.

I was keen to see what he could offer when I thought that a relegation battle was on the cards, but in the long-term I don't think you can ever establish an effective style of play with one-in-five wild cards starting every week.
 
Perhaps I exaggerate due to the horror him turning up at Everton after years of me thinking that he was laugh out loud bad, and for an enormous fee no less.

I was keen to see what he could offer when I thought that a relegation battle was on the cards, but in the long-term I don't think you can ever establish an effective style of play with one-in-five wild cards starting every week.

The first few pages of him signing for us on the Bolasie transfer thread is enlightening.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/footbal...rton-liverpool-yannick-bolasie-seamus-coleman

Things are looking up for Everton – especially with Yannick Bolasie returning
hey had three shots on target, we had two. That shows how we mastered a really good side.” Sam Allardyce’s summary of events at Anfield on Sunday was more than a little biased, but the result was more important than the performance for the new Everton manager and rightly so at this early stage of his tenure. Everton are unbeaten in their last four matches – with the 1-1 draw at Liverpool coming after a 4-0 win over West Ham, a 2-0 win over Huddersfield and a 3-0 win over Apollon Limassol – but Allardyce knows better than anyone that he still has a huge task on his hands.

Everton’s strongest system, let alone their starting line-up, is still a mystery. They have deployed nine different formations in the league this season, which sums up the issues with this muddled squad better than anything. The fact that 22 different players have started for them in the league shows this is a side lacking an identity. Allardyce has managed to take them into the top half of the table but establishing a clear vision for his players will take time.

One thing that should be clear is that this squad, with the current list of absentees at least, does not suit a back three. They have played three at the back on five occasions this season and shipped 12 goals. Instead, a variation of a 4-1-4-1 or 4-3-3 formation looks the most viable option, but they need to exploit the wide areas of the pitch better and that has been a major problem.

Wayne Rooney and Gylfi Sigurdsson were fielded as the nominal wide men against Liverpool on Sunday and Everton were toothless on the counterattack. Rooney’s penalty in the 77th minute was their only shot of the afternoon from inside Liverpool’s box. Given his team’s lack of threat from wide areas, Allardyce will have been pleased to see Yannick Bolasie return from injury to play for Everton’s U23s against Leicester on Monday night. His comeback could be a real turning point for a side in stasis.

“Playing again was overwhelming,” said Bolasie after he had been given the last half-hour of the game by David Unsworth. “When I got on I felt good. I knew about two weeks ago I was going to play in this game. Right now the team is doing really well so you’re going to have to try to fight your way in, but there’s no rush. I know what my role is because a year out in football means it will be a month or two before I’m really back at it, but the main thing is that I feel OK. Just the smell of grass again in the game was great.”

None of the adjectives used to describe Everton’s poor performances this season could be attributed to the winger. Everton lack pace, invention and unpredictability; step forward Bolasie. The DR Congo international is one of the league’s great entertainers when he is on top form. At times he is so unpredictable even he seems to have no clue what he will do next.

Everton paid Crystal Palace £25m for his services in August 2016 and he is exactly what they have been missing this season. Bolasie will bring the team pace and so will Seamus Coleman, who is back in training after suffering a double fracture to his right leg in March. Coleman signed a new five-year contract with the club in May and Everton will be an entirely different animal once both are fully fit. The right-back has been a pivotal player at both ends of the pitch for years, while Bolasie made an excellent start to life on Merseyside before he suffered a cruciate knee ligament injury in a 1-1 draw with Manchester United last December.

In his 12 starts for the club, the 28-year-old had a direct hand in five goals and averaged 2.8 dribbles per game. To put that figure into perspective, of the players from last season who have started more than twice for Everton this season, Idrissa Gueye was his closest challenger on 0.8 dribbles. Of the players who have started at least five times this campaign, Dominic Calvert-Lewin leads the way, again with just 0.8. Everton’s average of 5.6 dribbles per game as a team this season is just twice what Bolasie was averaging on his own.

Given the nature of his injury and the type of player Bolasie is, it is important Everton do not rush him back after a year on the sidelines. A knee ligament rupture can be devastating to a player so reliant on speed, power and agility. However, once he and Coleman settle back into the team in the New Year – with the Irishman expected back in January – Everton should be a force to be reckoned with once again. The fans will have to be patient – and perhaps settle for performances akin to one they produced at Liverpool for the next few weeks – but a far more exciting side could be just around the corner.
 

He's certainly not without his flaws, however he will hopefully offer us the pace, width and spontaneity that we've all been crying out for.

As others have mentioned, he will frighten defenders with his pace, he offers something different with his skill and can also cross a ball.
Lol
 

Can't wait for his whipped balls into the box, to nobody because we don't have any strikers and our most advanced player is usually about 30 yards from the opposition's penalty box.

COYFBB
 
You laugh but he can certainly put a decent ball into the box. Did it a number of times before his injury and more often than not there was no striker to get on the end of them.
If you fire balls off at random eventually one or two will end up in the right place. Look at his career stats, the lad is hardly an assist machine. It's amazing how good players become in peoples minds when they are out of the side for a prolonged period of time.
 

Status
Not open for further replies.

Welcome to GrandOldTeam

Get involved. Registration is simple and free.

Back
Top