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Post by account_disabled on Feb 2, 2018 7:52:11 GMT
Hi, Argentina toiling under the management of Edgardo Bauza was at times an excruciating experience. El Patón, for all his achievements at club level in South America, looked ill-equipped to handle the players and almost inexplicably failed to find a balance in midfield. Bauza’s stumbling career in charge saw Argentina almost lacking a midfield entirely and while Jorge Sampaoli is still trying to address this, La Albiceleste cry out for the type of players, able to link play, break lines, protect the defence while crucially getting the ball forward to Lionel Messi and co. Step forward Leandro Paredes, Zenit St. Petersburg’s cultured number five, who may yet be the man to fill that void. While the role of deep-lying playmaker may now be one that is associated with Paredes that wasn’t always the case and earlier in his career the suggestion would have perhaps raised eyebrows. At the age of eight, Paredes was snapped up by Boca Juniors from his local club, an hour or so away in Buenos Aires province, and his incredible technical ability saw him promoted into the first team picture at sixteen. Tales of a naturally gifted enganche had filtered through from the academy and it wasn’t long before comparisons with the incumbent Boca number ten at the time were heard, none other than Juan Román Riquelme. For More Details Cloud Storage Solutions Video
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