Daniel Brigham 0 Posted April 4, 2014 Ricky van Wolfswinkel''s criticism this season is as misplaced as the abuse Jonny Howson received last year. By Daniel Brigham.Ricky van Wolfswinkel is making it very difficult for Norwich fans to defend him. It used to be quite simple. We could say he would come good; he needs better service; he was unlucky with his injury; it takes a while to adapt to the Premier League. If that didn''t work we would reasonably point out that he’s loveable on twitter and if even that wasn''t enough then, well, just look at his adorably funny hair. How could anyone not defend him?Yet with every minute he goes without scoring a goal – now at 1,329 (or 14 full games) – and with every chance he misses like a drunk failing to fit a key into a lock, it becomes harder to muster those excuses without letting doubt creep into your voice. The sight of him, hands on hips, with an expression like he''d just seen a video of his own conception is becoming all-too familiar. This column isn''t going to criticise van Wolfswinkel though. I still firmly believe he is a good striker and that Norwich are wasting a talented player. Plus there is already too much RVW-bashing going on among the fans. Whenever Wolfswinkel starts for Norwich something strange takes hold of Carrow Road. First there''s a solitary ''gethooperon''. A few more individuals join in, then pockets of fans, before it becomes a cacophony of chirps sweeping across the stands, a dawn chorus spreading throughout the Carrow Road jungle. Gethooperon.Where''s the logic to this? The two strikers are interchangeably as poor as each other at the moment. Hooper has gone 938 minutes without a goal, so wanting him to come on for Wolfswinkel is as futile as swapping Katie Price''s autobiography for Kerry Katona''s. While Hooper is still lauded by the majority of Norwich fans there is an unpleasant relish among some who are lining up to attack Wolfswinkel. They call him lazy, lightweight, out of his depth. As Noel Gallagher once said of his brother Liam, these are people with forks in a world of soup. They live to moan, spending 90 minutes barking out the same three or four angry cliches in a loop, like a broken angry football Dalek, honing in on an easy target. At the moment that target is Wolfswinkel. Last season it was Jonny Howson. You remember that? How fans would turn on him. How he was accused of being lightweight. That he didn''t get stuck in. That he wasn''t good enough for the Premier League. How Carrow Road would tut and shake its giant yellow head whenever Howson misplaced a pass. Familiar isn''t it. Weird though, also. Because Howson has been our best player this season. So how has he gone from being rubbish and not good enough for this league to being Norwich''s top dog?Because he was never rubbish. Because what he went through last season is exactly what Wolfswinkel is going through now. Both good players, they were asked to perform roles they''re not suited to. Howson was played as a defensive midfielder. He is not a defensive midfielder. Wolfswinkel is being played as a defensive striker, expected to drop deep and close down defenders rather than make runs and get in the box, which is what he is best at.In roles that went against their natural instincts and abilities both struggled. The more they struggled the more their confidence was lowered. As confidence drained away so did their first touch – always the first thing to suffer when doubts creep in. Doubt attaches itself to players like a parasite, spreading disease throughout their body and mind. After the first touch went, Howson’s passing deteriorated, just as Wolfswinkel''s finishing instinct has.The more this happened, the more the crowd got on their backs, the worse their touch became, the more the forks started thrashing about in soup. That easily, a vicious cycle is formed.However, Howson shows there is hope for Wolfswinkel. Playing in a more natural advanced role this season, Howson has excelled. He has proved that the criticism was knee-jerk and has been allowed to become the player he had promised to be when Paul Lambert signed him. He has also shown that last year''s shift as a defensive midfielder has added a different layer to his game, has made him a more dynamic midfielder. It may not look like it now but, like Howson, Wolfswinkel will be a better player for this season''s experience. He will know he has to adapt his game to thrive in the Premier League. A bit of increased strength wouldn''t go amiss. But he will need help from whoever Norwich''s manager is next season. Wolfswinkel is a poacher. Some have used this to criticise him, but they''re mistaking poacher for goal-hanger. He is perfectly capable of leading the line on his own. His touch is good enough and his runs are suited to the role – but he needs the midfield to be higher up the pitch and he needs them to play through the middle more often. He suits a team with high-intensity passing and explosive speed in their side. His attributes would almost certainly have brought him goals for Southampton or Swansea this season. That''s not the Hughton way though (which begs the question why he was bought in the first place) but, to get the best out of him – and Hooper – that''s how Norwich need to play next season if they are still a Premier League club. If Norwich do adapt to Wolfswinkel’s strengths then there is no reason why his transformation can''t be as stark as Howson''s. If not then inevitably he will move on, start scoring goals for a good team and we''ll be left to wonder how on earth Norwich managed to waste such a bright talent. Daniel Brigham is features editor of The Cricketer. He tweets at @cricketer_dan Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
The Great Mass Debater 1,081 Posted April 4, 2014 Think you''ve generally hit the nail on the head there - a good read, thanks Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tetteys Jig 830 Posted April 4, 2014 I hope you''re right. The only way he''ll be saved with us is if we stay up and have a couple of games to spare where he can play some open football.Howson''s last two appearences last season brought a massive change to his fortunes, 2 goals right out of the top drawer. Once we were 3-0 up against WBA, safety was secured and the players all came out of their shells. Perhaps this is what RVW needs.I feel the premiership has suffered for quality because of the hefty price relegation brings. Every team 11th down has been poor to watch this season for the most part and nearly every match was like the final frame of the crucible, error strewn despite some great names on paper playing. The nerves creep in and any thought of expansive or risky play is quickly dismissed.Hopefully at some point in our premiership tenure, we''ll get more of a chance to play without fear and we can perhaps produce the odd Michu or Lallana.It''s not beyond the realms of possibility. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PurpleCanary 5,556 Posted April 4, 2014 Well, for me the difference between Howson and RvW is that when I thought Howson was playing badly last season I didn''t think he was the worst Norwich City midfielder I''d seen since the late 1960s... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tetteys Jig 830 Posted April 4, 2014 He had also shown sparks of form under Lambert briefly and hadn''t been completely hopeless since arriving. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GPs Beard 0 Posted April 4, 2014 This is without any pretence at insider knowledge, but I have a gut feeling that RVW wont start tomorrow.... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fromage Frais 10 Posted April 4, 2014 Howson was not good.RVW however looks diabolical.I hope that he comes good as he has been so bad we cannot get rid either. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Muffles 8 Posted April 4, 2014 I have to say, I''ve always enjoyed and agreed with Dan''s blogs - and once again, it''s spot on. I think RvW is out of position and playing an unnatural game and I too hope, maybe foolish optimism, that he will come good next season... For my two penneth, I think the comment of Hooper being just as bad is a little off, in that at least he has scored this season, several times, albeit ONLY several times. I also believe RvWs starts have been misguided, especially when he''s missed several chances maybe, just maybe Hooper would have scored... but then for that matter, so might Becchio, if he gets the opportunity. All in, my feeling for the future is - survive relegation this year. New manager in the summer, and a new lease of life for the team next season. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ZLF 273 Posted April 4, 2014 RvW is likely to follow Daniel and Howsons progress; both took a while to find their feet but both have improved significantly over time.Another good article - thanks DB. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bury Yellow 2 Posted April 4, 2014 Another excellent blog but just adds to my frustration to what our manager and coaches are doing to this talented squad. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lappinitup 629 Posted April 4, 2014 [quote user="Bury Yellow"]Another excellent blog but just adds to my frustration to what our manager and coaches are doing to this talented squad.[/quote]You saw it the same as me Bury, another dig at Chris Hughton but in a RVW disguise. [^o)] Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
The ghost of Michael Theoklitos 0 Posted April 4, 2014 I really enjoy your writing style mate. This one did give me a chuckle."The two strikers are interchangeably as poor as each other at the moment. Hooper has gone 938 minutes without a goal, so wanting him to come on for Wolfswinkel is as futile as swapping Katie Price''s autobiography for Kerry Katona''s"As to your main point, I''m not as optimistic he''ll come good. However, I''d love nothing more than to be proved wrong. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Daniel Brigham 0 Posted April 4, 2014 Cheers for the kind words. Lappinitup - there was nothing disguised about the dig! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Luv The Board. 0 Posted April 4, 2014 I was one of Ewan Roberts biggest critics in his first season with us . Boy how wrong was I .Here''s hoping RVW turns out to be just as good ,if not better. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Luv The Board. 0 Posted April 4, 2014 Who can''t spell IWan? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
im spartacus canary 0 Posted April 4, 2014 i always look out for your blog DB you write really well, do you make a living from writing? i know you write for cricketer magazine(ZZZZZZZ) but does it pay the bills ? keep it up [:D] Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lake district canary 4,531 Posted April 4, 2014 As much as this blog is a good read, I still question that the manager is the problem here. RVW has not scored goals - obviously - but we have won matches he has started in and we have scored goals in matches he has started in. That is not an excuse - it is fact - and although he isn''t scoring goals, there are aspects of his play that have been good - to the extent he got a rousing reception when substituted against Spurs. The scapegoating goes on. RVW is useless or Hughton is useless because he''s not using him right. Well which is it - or is it a combination of factors? Many of us have seen players that have been regarded as useless - and then come good - like Iwan. I remember when Hoolahan was villified by fans at Carrow Rd in 2007-8 - and now he is still regarded as some kind of saint by some people. I don''t blame Hughton - RVW has had chances to score - and that proves something is right (his positioning, his anticipation etc) - but I don''t blame RVW either - luck, his injury, his settling and adapting to a tighter league than he is used to - even the fact he wasn''t allowed to take THAT penalty. No. Its a combination of things. All to easy to say "no good, get rid" or Hughton is "no good, get rid" - but that demeans both player and manager - and to my mind they need support, not villification. He will score - and I believe he will score goals for Norwich - and with Hughton as manager. The sooner though, the better! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Katie Borkins 1 Posted April 4, 2014 Not sure his touch is good enough or his pace is quick enough. Add to that a lack of a midfielder capable of a defence splitting pass, and you''ve got a goal drought on your hands. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dubai Mark 0 Posted April 4, 2014 This subject has been done to death already in fairness, but its always good to read your blogs.I really dont see the comparison with Howson to be honest, but like the overwhelming majority am actually giving RVW a huge benefit of doubt this season in the belief that he will come good. I too think it is so very easy to get on the "it''s Hoooghton''s fault" bandwagon on this one and really feel that RVW HAS been given many opportunities both in starts and also actual chances, and as such, I really put his failure down to not being ready at this level yet, and needing time to get used to the EPL, which could certainly be the case and doesnt necessarily mean that he wont make it.Now, that all said, I have become a little worried in more recent games when unless my eyes have deceived me he has missed a couple of absolute sitters, gifts almost and also shown some very poor positioning when chances have been created and the ball put in exactly the right place for him.......its almost like he has lost his natural goal scorers instinct to make the right run and find that space and that is way more worringing than actually missing the sitters when he is in the right position.Also, I must mention, that at this level EVERY striker in every side is expected to work hard, track back when required and close down, its just the way it is in the EPL and all of the best strikers are very good at that as well as putting the ball in the net. So, short term I would actually start Hooper every time despite his barren spell and trust that RVW is one for next season, but in the meantime would welcome a couple of late winners from him coming off the bench. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FCC 76 Posted April 4, 2014 I am starting to love RVW - I love an underdog and the more the BBC have a pop at him, the more I want him to shut them up.And - when he scores I hope celebrates because the noise might take the roof of a stand or two!Come on Ricky!And now, back to my Jack and Coke! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Barossa 0 Posted April 4, 2014 what a load of apologist b******s! He has been utter w**k. If he scores tomorrow (and that''s his job), we can''t suddenly forget the dire performances prior. He has been given more than enough time to deliver. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites