145 post-match analysis and summary

Sunset was confused, Heidenheim's right side was almost useless to him, he was almost giving in on the left, shooting and passing, but the goal was always narrow.

After he played for more than half an hour, and when the time came to 70 minutes, the goal came unexpectedly.

In the 71st minute, when Sunset received the ball from central defender Kempf, Heidenheim no longer dared to use Strauss, who was carrying a yellow card, to mark Sunset, nor did he dare to defend and swoop with rough and simple movements. Instead, the newly substituted defensive midfielder Philip harassed and pulled, Victor, who was responsible for sweeping in the three central defenders, and Grisbeck, the defender, were close to support to form a defensive combination to deal with Sunset.

Sunset, who received the ball half-sideways, had already shaken off Heidenheim's Philip through nimble running, but was caught up again the moment he stopped the ball. Philip leans behind him and stretches his foot forward to reach for the ball, interfering with Sunset's possession even if he can't catch it, and on the other hand, he stealthily pulls Sunset's jersey behind him, and squeezes Sunset from time to time.

After a week of repeated behind-the-back collision training, Sunset gained a lot of experience, first controlling the ball and squeezing backwards at the same time, then suddenly unloading, and using the force of the behind-the-back collision to kick in, and opened up the distance with Heidenheim's Philip.

The jersey behind him was still being pulled, but after pulling it away, this small action was exposed, the referee was standing not far away, the whistle was already in his mouth, and Philip, who was frightened of Heidenheim, hurriedly let go, and raised it to try to show his innocence to the referee.

Sunset shook for a moment when the pull was suddenly relaxed, but she quickly took control of it, and she could already observe the running and development on the field.

Niederlechner and Petersen were confident of Sunset's breakthrough and had already sprinted forward to the edge of Heidenheim's box. Peterson pulled to the right and then turned sharply to catch the ball, Niederina's top up the front was already pulling to the left, and there was a large empty space in front of the left of the run. They are Freiburg's best passing and design routines.

"Niederlechna, left side of the box, red zone."

Before the game, private analyst Lucas repeatedly showed Sunset the introduction of the pass priority chart, and at this moment, three key words were particularly clear, and he subconsciously passed a precedent to Niedlechner.

This knee-jerk pass was particularly fast, flying between the two before Heidenheim's midfielder and centre-back closed the goal.

Heidenheim was even more nervous about the connection between Sunset and Peterson, with Sunset sending the ball at his feet, and Peterson turning around to catch the ball was Freiburg's most efficient goal-scoring combination. Compared with Niederlechner, who scored 4 goals, Petersen, who has scored 21 goals, is obviously more threatening, and Klaus, who is marking Niederlechner, has taken a step back, and is also planning to make up for the middle and block Peterson's shot.

Niederlechner, who grabbed the ball in front of Klaus, received the ball and directly half-turned and hit the near corner from a small angle, not giving Heidenheim a chance to make up for the second half of his life.

On 72 minutes, Freiburg's long-awaited goal finally arrived.

1:0。

The next afterglow no longer insists on his own breakthrough, and always passes the ball he feels is the most threatening as soon as he dodges the angle, according to the situation and impression on the field as soon as he dodges the angle, Niederlechner in front, Peterson who swims behind him, Philippe or Abrahi of Freiburg in the midfield, there is no fixed passing object and routine, the most favorable pass to that pass, who appears in his best position to pass there, the proportion of threatening shots on target has increased significantly, making Heidenheim jump in the backfield, and only the work of parrying remains.

And in the 78th minute, Sunset hung diagonally in the penalty area in front, and Niederlechner suddenly snatched from behind Klaus to score a brace.

Although Heidenheim pulled a goal back from a corner in the 92nd minute, Freiburg held on for the win and set the Bundesliga championship celebrations off to a good start.

As soon as the match was over, the Heidenheim players and the expedition fans quickly left the Black Forest Stadium, leaving the stage for celebration to the Freiburgers.

At this time, not only the Freiburg players and fans at the Black Forest Stadium were ecstatic, but even the entire small town of Freiburg was boiling.

The professional championship and trophy were a completely unfamiliar experience for Sunset, and the junior tournament was nothing compared to this one, so much so that the smirk on the face of the Bundesliga trophy became the most important photo he would like to delete in the future.

The awards at the stadium weren't all there was to the celebration, and it was followed by a city parade and club dinners, a day of total madness.

However, after all kinds of congratulations, Vahili Moyr called him into the analysis room and asked Lucas to start playing the breakthrough and performance before the goal, Vahili himself held his arm and waited for Sunset to read it seriously before he said seriously:

"Why didn't you score, you know?"

This is where Sunset is confused, at the beginning he has almost 7 or 8 successful breakthroughs in 10 when he is fit, sometimes he can pass two or three people in a row, and the final passes and shots are also good, but he always can't score the goal, and there is always a little bit of stumbling at the end of the smooth, but he can't figure out what the problem is.

Vahili also signaled to Lucas to show a lot of clips of the Chinese Super League game, and the initial breakthrough was mostly good, but the passing problems in the final stage were more obvious and sometimes even outrageous. Even though Sunset didn't jerk off and go out of bounds, after watching it for a while, I had to admit that the problem was much the same. Hurriedly asked eagerly:

"Coach Vahiri, please tell me what the problem is? How to improve ?..."

Seeing his anxiety and sincerity, Vahili stopped selling it and said directly:

"You pay attention to the combination of body and movement, the connection between movement and movement, have you considered the combination of physical fitness and movement?"

It wasn't until Sunset had some realization that Vahiri continued to explain in detail:

"There are two types of fitness: full-field fitness and phase fitness, and you can also equate phase fitness with anaerobic running ability. When you sprint too much and pass too much, the physical fitness you are assigned to the last pass or shot will inevitably decrease, and the ability to control your footwork and power will decrease. You see, usually your pass can make your teammates very comfortable to move on to the next move, but yesterday there were three times when they needed to adjust to complete the next move, and once they lost control of the pass and passed behind their teammates. If you look at the shots, your shots are a little bit out of shape at the end, so it's going to be a fraction of a second..."

"What seems like a small control error can end up being a very large error in the result. Looking at the two passes you made and you didn't go after everyone in front of you, and although your fitness dropped, you had more energy allocated to the last pass than the previous ones. Not only did he pass it accurately, but he also made Niederlechner very comfortable to shoot directly at the goal, so the goal was scored..."

Sunset stared at the screen for a moment, and realized that Vahiri's words were right, so she asked anxiously:

"Yes, Coach Vahiri, you are right. So am I going to break through and get rid of it in the future?"

Vahily smiled and shook his head:

"No, after getting rid of the defense for a while, your passing environment will be much better, and you can't break through and get rid of it because you are afraid of physical fitness. It would be accurate to say that you should complete the breakthrough and get rid of it under the premise of ensuring the physical strength required for the last pass. Sometimes you don't have to absolutely get out of the defensive, you just have to win the corners and the time you need, and doing more is a complete waste of energy. Think about it..."