Showing posts with label di santo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label di santo. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

A profile of Swansea target Franco Di Santo

With a move heavily rumoured, how did the ex-Wigan frontman perform last season?


"Franco Di Santo? Him by 'ere"
Following on from yesterday's blog where I had a look at Di Santo's performance in general over the last few seasons, let's now look a little closer at the Argentinian striker's game. With Lita and Moore both seemingly free to find another club, the Swans would be left with Bony, Michu and Rory Donnelly as the only registered forwards (and Michu's inclusion in that list would no doubt gall the Spaniard), so you'd hope that if he is to come in, he'd improve the overall calibre of our front-line.

Last season he played 35 games in the league (24 starts), scoring 5 goals and nabbing two assists. Not the most auspicious start for a striker, so let's move on. When I've been discussing the merits of Di Santo coming in with other Swansea fans, the general consensus has actually been more positive than I'd have imagined; he's clearly not your "out and out striker" and his ability to hold up play has been cited more than once as something which could be useful to the Swans - but do the stats support this? His pass completion is 72.8% (averaging 17.2 passes per game) which when compared with Luke Moore (79.9% completion and 10.2 passes per game) doesn't actually hold up that well. Pun not intended.

Furthermore, from 4 starts and 11 sub appearances Moore managed to grab 3 goals and 2 assists - is Di Santo really any better? The former Chelsea man is dispossessed 1.3 times per game and gives the ball away another 1.6 - Moore weighs in with 0.3 and 0.4 respectively so it would seem that the ball retention argument isn't actually that sound. Ok, Moore has a smaller amount of average game time but it shouldn't produce a disparity as marked as that displayed so far. He averages 1.9 shots per game, with his 5 goals coming from a total of 65 shots - far from clinical and that gives him a conversion rate of 13%. 

He does manage 0.9 key passes per game, which is more than all but 5 Swansea players averaged last term (Ki, Pablo, Routledge, Michu & JDG), so he's clearly got an eye for a pass, but the problem seems to be holding on to the ball long enough to do anything with it, and when you consider he only attempts a dribble once every other game it doesn't seem he's even trying to do anything particularly spectacular. Defensively, 0.6 tackles per game dwarfs the 0.1 managed by Moore, but when you put it alongside the 1.3 managed by Michu it doesn't look that great. I remember Alan Shearer talking about goalscorers once, and he said "Scoring goals hurts", implying that you don't magically appear for tap-ins; you produce your own luck by busting a gut for 90 minutes every time you take the field. 

All in all, not that encouraging really. As has often been the case with the Swans, however, judging a player based on performances at another club could well be fool-hardy. We're seeing more and more cases of "if the shoe fits" and Swansea seems to be turning into somewhere technical footballers can legitimately hope to revitalise their careers if they've seen them stutter elsewhere. Let's hope that, if he does make a switch to SA1, we'll be saying exactly that about Di Santo in a year's time. 

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Swansea linked with Franco Di Santo

Goal-shy striker could be brought in as backup for Bony



Franco Di Santo

The latest name to be linked with the Swans is ex-Chelsea youngster Di Santo, who's spent the last few seasons oop North in Wigan. The inspiration from this blog came from reading an article on footballfancast.com, which interestingly called him both a "former PL player" and "a star". Both of those statements are fairly tenuous given current goings on, but you can chew them apart at your leisure. The main point I wanted to look at was their assertation that Di Santo had earned himself cult status at the DW thanks to goal-scoring exploits which helped save the club from relegation (a few seasons ago).

I didn't really remember that happening (which is by no means proof it didn't; there are lots of things I manage to miss), so I had a quick look at matches he participated in to see if there was anything in this.

After a spell at Chelsea as a youngster (where he scored a prolific amount of goals for the reserve team) he made a few sub appearances before being shipped out to Blackburn on loan, where despite a decent start he fell out of favour. In fairness, he'd slipped out of the starting XI based on a lack of goals, so it wasn't like he was being particularly mis-treated, and after a full year on loan at Ewood Park he signed for Wigan for £2million.

In his first full year at Wigan, he played 29 games and scored only one goal. Given that goal was one of two scored by Wigan in a 4-2 loss to Sunderland, it doesn't seem it was 2010/11 he saved the club from relegation! Next!...

So, 11/12 then. Bingo. He got off the mark early in the season with two deflected goals against QPR, before a consolation goal against Everton preceeded one of two Wigan goals in a 2-1 win away at Sunderland on the 26th of November. That was his last goal for 5 months, as his next strike came in a 2-1 win away at Arsenal on the 16th of April, before he also managed to bag himself one in a 4-0 win over Newcastle, and another in a 3-2 win over Wolves on the final day of the season, giving him 7 in 33 overall that campaign.

Hardly the stuff of legends, surely? No-one can take away his contribution to the Latics, however I suspect that if indeed he is a club legend up there, it's because they were particularly short on suitable candidates.

Last season was more of the same really. 5 goals in 33 games really doesn't convince me that he'd be worth bringing in, but as I've said before if he is brought in he'd have my backing. I don't think he's a bad player necessarily, and psycohology can play a huge part in striker's going on scoring sprees. You don't score as many goals at youth/reserve level as he has without possessing the quality, and hopefully if he does arrive it'll be the spark he needs to rediscover his goalscoring touch. Because let's be honest, he needs to....