Steve Bruce must show bravery to take spiralling Newcastle in new direction

Magpies are winless in seven and promise of an attacking approach must become more than empty words

Vithushan Ehantharajah
Sports Feature Writer
Monday 11 January 2021 11:43 GMT
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(Getty Images)

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"I think the supporters will see that hopefully they've enjoyed watching the team tonight even though they've been knocked out."

Of the gripes Newcastle United fans have with Steve Bruce, perhaps this was a perfect encapsulation of two in particular. The assertion that their criticisms of a team that sit 15th in the Premier League table, knocked out of the League Cup by Championship side Brentford and now out of the FA Cup at the first stage, has been about a lack of effort. And of a manager who chips away expectation with every misstep. The call for Newcastle fans to revel in their own schadenfreude is a new one, mind. 

Sunday's 2-0 defeat to Arsenal in the third round could have been very different. Two chances in the final minutes of normal time fell to Elliot Anderson and then Andy Carroll, who had missed an earlier, clearer opportunity to put Newcastle ahead in the second half. This lack of cutting edge has been a problem all season.

READ MORE: Arteta ‘thanks God’ for VAR after victory over Newcastle

Though fans have moaned about the quality of teams put out, and a "sit back and hit them on the break" style which lacks the crucial "hit them on the break" bit, rarely have they belied the effort. All told, Newcastle have fared relatively well against higher-profile opposition through lasting the pace, albeit with dollops of good fortune along the way.

The 1-1 draw with Tottenham Hotspur in September was earned via a late VAR-assisted penalty. Holding Liverpool to a 0-0 draw at the end of 2020 was achieved primarily through Karl Darlow putting on one of the club's best individual displays of the season. There was also a valiant effort while going down 2-0 against Manchester City on Boxing Day. And their second-half performance at the Emirates contained more energy and drive than the first. That late surge will have Newcastle players and fans considering themselves unfortunate not to triumph against a side who have now won four on the bounce.

But “effort” only nourishes you for so long, just as “exposure” is no alternative to “money”. It does not offset the need for wins and points or give fans any greater comfort amid a winless seven-game run that has Newcastle out of all cup competitions and dropping three places in the table. Even if Bruce, as ever, sees a sunnier side.

"I've seen positives in all of the games. It's not easy when you've played Man City, Liverpool, Leicester (a 2-1 defeat) and now Arsenal. It's been a particularly difficult period in terms of the games but I've seen positives."

When prompted to elaborate, Bruce said he saw the team adhere to his desire to base themselves higher up the pitch. A move he says will lead to similar chances that were spurned on Sunday. The green shoots of brighter, more expressive days ahead. 

"Yes we haven't took the wins, but the reaction from the players and the shift — trying to get us higher up the pitch - I think they are getting used to it and we are making progress.

"Rather than sitting deep and playing off a low block, if you like. It's to try and get us higher up the pitch. Of course, that's always a difficult part and to win a game you've got to score a couple. That's the positive for me - we're trying something different and it nearly played dividends." 

Newcastle did sit higher up the pitch, though that was clearest when Pierre Emerick Aubameyang was let loose with balls over the top from deep. Nevertheless, it was a noticeable shift and one, if it really is to be adopted, should become more defined in the coming weeks.

If Bruce's assertion of a new way is to be taken at face value, Tuesday's trip to Bramall Lane presents the perfect opportunity to make good on it. Sheffield United, without a win in 17 Premier League games, narrowly made it past League One Bristol Rovers for their first win of 2020/21. You could not pick a better scenario to showcase this tactical ambition.

Maintaining a higher line comes with a need to see more of the ball than your opponents, making better use of it in the final third and exploiting that dominance in front of goal. Looking at the numbers, such an approach needs a complete flip of their behaviours, and a more coherent attacking strategy than cross your fingers and hope Callum Wilson scores.

No one this season has had less of the ball than Newcastle, averaging just 38 per cent possession per match. Their passing accuracy in the attacking half (66.53 per cent) is in the bottom three having attempted the least of all 20 sides. They are 19th when it comes to total touches in the opposition box so far.

As such, talk of a change in approach comes with a fistful of salt. Newcastle under Bruce have dulled their attacking tendencies in pursuit of laborious defence. A tweak of this magnitude requires progressive football preached from top to bottom, something which has been nonexistent over the last 18 months. You can understand why fans are sceptical of this latest soundbite. Can this team and, more importantly, this manager really change their stripes?

Of some comfort is that Bruce is preaching solutions rather than excuses. How long that lasts remains to be seen. They return to Arsenal next weekend, followed by matches at home to Leeds United and away to Everton. A run of fixtures where the temptation to drop back, in every sense, will be great.

Whatever bravery necessary for this new direction needs to be dictated by actions from above. Any intent from the players matched tenfold by intent from Bruce. Otherwise, these are just more empty words to throw on the pyre at St James' Park. 

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