Corners are back in fashion in the Premier League and clubs are employing specialist set-piece coaches – much to the annoyance of some fans, who regard packed penalty areas and all-in wrestling between players as a threat to the English game.
‘What matters is winning’’ Premier League leaders Arsenal have led the way in the resurgence of set-pieces, scoring 37 league goals from corners since the start of the 2023-24 season, the highest tally in Europe’s top five leagues. Some people are “snobbish” about the role of set-pieces in the game, former Stoke City and Crystal Palace manager Tony Pulis told the BBC, but “the expectation, and the pressure they put on the opposition, is amazing”. And whatever the critics say, “what matters is winning”.
After years of “strategy and technique”, and the dominance of patient, possession-based football, the “suddenness” of the change in approach by English teams has been “remarkable”, said Jonathan Wilson in The Guardian. The obsession with possession-based tactics has led to opposition teams defending in a compact “low block”, and a “reversion to something more physical” certainly poses a threat – but in a game of tactical cycles, “this too will pass”.
‘Ruining the spectacle’ Some scenes during the recent game between Everton and Manchester United were an “absolute disgrace”, said Martin Samuel in The Times. We’ve grown used to a “melee of grabbing, holding, pushing, pulling” and “grappling” in penalty areas. Meanwhile, governing bodies “obsess over trivia and the trivial”, exemplified by the International Football Association Board prioritising stuff like five-second countdowns for goal-kicks. Nothing is being done to safeguard the “beautiful game”.
“Enough already,” said Graham Scott, a former Premier League referee, in The Telegraph. Corners may be “ruining the spectacle” of football, but referees have a “nearly impossible job” trying to police the fray, especially when fans have little “appetite” for lengthy VAR delays. To fix the issue, “I would imitate hockey by forcing teams to place a certain number of players in the other half” to reduce congestion. In a “more radical move”, defenders could be inside the six-yard box and attackers outside it when a corner is taken, separating them entirely.
|