Arsenal crush set pieces, but how important are they in Europe?

Arsenal crush set pieces, but how important are they in Europe?

There was a time when set pieces were seen as the refuge of the damned: a shortcut to competitiveness for inferior teams seeking a goal threat to supplement their defensive gameplan. Elite sides considered them an afterthought, an addendum to their footballing philosophy.

Now, the combination of a never-ending search for marginal gains and the rapid expansion of backroom staff has created a trend of appointing specialists adept at finding an edge from dead-ball situations … unless you’re Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou.

Postecoglou has never appointed a set-piece specialist in his career and while he insists the club work on them regularly, the 58-year-old said earlier this month that he would accept criticism of their record in pursuit of a grander plan.

“It’s my burden to carry and I’m happy to do that,” he admitted, after the concession of a goal from a corner cost his team the North London derby against Arsenal. “Like I’ve always said, for me there’s a bigger picture that’s at play here that’s much more important than the finer details of us getting to where we want to. For us, the way forward is to, as I said, try and turn the football we’re playing now into something meaningful.”

But is he right? Are set pieces still merely a supplementary part of the game, or have specialists taken the forensic analysis to a level that makes them a fundamental part of a team’s success? ESPN examines the latest thinking across Europe.

What do the top clubs in Europe do?

Premier League

Spurs are undoubtedly an outlier in England. The original specialist set-piece coach, Gianni Vio, left the club in the summer of 2023 (he’s now at Championship club Watford) and Nick Montgomery joined Postecoglou’s coaching staff. Although he was appointed as one of the Australian’s assistant coaches rather than a specific specialist, he has taken the lead on set-piece work.

Their Premier League rivals have taken a different approach. Nicolas Jover, who left Manchester City to join Arsenal in 2021, is probably the most celebrated specialist in England given the Gunners have scored 24 goals from set pieces (excluding penalties) since the start of last season in the Premier League — the most of any side — and 18 have come from corners. They’ve also managed 43 set-piece goals since Jovar’s appointment.