Brwned
Have you ever been in love before?
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2008
- Messages
- 50,879
I don't think we do. We may not even want him to. The ideal is for him to score somewhere between 20-30 - ideally on the upper end of the scale. That sounds like a bit of a strange statement but it tallies up pretty strongly against our success under Sir Alex.
From every angle you look at, scoring a ridiculous amount of goals doesn't necessarily align with huge amounts of success. The only real exception to that is Ronaldo in 07/08...but then that was followed up by us almost repeating a league and CL double, retaining the CL for the first time, in a season which he scored 26 goals. It really emphasised the fact our success in 07/08 was about much more than his incredible goal return.
In every other great season under Sir Alex, it was the 2nd top scorer scoring 20+ goals that made the difference - Hughes in 93/94, Cole in 98/99, Rooney in 08/09, Hernández in 10/11. The greatest example of that is the decade-long gap in elite success between 1999 and 2008 - a period when we had the greatest goalscorer in club history.
In the 4 seasons before van Nistelrooy joined (97-01) Cole was our topscorer with 84 goals and we won 3 league, 1 CL and 1 FA Cup. In the 4 following seasons (01-05) van Nistelrooy scored 127 goals and we won 1 league and 1 FA Cup. It goes some way to answering the question posed by many...
The reality is it generally doesn't benefit us to have a goalscoring machine who inhibits the productivity of his team-mates. If we want to be successful again we need Lukaku to be scoring goals - we've never won the league when our top scorer's scored less than 19 - but we don't need him to be a goal machine. We need him to be the figurehead of a coherent attack, like Cole in 97-01, rather than van Nistelrooy in 02-06.
Most successful seasons
When we won the treble, Yorke scored 29 goals. When we won the league and cup double (93/94, 95/96), Cantona scored 25 and 19 goals. When we won the league on it own (92/93, 99/00, 00/01, 02/03, 06/07, 12/13), Hughes, Yorke, Sheringham, Ronaldo, van Nistelrooy and Rooney scored an average of 24 goals.
Best goalscoring seasons
We've actually been more successful when our topscorer scored 15-19 goals (92/93, 94/95, 96/97, 04/05, 12/13, 13/14) than when we've scored 30+ (02/03, 03/04, 07/08, 09/10, 12/13). It's just further evidence that spreading around the goals is a much more effective route to success than relying on one supreme goalscorer.
When we won the treble, Yorke scored 29 goals. When we won the league and cup double (93/94, 95/96), Cantona scored 25 and 19 goals. When we won the league on it own (92/93, 99/00, 00/01, 02/03, 06/07, 12/13), Hughes, Yorke, Sheringham, Ronaldo, van Nistelrooy and Rooney scored an average of 24 goals.
Best goalscoring seasons
We've actually been more successful when our topscorer scored 15-19 goals (92/93, 94/95, 96/97, 04/05, 12/13, 13/14) than when we've scored 30+ (02/03, 03/04, 07/08, 09/10, 12/13). It's just further evidence that spreading around the goals is a much more effective route to success than relying on one supreme goalscorer.
From every angle you look at, scoring a ridiculous amount of goals doesn't necessarily align with huge amounts of success. The only real exception to that is Ronaldo in 07/08...but then that was followed up by us almost repeating a league and CL double, retaining the CL for the first time, in a season which he scored 26 goals. It really emphasised the fact our success in 07/08 was about much more than his incredible goal return.
In every other great season under Sir Alex, it was the 2nd top scorer scoring 20+ goals that made the difference - Hughes in 93/94, Cole in 98/99, Rooney in 08/09, Hernández in 10/11. The greatest example of that is the decade-long gap in elite success between 1999 and 2008 - a period when we had the greatest goalscorer in club history.
In the 4 seasons before van Nistelrooy joined (97-01) Cole was our topscorer with 84 goals and we won 3 league, 1 CL and 1 FA Cup. In the 4 following seasons (01-05) van Nistelrooy scored 127 goals and we won 1 league and 1 FA Cup. It goes some way to answering the question posed by many...
If Lukaku's scoring 30+ goals, what does it matter what he does outside of that?
The reality is it generally doesn't benefit us to have a goalscoring machine who inhibits the productivity of his team-mates. If we want to be successful again we need Lukaku to be scoring goals - we've never won the league when our top scorer's scored less than 19 - but we don't need him to be a goal machine. We need him to be the figurehead of a coherent attack, like Cole in 97-01, rather than van Nistelrooy in 02-06.