Went back and watched the first goal again because it was so confusing how both Merino the passer and Trossard the runner were so open despite us sitting back with virtually everybody.
TLDR: Palhinha does a few things that are quite inexplicable and totally contradict his reputation as a destroyer, so I must conclude that it was by design on Frank's part.
Here's how it started. Not much to pick on here, other than Odobert giving Timber too much room to receive that pass. Whatever, no big deal.
Timber indeed receives the pass quite comfortably.
Now it gets interesting here. As you can see 3 players are in a great position to smother Timber to win the ball back. Palhinha in particular, the way he rushes towards Timber, looks like he's going to kick the crap out of him. Let's see what happens instead.
He decides to totally back down and give Timber the window to make a simple pass to a wide open Merino. What?
Now he's hurrying towards Merino to disrupt him instead. Right?
Wrong. He's backing down from a contest
again, despite having a 5 man defense waiting behind him.
Palhinha drops so deep and gives Merino so much room that Richarlison feels compelled to close Merino down himself. Who's the destroyer and who's the striker here? You can also see Danso in the background ball watching and losing sight of the runner, but I think it's a secondary issue here.
Danso has completely lost the runner, and makes a last effort to get back in the play in vain. You know the rest.
Verdict: Despite apparently picking on Palhinha here, I think this sequence was the epitome of Frank's incredibly negative approach to yesterday's game in general. This guy's natural instinct is to tackle, and he also knew that he had the safety net of a back 5 behind him. Yet he went out of his way to avoid challenging opponents on the ball, trying to keep his defensive shape instead.