Portal dos Dragões
·10 de maio de 2026
Maniche picks Froholdt as Porto's main man, Rosario surprise

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Yahoo sportsPortal dos Dragões
·10 de maio de 2026

Maniche looked back on FC Porto’s season and handed out praise and criticism with the clarity of someone who reads the game without beating around the bush. The former international highlighted Froholdt as the main figure behind the title win, pointed to Pablo Rosario as the biggest surprise, and identified structural aspects the team can still refine for the future. In essence, he painted a picture of usefulness, balance, and room for growth, and assured: “Pablo Rosario.”
In his season review, Maniche went straight to the point and chose the faces that, in his view, best sum up FC Porto’s performances. Between individual distinctions and collective corrections, the message running through his answers is simple: there were clear protagonists, but also details in the team’s play that still need fine-tuning.
When asked who the main figure of FC Porto’s title was, the answer came without hesitation and focused on the qualities that carry the most weight within the team.
“Froholdt, young but with above-average maturity. For his willingness, for the intensity he brings to the game, the ability he has to get into finishing areas,” he said. “Ease in the defensive process. For the way he balances the team.”
The choice reveals the value Maniche places on a player who occupies space, raises the tempo, and at the same time brings order to the collective. More than just an individual standout, Froholdt appears here as a connecting piece, one of those players who helps explain why a team holds together.
As for the biggest surprise of the season, the former midfielder once again prioritized usefulness and the ability to respond in different game scenarios.
“Pablo Rosario. A very useful player in difficult moments, with his experience and easy adaptation to all dynamics and processes, because he played as a full-back, center-back, and midfielder,” he stressed. “A player always available to help the team and give it consistency.”
It is a reading that points less to flair and more to reliability, a kind of coach’s praise from someone who knows the weight of invisible balances. Rosario thus appears as a solution to various problems and as a trusted presence in demanding contexts.
In his final answer, Maniche shifted the focus away from individuals and moved into the territory of collective build-up, identifying what FC Porto can still improve in the next stage.
“Above all, the first phase of build-up. The circulation of the ball has to be quicker. A center-back cannot or should not have the ball at his feet for more than four seconds,” he explained. “Then they can improve in terms of creativity in the final 30 meters. The ability the forwards need to have in the collective game. But I think one of the things FC Porto has to improve is when it has to defend in a low block and gives up pressing high. When it defends high and man-to-man, it defends very well; when it drops back and moves into a more zonal marking system, it loses its references and becomes more exposed.”
In Maniche’s diagnosis there is an idea of identity: the team responds better when it compresses the pitch, presses high, and maintains clear references. What is missing, in his view, is speeding up the base of the build-up, gaining imagination near the box, and not losing solidity when the game forces it to drop back.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇵🇹 here.







































