- Oct 17, 2008
- 14,526
Bit of a waffle this, and I’m not really sure what my point is. Great start, eh?
Just reading an article about De Zerbi on the BBC Football page (https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/63038529). I was particularly interested in James Horncastle’s assessment of De Zerbi;
“The football he will play will be very exciting because it will be very risky. He likes to invite teams on to his team, play through the press because he thinks that gives them a numerical advantage, and that has driven some old school Italian coaches mad.”
It got me thinking about the concept of managers instilling a doctrine to their squad, how that translates into training sessions, and how players react to playing completely different styles when a manager changes.
How exactly is it done? Individual instructions to the players at team meetings? Diagrams? Videos?
How do you deal with bad eggs who refuse to adapt?
It must be a completely different situation to managing, say, a shop or a building site - because so much of being a football manager appears to be so abstract.
Just reading an article about De Zerbi on the BBC Football page (https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/63038529). I was particularly interested in James Horncastle’s assessment of De Zerbi;
“The football he will play will be very exciting because it will be very risky. He likes to invite teams on to his team, play through the press because he thinks that gives them a numerical advantage, and that has driven some old school Italian coaches mad.”
It got me thinking about the concept of managers instilling a doctrine to their squad, how that translates into training sessions, and how players react to playing completely different styles when a manager changes.
How exactly is it done? Individual instructions to the players at team meetings? Diagrams? Videos?
How do you deal with bad eggs who refuse to adapt?
It must be a completely different situation to managing, say, a shop or a building site - because so much of being a football manager appears to be so abstract.