Long article in The Times today dissecting Roberto’s tactics and putting the poor form down to teams having worked us out. An extensive explanation of what I think most of us had sussed already: press high against us, you’ll be destroyed. Refuse to engage, you’ve got a chance on the counter. Brace yourself for this being the recurring theme of all ‘expert’ and pub bore talk about the Albion until we get a couple of big results again.
It’s fairly interesting analysis but totally ignores what I reckon is the key point. The changes in personnel over the summer and this season through injury, which has basically left us light in pivotal positions at times.
Surely that’s far more important than the fact teams are now routinely refusing to cross the halfway line when we’re in possession. That’s going to make it harder to score but it shouldn’t be too difficult either to tweak the style so we don’t get caught cheaply. At worst, we’re back to a ‘normal’ game. Sticking with our style, we still automatically negate the strengths of any team that would normally want to dominate us.
In Marseille, where a point was always going to be a decent outcome, Steele could have stood there with his foot on the ball for the whole of the first half. They’d have to press eventually. I’d love to see us push that to the limit on the road just for the hilarity of furious away fans frothing at the mouth.
It’s fairly interesting analysis but totally ignores what I reckon is the key point. The changes in personnel over the summer and this season through injury, which has basically left us light in pivotal positions at times.
Surely that’s far more important than the fact teams are now routinely refusing to cross the halfway line when we’re in possession. That’s going to make it harder to score but it shouldn’t be too difficult either to tweak the style so we don’t get caught cheaply. At worst, we’re back to a ‘normal’ game. Sticking with our style, we still automatically negate the strengths of any team that would normally want to dominate us.
In Marseille, where a point was always going to be a decent outcome, Steele could have stood there with his foot on the ball for the whole of the first half. They’d have to press eventually. I’d love to see us push that to the limit on the road just for the hilarity of furious away fans frothing at the mouth.