Nottseagull
Well-known member
To match his underpants?That looks more like the "Y" formation.
To match his underpants?That looks more like the "Y" formation.
Our 4411 which is really 4231 works so so much better both in general and especially given the speed of our 1 and 1. Most of our goals are concede on the break so we need two holding midfielders. Plus 4231 allows the full backs to get forward so is also more attacking. It depends on two wingers who can beat a man but also defend which we have in March AK and Jose (of last season when fit). There is no room for Locadia or Ali J in that formation though.
What happened to the much vaunted “pressing” we were going to do this season?
Still waiting to see it
Man United at home is when I saw it. We won.
Man United at home is when I saw it. We won.
Also saw it in the first half at home v Leicester, got a high press going, got in their faces and went in at half time leading 1-0 (against 10 men).
Naturally we spent the next 45 minutes camped deep in our own half, just trying to protect the 1-0. Until the inevitable happened.
The problem with the V formation is the large gap between the fullbacks we have and the wide man in front of them. Our wide players spent too long pushing forward and didn't see it as their responsibility to help out the midfield so teams would break on us and exploit the space and our midfield was bypassed almost every attack.
A 4-4-1-1 gives us width, helps us retain possession and puts our most creative player in a dangerous space
You're probably right about the first half, but I do have a certain sympathy for what went on in the second half. Pressing is energy-sapping and it's really difficult to maintain it for prolonged periods. This is especially the case with our players who don't tend to be as physically brilliant as others. Firmino, for instance, is the player who performs the most intensive sprints in 90 minutes and there's a reason why he's at Liverpool and not us. All I'm saying effectively is it's not just better technique, vision, speed of thought, etc that money buys you, but also better athletes.
There may be sometihng in that, but I think the fact that we were playing against 10 men for over an hour after Maddison got his 2nd yellow for diving should have mitigated that.
Whether we came back out under direct instruction from CH to "hold back, don't commit, just keep it tight, protect what we have", or whether the players decided to do exactly that off their own backs we won't ever know for sure. But I remember being utterly AGHAST at our insipid 2nd half display, and the binning off of two precious points. It felt like a defeat.
There may be sometihng in that, but I think the fact that we were playing against 10 men for over an hour after Maddison got his 2nd yellow for diving should have mitigated that.
Whether we came back out under direct instruction from CH to "hold back, don't commit, just keep it tight, protect what we have", or whether the players decided to do exactly that off their own backs we won't ever know for sure. But I remember being utterly AGHAST at our insipid 2nd half display, and the binning off of two precious points. It felt like a defeat.
You also need to factor in which wide player. Solly is our most disciplined (at times to the infuriating neglect of attacking ambition and belief). Knockaert probably covers the most distance, but it doesn't tend to be in a disciplined manner.
I thought it was thisView attachment 108622
You're probably right about the first half, but I do have a certain sympathy for what went on in the second half. Pressing is energy-sapping and it's really difficult to maintain it for prolonged periods. This is especially the case with our players who don't tend to be as physically brilliant as others. Firmino, for instance, is the player who performs the most intensive sprints in 90 minutes and there's a reason why he's at Liverpool and not us. All I'm saying effectively is it's not just better technique, vision, speed of thought, etc that money buys you, but also better athletes.
It was something I posted about in another thread. City and Liverpool's players seem to be able to maintain the 'press' for longer than other teams. Does more money buy you better genetic athletes, or is it coaching, motivation and competition ?
There is no doubt that the top team's players statistically work harder, but why ?
We can play 442, 4411, 433, the V or the Christmas pudding with Stephens as the six pence, it makes no difference as they all end up like this during the match.
EDIT: I've mad a slight schoolboy error here as our defensive line looks too high
View attachment 108687