Why don't you **** off and mind your own business?
For some reason this post cracked me up, not usually keen on expletives, but sometimes there is a time and a place....this seemed to be it imo.
Why don't you **** off and mind your own business?
He originally said he wanted the team to be more expensive, but Barber doctored the article
"Worringly"? Hughton's said our football will probably a little "less expansive" under him.Worringly that picture looks a little like what Hyypia was trying to do. I'd rather see the fullbacks defend and cover the centre halves than sit on the wings without touching the ball for half the match.
I hope this helps.
View attachment 61436
There are twelve players in that team
Is that what expansive means?
I hope this helps.
View attachment 61436
Better explained here https://footballpoliticsandculture....sive-football-the-future-of-football-tactics/
"Worringly"? Hughton's said our football will probably a little "less expansive" under him.
I've always understood it to mean making the pitch as big as possible, using the full width with the intention of dragging your opponents about with possession play and eventually creating space in order to pick your way through and create clear-cut chances. For instance a feature of our play under Gus was having the two CBs stood miles apart, with the full-backs more advanced and hugging the touchline, and Bridcutt deployed as the single (or at least deepest) pivot in DM. The risk of course being that you can be left very, very open if dispossessed in your own half - an example being when Liam gave the ball away at home to West Ham and Kevin Nolan nipped in to score with essentially the freedom of our third of the pitch.
Sami played an expansive game with a far greater element of risk and we could all see the obvious flaws. Oscar's 4-3-3 had a much better balance to it.
Guardiola, Van Gaal, Rodgers etc.. are all proponents of expansive football, though the following clip of Marcelo Bielsa's Chile side, using an experimental 3-4-3 formation, is a great example of an expansive game.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWd0t0dvFCk
Comment: why I was not really in favour of Houghton or any British manager of the eighties percentage play old style football of the dull 4-4-2 and rigid 4-2-3-1. Our saviour maybe a younger assistant
I am not really that modern, as I prefer the classic 4-3-3 of the late seventies. If you need a point away to a top team, play two banks of four (4-4-2) and it is up to the opposition to break your defence down.
Just needs the right balance. I think the formation should be fluid and able to change at any moment to suit the game.
the link [MENTION=14905]symyjym[/MENTION] put up (under the blackboard) explains it perfectly
Tremendous article. Really an obituary for 442 (the formation, not the magazine) who will be sorely missed by its many friends on these boards.
Houghton's lucubrations on the topic, however, are as opaque, and as conventional, as anything you'll ever hear outside a conference for university administrators.
It's Refrigerator Poetry Magnets, the Football Edition.
He originally said he wanted the team to be more expensive, but Barber doctored the article
OK, as we're talking formations, can I ask a question to see if my more knowledgeable NSC colleagues can enlighten me? When Sir Alf Ramsey's team won the World Cup in 1966, they were known as the 'Wingless Wonders', playing a revolutionary (to us in England anyway - for all I know the South Americans might have been doing it for years) 4-3-3 system rather than the conventional (at the time) 4-2-4/4-4-2 formation that most teams played around then. One thing's always puzzled me about this.
Which one of Alan Ball and Martin Peters was the third forward, and which one was the third midfielder?
Agree about the 442 comment. We really do need to get shot of this rigid and technically stifling approach to football. It's been holding back English footballers for decades now.