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  • Tactical Visions An Introduction to Football Tactics

    playmaker

  • 2 Tactical Visions

    Tactical Visions

    Football Manager 2010 sees a seismic shift in the way tactics are approached from the

    human perspective, seeking to replace slider think with football speak. The focus is no

    longer on finding the correct settings to master the simulation, but on understanding

    how to create a coherent tactic using proper football terminology.

    The best way to understand the new tactical system is to look at what the real tacticians

    do. The aim of this article is not to tell you how to play, or which system is best, but to

    provide a solid platform on which to build your own ideas.

    If youve read books such as Jonathon Wilsons Inverting the Pyramid then hopefully

    this serves as a handy reminder. If not, then hopefully this will give you some ideas how

    to put your tactics together. You might agree with some points and disagree with others

    in which case I have done my job, because you are thinking about football and not

    computer games.

    Beginnings As an Englishman I am obliged to stipulate three things.

    1. We werent the first people to think of kicking a ball around.

    2. We were the first to have a hissy-fit about rules and threaten to take our ball

    away, thus creating the modern version of the sport played worldwide.

    3. We dont understand how our own creation works and our tactics have the

    subtlety and sophistication of a herd of stampeding elephants with toothache.

    Which is pretty much how we do everything round here.

    The rudimentary form of the game adopted within public schools in the early 1800s

    involved a senior pupil dribbling the ball towards the goal (by which I mean nothing

    more technical than propelling the ball forwards), with the younger boys backing up

    lining up behind him in order to pick up the ball if it bounced loose.

    Kicking lumps out of your opponents shins, or hacking, was perfectly legal at this time,

    while passing was considered unmanly though long forward passes would come to be

    grudgingly accepted.

    Football was quite simply a charge towards goal, based on bravery and iron will. For all

    the technical innovations of the last century or so, the only change in requirement to

    describe the modern English game is to replace the word was with is.

  • Tactical Visions 3

    Formation A Means to an End

    Formation Neutrality

    Ideally your first question should be how do I want to play rather than what

    formation should I play. Though formation is the first step in the Tactics Creator, this is

    merely functional as player roles and duties cannot be assigned without defining the

    formation first.

    Throughout the history of football the great tacticians have used formation to answer a

    specific problem or requirement, usually finding space to attack or denying space for

    opponents to attack. The formation should come about as a conclusion to your chosen

    style of play and overall aims and in itself is neutral. That is, no formation is overtly

    defensive or attacking, but rather it is the instructions that are issued to the players that

    make it so.

    Rappans Verrou (a.k.a. Swiss Bolt) employed the same 1-3-3-3 formation as the

    imperious Dutch brand of Total Football that dominated the 70s, yet it was employed

    as a rigid spoiling tactic and was vastly different to the fluid football of Cruyff and

    Neeskens.

    Likewise, playing more forwards does not automatically mean you will be able to attack

    more. Indeed, it may be difficult to get the ball far enough forward to take advantage of

    the extra men. Withdrawing forwards may actually increase possession and therefore

    create more attacking situations. Formation is, as the heading suggests, merely a means

    to an end.

  • 4 Tactical Visions

    Pragmatism and First Steps

    Before you get too carried away, it is worth noting two things - firstly that you will be

    inheriting a squad designed to play your predecessors preferred formation and

    secondly that most tactical innovations came as a result of subtle alterations to the

    previously employed formation.

    Alterations to style and formation may require some aggressive action in the transfer

    market, so in the meantime it is worth considering the formations suggested in the

    Backroom Advice section, if only as a pragmatic short term solution. New managers

    playing players in their preferred position is often credited with a turn round in form.

    Notation versus Shape

    As football fans we have become accustomed to referring to formation by numerical

    notation. Many of the top managers see this as a rigid media device that does not reflect

    the true complexity of their tactical master plan. Alex Ferguson claims that he has never

    played a standard 4-4-2 at Manchester United, but rather he has always employed split

    forwards.

    In fact, it could be argued (and has been) that the formation employed in the mid-

    nineties was actually 4-2-3-1 and not a 4-4-2 at all. Eric Cantona played in the hole

    behind strike partner Mark Hughes, Ryan Giggs and Andrei Kanchelskis played as

    advanced wingers, and the central midfield partnership of Roy Keane and Paul Ince took

    up deeper positions. It may not have been as explicit as the formation that featured

    Rooney, Ronaldo and Tevez, but there is no denying the similarity.

    Likewise, the 4-2-4 employed by Brazil in winning the 1958 and 1962 World Cups could

    just as easily be described as 4-3-3 or 4-5-1. Attacking shape is a product of situation or

    context rather than explicitly defined as a secondary formation. In other words, it is the

  • Tactical Visions 5

    instructions given to players and the way they react to them as opportunities arise or

    their path is blocked that defines attacking shape.

    Jose Mourinho talks about breaking lines. The 4-3-3 formation he employed at Chelsea

    does exactly that by employing two wide players who operate between the midfield and

    forward line. If you could freeze the action during the match then sometimes it would

    look like a 4-1-2-3, but at another time would look more like 4-1-4-1.

    While Bolton played the same formation under Sam Allardyce, in this context it was

    more commonly referred to as 4-5-1. The difference perhaps, is the aggressiveness with

    which the Chelsea wingers would attack, rather than merely offer support.

    In case you are wondering, that is a none-too-subtle clue as to Football Manager 2010s

    approach to changing from a defensive shape to an attacking one. Like real football,

    assigning duties produces more dynamic and less robotic movement that is, it is

    contextual rather than predefined.

    Matching the Opposition

    In setting out your teams formation it is easy to forget that it does not just define how

    11 players play, but that there are 22 players to consider. That may sound like stating

    the obvious, but it is easily overlooked, even by real life managers. To demonstrate this,

    we need to look at an example rather more mundane than those discussed so far.

    Paul Hart, in employing a 4-4-2 diamond for Portsmouths relegation six-pointer against

    Bolton in September 2009, neglected to take the opposing 4-5-1 formation into account,

    placing considerable stress on his defence and midfield and resulting in a 2-3 home loss.

    With no width in midfield, the full backs were over exposed against Boltons advanced

    wingers, while the midfielders on the right and left side of the diamond were left to deal

    with a central midfield opponent and an advancing full back.

  • 6 Tactical Visions

    Meanwhile Boltons lone striker regularly drifted into the space occupied by

    Portsmouths defensive midfielder, taking away valuable cover for the overworked pair

    in the centre. Worse still, as Bolton frequently got behind the full backs the nearest

    centre back was drawn across and with him the rest of the defence, leaving Portsmouth

    vulnerable to the ball being switched to the opposite flank.

    Managers are often left perplexed when individual errors consistently affect results, but

    this can easily be explained as a failure of system placing defenders under undue stress.

    The aim of formation is to somehow create a spare man in both attack and defence

    something that cannot be achieved without first taking the opponents formation into

    consideration.

    The easiest way to match an opponent is to play exactly the same formation (which

    explains the widespread adoption of successful formations, even without the elements

    that made them work), though this can reduce the game to a simple test of quality rather

    than system something Portsmouth would be ill advised to attempt when facing

    Chelseas diamond system.

    Balancing Requirements

    Throughout the history of football, the greatest triumphs have come about by balancing

    attacking play with defensive structure. Brazil may have placed an extra man in defence,

    but it allowed the full backs scope to attack from deep positions. Herbert Chapmans

    WM (3-2-2-3) withdrew a midfielder into the defence, but compensated the loss by

    moving the inside forwards back into the midfield.

  • Tactical Visions 7

    Coming up to date, the 4-2-2-2 that has become popular in Brazil balances two overtly

    defensive midfielders with two out and out attacking midfielders and the 4-2-3-1

    maintains a similar balance of attackers and defenders.

    Defensive Structures

    Situational Defending

    Speaking to forum member footynut, Ray Wilkins describes how the defence react in

    one given situation: If the ball is coming down your left hand side your left back presses

    the ball, your left centre back is marking his player, your right centre back is slightly

    deeper on the cover in a position that he can see his left centre backs shirt number and

    your right full back would be pushed up in level with your left centre back.

    In this example, it is not clear what marking system the defence is playing (though it

    sounds a lot like zonal), but it seems that players are not glued to their marking

    responsibilities in text book fashion. Instead they are reacting according to the situation

    - closing down, marking or covering according to both player and ball position.

    Much of the defensive work that takes place during a match simply comes down to

    common sense - positioning, anticipation, decision making and good old fashioned

    teamwork (coincidentally all player attributes in Football Manager!). The covering

    centre back will position himself with reference to his man or zone, but will anticipate

    the threat in behind his partner.

    Zonal Marking

    These days it is relatively uncommon to find a team that does not employ a four man

    defence marking zones. Man marking is largely consigned to the past a legacy of

    Brazils most dominant years. Zonal marking is often conceived as two banks of four

    covering one entire half of the pitch, but in reality is a good deal more dynamic than

    that. Applied in such a basic manner it would result in large gaps appearing.

    Zones expand or contract according to demand, allowing defenders to cover each other

    as the situation demands, whether it is to cover a team mate in an advanced position, to

    back up an overloaded zone or to close down an attacker who has bypassed another

    zone and poses a significant goal threat. Zonal marking allows the defence to react to

    dangerous situations rather than dangerous players.

    Loosely speaking, zonal marking relies on anticipation and communication rather than

    speed though with the pace and athleticism of the modern game, speed has to be taken

    into account.

    The primary function in an attacking strategy should be allowing the full backs to get

    forward and attack or to support the midfield (again, Brazil are one of the best

    exponents of this), whereas more defensive teams may prefer to use zonal marking to

    maintain defensive shape and form an impenetrable barrier to goal.

  • 8 Tactical Visions

    Man Marking

    Global man marking systems employing the whole team as man markers may be rare in

    modern football, but that is not to say they are unheard of. Man marking can work very

    well when formations provide an obvious player for player match up as two opposing

    WM formations would have prior to the formations demise in the 1960s.

    However, the system can be broken down by pace and movement (and red cards!) as

    Reading found to their cost when Manchester United beat them 3-2 on New Years Eve

    in 2006. Wind the clock back to 1953 and Hungary provided an early warning of the

    deficiencies of man marking as they destroyed England 6-3 and a year later 7-1 by

    instructing players to interchange positions or to drop into the hole causing much

    confusion in the English defensive ranks.

  • Tactical Visions 9

    That defeat owes a good deal to the naivety of the English in failing to adapt to the

    situation closing down or marking players when they should have been covering.

    Fortunately, FM is a good deal more sophisticated, limiting how far players will stray

    from their position to follow their man and maintaining a degree of common sense,

    whilst still prioritising the man more than zonal marking does.

    It should be noted that man marking in this sense applies purely to the overall team

    setting and not individual player settings (player x follows player y wherever he goes)

    or opposition instructions (the whole team keeps a close eye on player y).

    Coaches and fans alike will often refer to getting touch tight (mark the player tightly,

    rather than stand off him). This is not specific to man marking and can apply equally to

    zonal marking remembering that zonal marking still requires the defender to close

    down or mark attackers in certain situations (such as having the ball).

    Mixed Marking

    Sweeper systems such as Catenaccio place a zonal marker behind three or four man-

    markers, ensuring that any break down of the man marking system is covered, though

    again it should be noted that the original asymmetric nature of Catenaccio pitted the

    defensive side of the team against the opponents attacking side, providing a player for

    player match up.

    When Greece won Euro 2004, they employed a sweeper behind three man markers, a

    five man midfield and a lone striker in essence, the formation was much the same as

    Rappans Verrou, but with the wingers withdrawn into midfield, and perhaps a flatter

    back four. The five man midfield suggests that the extra man acts as cover for four more

    man markers, but that is speculation on my part it may just be a way of packing the

    midfield. While Greece were undeniably superior to the Swiss team of the 1930s, their

    success owed something to the surprise element.

  • 10 Tactical Visions

    During the 1980s and 90s the sweeper was commonly deployed in a 3-5-2 formation

    and was often referred to as Catenaccio, though it bore little resemblance to the original

    system beyond the spare man.

    Sweeper systems deal with the opponents attacking unit as a whole by adding a zonal

    marker to a man marking system. This combination can be reversed, adding a man

    marker to a zonal defence to deal with a specific individual threat. Manchester United

    did this against Barcelona in 1994, using full back Paul Parker to mark Romario, while

    the remaining three defenders retained their zonal responsibilities though a lapse in

    concentration allowed Romario to run onto a through ball and score.

    Most real life mixed marking systems only employ one defender and perhaps one

    midfielder with different instructions to the rest of the team. That is not to say you

    should only stick to systems that real managers have used. Football Manager 2010s

    Default marking assigns zonal or man marking according to position, role and duty and

    could result in a 50/50 split. If you are comfortable with that (i.e. it seems to work, or it

    fits your tactical vision) then there is no reason to change it.

    The Transition Phase

    Space Management

    For the past few years I have been a season ticket holder at my local club, Portsmouth.

    There is a middle aged woman sat behind me (and a few seats to the right, thankfully)

    who yelps every time the ball enters our penalty area, even when there is clearly no

    danger. Now this may be an over-reaction, but there is generally a stage in the match,

    shortly before conceding, where the yelping increases and the passage of play is

    generally characterised by one of my friends using the phrase were sitting too deep.

    The defensive line is all about controlling the space and while the failure to control it

    may result in conceding sloppy goals, it can also be used to turn defence into attack.

    Herbert Chapmans Arsenal team did this by sitting deep, drawing the opposition out of

    defence and holding them at the edge of the penalty area, before launching a swift

    counter attack into the space created.

    Valeriy Lobanovskyi took the opposite approach with Dynamo and USSR, playing a high

    line in combination with the offside trap and aggressive pressing. This meant that

    possession was won higher up the pitch, placing his teams in a much better position to

    attack and containing the opposition in one half of the pitch. While this was successful in

    Europe, it was referred to as the donkey line in Brazil as it was considered stupid pass

    one man and you pass them all.

  • Tactical Visions 11

    Both strategies require a strong back line, but are not necessarily the preserve of world

    class teams. Equally, both strategies require concentration as there is less margin for

    error. Where they differ is in their approach to possession a deep line prioritising

    quality of possession over quantity and a high line the opposite.

    Defensive Midfielders

    You are probably wondering why I have singled out just the one position. This is

    because of its importance in making the whole team function. When the England team

    lacks a good defensive midfielder the question is often asked why do we need a holding

    player anyway? The answer is perhaps that we dont necessarily need one but it

    doesnt half help.

    Brazils rampaging full backs and the artistry of Pele, Zico or Ronaldinho are made

    possible by the protection that a defensive midfielder (or two) offers when play breaks

    down, covering the empty space left behind and snuffing out attacks before they get

    started.

    The 4-2-3-1 formation used by France in the 1998 World Cup uses two holding players

    as a platform for the four attacking players, who are afforded greater freedom than they

    would have in other systems, and also allows the full backs some attacking scope.

    When possession is regained the defensive midfielder becomes the fulcrum around

    which the midfield pivots. This is particularly true in a three man midfield where a

    triangle will frequently exert greater control than a flat line.

    Football Manager distinguishes the defensive midfield position from that of a standard

    midfielder, but to all intents and purposes, a standard midfielder with a defensive duty

    is performing the same task in the attacking phase- staying behind the rest of the

    midfield. The only difference comes with the position adopted in the defensive phase

  • 12 Tactical Visions

    the defensive midfielder covering the hole while the standard midfielder who defends

    forms a line with the rest of the midfield.

    Attacking Play

    Possession Football

    Losing managers are often asked why their team did not win a match that they seemed

    to control. Somewhere amongst the rambling excuses there will most likely be some

    kind of reference to having the lions share of possession (i.e. more than the other

    team). Occasionally a more pragmatic manager will simply say They scored more goals

    than us.

    Goals win football matches, not possession, or for that matter shots (a common

    complaint on Football Manager forums). The relationship between possession and goals

    is not clear cut. Counter attacking football actually relies on having less possession than

    the opponent, but it is quite obvious that you cant score goals when not in possession of

    the ball.

    You may remember we started this article by talking about the English predilection for

    moving the ball rapidly in one direction only. It came as something of a surprise then in

    the 1880s, when Scotland lined up in a 2-3-5 formation and used short sideways passes

    to maintain possession of the ball and patiently wait for an opening though the game

    ended in a goalless draw.

    Austria and Hungary then showed the true potential of the passing game, by realising

    that a good first touch meant that the ball could be released quicker. Uruguay, Argentina

    and Brazil took it a step further, celebrating the technique and artistry of football more

    than winning though they frequently did win and taking their time over possession,

    thus creating better quality chances.

    If it is true that attack is the best form of defence then possession is the mechanism by

    which attack and defence operates. English fans may get impatient, boo back passes and

    yell get it forward, but paradoxically they still expect to retain possession of the ball.

    The Long Ball Game

    Teams adopting a long ball game are often derided as playing anti-football partly

    because it goes hand in hand with a more physical approach, leaving the opposition

    battered and bruised. Its certainly not pretty, but as Wimbledon and Watford proved in

    the 1980s, it can be highly effective for teams looking to punch above their weight.

    Charles Hughes, who unfortunately was made Technical Director of the Football

    Association, analysed 100 matches and concluded that 80 percent of goals come from

    three or less passes. On the surface of it, this appears to support getting the ball forward

    quickly, but his deeply flawed analysis fails to properly account for another statistic

    that 91.5 percent of moves consist of three or less passes, which actually means that

    there is an 11.5 percent shortfall in the number of goals that should be scored.

  • Tactical Visions 13

    Long ball football is likely to produce a high turnover of possession and that is perhaps

    why the more successful exponents (as Graham Taylor was, at least at Watford) tended

    to play a pressing game to re-balance possession in their favour. What it does give you is

    penetration of enemy territory, provided the long balls are not just aimless that is,

    they either have a specific target, or in the case of David Beckham, the passing is of a

    high quality.

    Both Wimbledon and Watford had big, physical target men to look for (as Bolton do

    today in Kevin Davies) and willing runners from midfield to collect the knock downs,

    achieving a good deal of success without relying on technically gifted players. That is not

    to say that it couldnt fail spectacularly when meeting a team with enough technical

    ability to maintain possession under pressure.

    While long ball football does not necessarily have to be about analysis, statistics and

    percentages (it is doubtful many lower league managers take such a scientific

    approach), Football Manager 2010 does give you some pretty useful data in the match

    day Stats tab.

    Strike Partnerships

    While 4-5-1 is gaining in popularity, many formations still rely on a two man strike

    partnership. The key to any successful partnership is division of labour and this is

    perhaps what makes it easier to get two men working than a lone striker.

    That division most commonly comes in two forms the creator/scorer combination, or

    the big man/small man combination (small man usually implies pace). This will often

    see one man drop into the hole as deep lying forward, support striker or trequartista

    (three-quarters), while the other takes a more advanced role. In Football Manager, as in

    real life, it is much easier to mark two strikers who play in line with each other.

    There are other combinations that work of course. Real Madrid won La Liga five times in

    a row in the 1980s with two strikers who didnt even like each other and rarely

    dovetailed, but in Hugo Sanchez and Emilio Butragueno they had a power and subtlety.

    Arsenals Bergkamp/Henry combination is perhaps one of the most complete

    partnerships. At first glance they could be described as a typical creator/scorer

    combination, but that doesnt take into account Henrys blistering pace or Bergkamps

    aerial ability, which made them as effective as any big man/small man combo, or their

    ability to swap creative and goal scoring roles.

    At the other end of the spectrum, Portsmouth found moderate success due to Kanus

    flair and Benjanis work rate and determination. Perhaps the only quality they shared

    was the ability to hold the ball up, but there is no denying that the almost total split of

    abilities worked to good effect.

    The apparent exception to the rule is the partnership of Didier Drogba and Nicolas

    Anelka. Many pundits doubted that they could work together, considering them too

    similar in many aspects of their game. However, this ignores their obvious qualities

    beyond mere goal scoring. Like the Bergkamp/Henry combination at times they can be a

  • 14 Tactical Visions

    big man/small man combination and at other times a creator/scorer combination.

    Though the lines are much more blurred (particularly since both can operate as lone

    strikers or do each others job when playing together), they are there.

    Universality versus Specialisation

    The heroes of the past were the wingers, playmakers and goal poachers, but the modern

    game is an altogether different beast that does not allow room for so called luxury

    players. Improvements in physical fitness and defensive organisation mean that space

    on the football field is limited, there are fewer mistakes and less gaps (even if the Match

    of the Day pundits would have you believe otherwise). This has given rise to two very

    different types of footballers.

    Complete players, or hybrids such as Christiano Ronaldo, Thierry Henry and Wayne

    Rooney combine multiple abilities creativity, dribbling and finishing that mean they

    can pop up in different areas of the pitch and be equally adept as a playmaker, winger or

    striker. Didier Drogba is another take on the theme, complimenting his power and

    strength with moments of finesse.

    Valeriy Lobanovskyi called this universality - to which the specialist would be the

    philosophical opposite. The universal player is unpredictable and, at his best,

    unplayable, while the specialist plays purely to his strengths. Emile Heskey, Michael

    Owen and Stephane Guivarch are perfect examples, much derided for their limitations,

    but frequently the key component in victory in Guivarchs case, World Cup victory.

    Further back, Claude Makelele was often held up as the perfect example of a defensive

    midfielder in his heyday, doing little other than breaking up attacks and playing short

    simple passes to his more creative team mates. Even so Jose Mourinho (Makeleles

    manager at Chelsea) is quick to bemoan English coaching for failing to create young

    players who are multi-functional.

    Most players, of course, fall somewhere between the two extremes and the top teams

    employ a mixture of hybrids, specialists and general purpose players. If you are lucky

    enough to have a hybrid or two it is worth remembering that, since their abilities blur

    the lines between midfield and attack, their position tends to follow as does

    withdrawing a striker.

    Manchester Uniteds front four of Rooney, Ronaldo, Giggs and Tevez interchanged

    between three attacking midfield berths and one strike position (more on this in a

    minute). At Arsenal, Bergkamp dropped deep and Henry drifted out wide. Maradona

    was a midfielder who could play as a support striker, explaining why a long line of

    Argentinian playmakers have failed to become the next Maradona.

  • Tactical Visions 15

    Drogba, again, is an exception, operating on his own as an out-and-out striker under

    Mourhinho, but in partnership with Nicolas Anelka under Carlo Ancelotti.

    Movement and Interchanging

    As we have already seen with Hungarys destruction of the English, good movement and

    good attacking play go hand in hand. Rigid formations have their place, but stationary

    players can be easy to mark. This is perhaps why many teams employ a big striker to

    hold the ball up, concentrating on grinding the opposition down rather than pattern

    weaving.

    Total Football is often seen as the ideal defenders attacking and attackers defending in

    one fluid formation. The reality was a good deal more organised than it sounds, even if it

    would be difficult to implement at the pace the modern game is played. Players in the 1-

    3-3-3 formation interchange along vertical lines. For example, if the left midfielder came

    forward, the left wing forward would cover.

    It was different to merely swapping positions as two wingers would do, having more to

    do with balancing forward runs and freedom to roam with defensive responsibility.

    Revisiting another of our previous examples, Manchester Uniteds front four used a

    similar interchanging of roles to good effect, but left the remaining six outfield players

    out of the equation, defending, supporting or attacking within their normal roles.

    The aim of this type of movement is to present defenders with a threat that is

    unpredictable in its direction and nature, with much of the work carried out off the ball.

    Even then, it is not totally without structure. Alex Ferguson maintains that it is better to

    have forwards attack from wide positions and move into the centre towards goal, than

  • 16 Tactical Visions

    to start in the centre and move away from goal. This may indicate why the 4-5-1/4-3-3

    has become so popular, as it uses two advanced wingers that converge on the goal.

    Looking beyond the obvious wisdom of Fergusons point, it is also fair to say that

    defending teams looking for an out ball will have greater luck finding strikers who have

    drifted wide, while Arsenal echoed their counter attacking ploy of the 1930s by allowing

    Thierry Henry to drift into wide positions to devastating effect.

    As with all tactical elements there is no definitive rule Ruud van Nistelrooy is a good

    example of a striker who starts in the middle and stays in the middle and gets a lot of

    goals, though he would have had another striker to run the channels, such as Ole Gunnar

    Solskjaer.

    The Numbers Game

    The title of Jonathon Wilsons book Inverting the Pyramid is a clue as to how the

    balance of attackers and defenders has changed. From the time the first formation was

    dreamt up forwards have been withdrawn into midfield to look for space and

    midfielders withdrawn into defence to deny it.

    Teams once attacked with eight players and defended with five (midfielders in a 2-3-5

    operating in both phases), but this is generally reversed in modern football. The 4-4-2

    defends with two banks of four, but at the most will only send three of the four

    midfielders forward to join the two strikers

  • Tactical Visions 17

    This apparent trend towards negativity was set in motion by a change to the offside law,

    reducing the number of men required to be goal side from three to two and precipitating

    Chapmans WM. I say apparent, because as we have seen, withdrawing players does not

    necessarily mean teams are less attacking.

    Shifting the right numbers between attack and defence is perhaps the key component of

    style of play more so than starting formation. Argentina found this out to their cost as

    they lost the 1930 World Cup to Uruguay. Both teams liked to attack in numbers, in an

    attempt to overload the defence, but crucially, only Uruguay gave any thought to

    defending.

    Brazil attacked in numbers, winning the World Cup three times between 1958 and 1970,

    but this is generally recognised as the end of a more nave era. Defenders sat deeper, so

    Brazil were less likely to be caught on the break and their world class players

    consequently had the kind of space the modern game rarely allows. It shouldnt be

    forgotten that they also defended in greater numbers though again the less frenetic

    style of play made this much easier.

    Italian football is often seen as overly defensive and negative, characterised, not by

    formation, but by the use of just three attacking players. The first aim is to avoid

    conceding you cant lose if you dont concede. Scoring is almost a secondary aim and

    the national side in particular are famed for their 1-0 wins.

    A Final Word

    My own management career (from the first Championship Manager to the current

    Football Manager) has followed a similar path to the development of tactics in the real

    game. Early on, I simply found the best players I could, seeing football merely as a test of

    ability. Then came the 4-3-1-2 formation and a desire to create beautiful football, albeit

    it through text commentary. The luxury of a playmaker gave way to grinding out results;

  • 18 Tactical Visions

    or rather fear of losing took over, leading to a more defensive approach and thankfully

    plenty of 1-0 wins.

    I finally feel that I have reached a point where I understand why my tactics worked and

    why they subsequently stopped working which is why I am genuinely excited by the

    prospect of taking over a Portsmouth team that has sold a team and a half of quality

    players and replaced them with second rate journeymen.

    One line of thought is to create a spare man in attack and exploit gaps in the opponents

    back four without sacrificing my own defensive stability - which I would hope to achieve

    by employing a 4-4-2 that morphs into a 4-3-3 using duties and individual width to

    reshape the formation.

    Another approach is to control the midfield space and play to individual strengths in a 4-

    2-3-1 that uses two playmakers, three willing runners and a target man. In both cases

    the formation is the end result and not the starting point.

    Both methods also require one or two additional signings to make it work, so with no

    money to spend it may yet be back to the drawing board!

    BeginningsFormation A Means to an EndFormation NeutralityPragmatism and First StepsNotation versus ShapeMatching the OppositionBalancing Requirements

    Defensive StructuresSituational DefendingZonal MarkingMan MarkingMixed Marking

    The Transition PhaseSpace ManagementDefensive Midfielders

    Attacking PlayPossession FootballThe Long Ball GameStrike PartnershipsUniversality versus SpecialisationMovement and InterchangingThe Numbers Game

    A Final Word