Hutton & Heskey on the wing was a tactic I still have nightmares about.
Bowery was totally tactical. Height at setpieces and someone to work hard on the wing. He tracked back well and won the ball a few times to set us up on attacks. He probably saw too much of the ball out wide, and had little option with what to do with it - also looked nervous and cautious in possession. Didn't do badly by any means, though.
Quote from: pestria on February 11, 2013, 11:03:04 PMI maintain it is vanishingly rare that a manager totally out thinks his opposite number and a lesser team wins by dint of formation, asking players to adopt unfamiliar roles and change their general way of play. The team that wins the league generally has the best 11 players (or squad these days).Some cracking debate on this thread. Although I disagree with you on the Bowery situation, I think you've touched upon a great point here.In my opinion, tactics are overrated by fans. The amount of information and statistics available to each managment staff makes it increasingly hard for any chinks in tactics and formations to be found out. I would say that over the course of a season roughly 80% of the season is determined by who has the best players, while the rest can be attributed to the managers tactics/formations/not picking the strongest XI when available and of course some teams may always be slightly more lucky to gain those few extras points that might see them a couple of places higher than their true ability should see them. I'd point to Newcastle last season as a good example here - their overall goal difference highlights this.So basically, I believe it all boils down to the fact that the better the players you have, the higher the likelihood that you'll be higher up the league. The reason we've struggled this season can be put slightly down to the fact we've missed first team players such as Dunne all season and Vlaar in a very hectic Xmas period but mainly to the fact we have a lot of young players, who fast forward 5 years down the line will most probably be an 8th-12th standard side. At the moment as they are virtually all still learning the game, which has consequently led us to being a bottom 5 side.
I maintain it is vanishingly rare that a manager totally out thinks his opposite number and a lesser team wins by dint of formation, asking players to adopt unfamiliar roles and change their general way of play. The team that wins the league generally has the best 11 players (or squad these days).
So why is it that the likes of Norwich and Swansea as two examples have done so well? They are punching above their weight when you look at the players they have and have had on their books. It's down to tactics (which incorporates style of football and approach to the game) rather than individuals.Clearly, if you've a team full of the very best players, you're likely to do better but Southampton stuffing Man City at the weekend is an example of your point being questionable....... :-)
With regard to those who are pointing out we only went ahead after Bowery was taken off, and that this suggests we're better without him, why ignore the fact that the 65 minutes he was on the pitch were a contribution, too?We didn't concede in those 65 minutes - the game didn't randomly start on the 65th minute.I am not saying we're better without him or with him, just that you can't really divorce his presence on the pitch for most of the game from the fact we looked pretty solid.
players and tactics aren't mutually exclusive, if you have the right players to play your tactics then you play well.Barcelona are the best example, they have a squad full of player who fit their style, can you see Xavi being successful playing for Stoke for example?
My view is that he looks like a guy who will put in a shift for his manager, and try his damned hardest to do the job asked of him. A real tryer. He doesn't look a good footballer though. Yet.
Southampton beating Man City shows the beauty of football as anything can happen in a one off game. Over the course of a season though, Saints are very unlikely to be higher than Man City as the players are vastly different in quality.