Having slept on it I'm still shocked with Sherwood's long ball tactics yesterday. I doubt for one milsecond Sherwood ever adopted those tactics at Spurs, whether at youth level or with the first team. He'd be aware that Lambert had spent the last couple of months trying to get us passing the ball as the long ball/hoof up to Benteke clearly wasn't working. Surely he'd be aware, like every journalist/pundit out there knew it was failing as it was too slow. He'd have seen our stats and realised we can hold onto the ball quite well and he'd seen with his own eyes against Leicester how with a little bit more urgency we can get the goals we were lacking.What the hell went through his head to think, especially against a physically strong team like Stoke, hoofing it up front was going to work when it's failed for so long? Did it ever cross his mind that if he could get the players to speed up their passing game we'd have a far better chance of beating teams? Is it any wonder the players looked lost, confused and out of ideas yesterday having worked on their possession game to suddenly abandon it for route 1 football.I can only think, much like Lambert against Bradford, he decided to play with lots of attacking players, ignore the midfield and play over the top of them in the hope that we got a lucky flick on and having so many forwards we'd score lots of goals. The fact that it wasn't working he left himself no real options to change it. He may say all the right things but yesterday he even surprised me with his tactics, they really made no sense at all.
Quote from: The Sound of Villadelphia on February 22, 2015, 05:02:53 PMHaving slept on it I'm still shocked with Sherwood's long ball tactics yesterday. I doubt for one milsecond Sherwood ever adopted those tactics at Spurs, whether at youth level or with the first team. He'd be aware that Lambert had spent the last couple of months trying to get us passing the ball as the long ball/hoof up to Benteke clearly wasn't working. Surely he'd be aware, like every journalist/pundit out there knew it was failing as it was too slow. He'd have seen our stats and realised we can hold onto the ball quite well and he'd seen with his own eyes against Leicester how with a little bit more urgency we can get the goals we were lacking.What the hell went through his head to think, especially against a physically strong team like Stoke, hoofing it up front was going to work when it's failed for so long? Did it ever cross his mind that if he could get the players to speed up their passing game we'd have a far better chance of beating teams? Is it any wonder the players looked lost, confused and out of ideas yesterday having worked on their possession game to suddenly abandon it for route 1 football.I can only think, much like Lambert against Bradford, he decided to play with lots of attacking players, ignore the midfield and play over the top of them in the hope that we got a lucky flick on and having so many forwards we'd score lots of goals. The fact that it wasn't working he left himself no real options to change it. He may say all the right things but yesterday he even surprised me with his tactics, they really made no sense at all.I agree. It was generally baffling. I don't mind being a bit more direct, considering our possession play under Lambert was about as sharp and threatening as a flump, but to go as actively long-ball as he did was clearly a mistake. However, he acknowledged as much in the post-match interview, so let's hope it tempers a bit in the coming games.
Crossing isn't the same as a long ball. Even long balls aren't all the same - the attempted flick-ons, whoever's fault they were, were a disaster.
What's happened to Benteke's dominance in the air? He barely gets off the deck and won very few headers. He used to leap so high - is it the injury I wonder?