There was a soft launch of the approach three days earlier at Bournemouth, in which the system used against City was unfurled in the second half. Emery has spoken about trialling different tactical systems during games, due to four fixtures in nine days affording scant time on the training pitch.
If we're being charitable, then all of our recent previous managers have played a part (however small) in where we are now, even Bruce with the purchase of McGinn. Smith got us up and kept us up and brought in the likes of Konsa, and Gerrard's profile helped get Kamara. None of them were remotely as good as Emery though, who looks like somebody asked AI to create the perfect manager. Brilliant, hard-working, likeable without being soft, with absolutely no ego whatsoever.
At the risk of sounding like I'm pining over a former lover, I think Dean Smith gets a tiny smidgen of credit for the performance last night. He was responsible for sowing the seeds that started a change of mentality at the club. In the 30 years I've been watching this team, we've always come out against the really top, title-contending teams on the back foot, even before the game started. It was always a batten down the hatches mindset, hold on for as long as possible, don't concede, and maybe, just maybe, sneak a goal in. And then as soon as the first whistle blows, sit deep, 10 behind the ball.One of the many things I liked about Smith was the positive way he set up. Even when we went up in games, he wouldn't park the bus. Results like the 7-2 against Liverpool would never happen with any other manager in charge - we came out trying to win that game, and everything came off. Obviously most of the credit goes to Unai for the transformation, and he's get us to a point where we go into any game believing we can win. But Dean Smith is where the shift in mentality started after decades of lacking belief.
He said, ahead of this game that he was “going to try and reduce the distance between them and us”. Thank you, Unai.
One thing I liked in his interview on Prime was how everyone was congratulating him for dominating the game, and he mentioned the possession stats and how they still had more possession than us, but he was happy to have reduced the gap. We won the game, convincingly so, a statement victory against the 'best team in Europe' and even in the immediate aftermath he's looking a room for improvement. I absolutely love the man.