by PistolPete » 22 Dec 2015 11:36
by TBM » 22 Dec 2015 11:59
by John Smith » 22 Dec 2015 12:05
by Winston Smith » 22 Dec 2015 12:25
by SCIAG » 22 Dec 2015 12:28
by Ian Royal » 22 Dec 2015 13:03
by Royal Ginger » 22 Dec 2015 13:11
by DaddyKuhl » 22 Dec 2015 13:20
Winston Smith I am amazed that there is anyone left in the world that thinks in terms of fixed 4-4-2's or 4-5-1's etc no matter how hard Sky Sports try to push the idea.
Every formation is adaptable and changeable depending on such a vast amount of factors - the passage of play, the opponent as a team, the opponent as individuals, how the game has gone so far with success or failure on certain moves etc. Formations are little more than a way telly programmes can try to guess who is playing where. They see a team sheet and guess at who will roughly be where, which is in itself misleading but also completely misses the point of how the natural ebb and flow of a game means the trained instructions that players have practiced all week/month come into play and demand that they react in a certain way which a fixed formation doesn't support.
by Winston Smith » 22 Dec 2015 13:24
DaddyKuhlWinston Smith I am amazed that there is anyone left in the world that thinks in terms of fixed 4-4-2's or 4-5-1's etc no matter how hard Sky Sports try to push the idea.
Every formation is adaptable and changeable depending on such a vast amount of factors - the passage of play, the opponent as a team, the opponent as individuals, how the game has gone so far with success or failure on certain moves etc. Formations are little more than a way telly programmes can try to guess who is playing where. They see a team sheet and guess at who will roughly be where, which is in itself misleading but also completely misses the point of how the natural ebb and flow of a game means the trained instructions that players have practiced all week/month come into play and demand that they react in a certain way which a fixed formation doesn't support.
Could not disagree more! I think formations are fundamentally part of the game. It gives the team structure and helps build passages of play and helps counter the opposition. I totally understand the game is fluid but these things are worked but you do try and have a game plan and implement it. Just watch how the team settles back into the formation when there is a lull in the play eg if playing 4-4-2 you will see the two banks of four when, say, a goal kick is being taken.
by West Stand Man » 22 Dec 2015 13:41
Winston Smith I am amazed that there is anyone left in the world that thinks in terms of fixed 4-4-2's or 4-5-1's etc no matter how hard Sky Sports try to push the idea.
Every formation is adaptable and changeable depending on such a vast amount of factors - the passage of play, the opponent as a team, the opponent as individuals, how the game has gone so far with success or failure on certain moves etc.
by Elm Park Kid » 22 Dec 2015 13:43
by Extended-Phenotype » 22 Dec 2015 14:26
by PistolPete » 22 Dec 2015 17:06
by Victor Meldrew » 22 Dec 2015 17:23
by CountryRoyal » 22 Dec 2015 17:31
by CountryRoyal » 22 Dec 2015 17:34
Victor Meldrew All of that Pete and our players don't have a clue what to do at throw-ins and invariably just throw the ball to the opposition.
Also our keepers too often put the ball straight into touch.
These two tactics are beyond me.
by melonhead » 22 Dec 2015 17:35
Victor Meldrew All of that Pete and our players don't have a clue what to do at throw-ins and invariably just throw the ball to the opposition.
Also our keepers too often put the ball straight into touch.
These two tactics are beyond me.
by Forbury Lion » 22 Dec 2015 17:41
by Extended-Phenotype » 22 Dec 2015 17:50
by Lower West » 22 Dec 2015 18:13
Winston Smith I am amazed that there is anyone left in the world that thinks in terms of fixed 4-4-2's or 4-5-1's etc no matter how hard Sky Sports try to push the idea.
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