by Crowthorne Royal » 05 Jan 2009 09:43
by Royal With Cheese » 05 Jan 2009 09:52
by Hoop Blah » 05 Jan 2009 10:29
by OLLIE KEARNS » 05 Jan 2009 11:00
by Maguire » 05 Jan 2009 12:16
by Archie's penalty » 05 Jan 2009 12:25
OLLIE KEARNS 1. Agreed although this is partly because our team ethic is to get the ball forward early in order to play the game in the oppositions final third. Many sides have out passed us at the Mad Stad this year but they all do so via a slow build up played in front of our two banks of four. Only Southampton have actually caused us any real problems with their passing and they were willing to play early forward passes to feet. That said, some of our ball retention in open play is very poor at times and can definitely be improved upon.
2. I think SC has now worked out that Harper and Cisse are his best two CM's and that Cisse is decent at making the extra man in the box. When he came on at Saints he had clearly been given licence to get forward as often as possible. Ironically this tactic actually cost us the goal in that Hunts attempted pass to him in Saints box gave the ball away with us all out of position. My guess would be that these two will play on Friday.
3. Both examples you use are what pro's would refer to as transitions i.e when there is a sudden change of possession. This is when all sides are most vunerable. Interestingly, Doobs was criticised for backing off Phillips at Brum and then made the opposite decision at Southampton in coming to the ball. The outcome both times was a goal. Just shows the danger that comes from giving the ball away cheaply.
by JC » 05 Jan 2009 14:12
Archie's penaltyOLLIE KEARNS 1. Agreed although this is partly because our team ethic is to get the ball forward early in order to play the game in the oppositions final third. Many sides have out passed us at the Mad Stad this year but they all do so via a slow build up played in front of our two banks of four. Only Southampton have actually caused us any real problems with their passing and they were willing to play early forward passes to feet. That said, some of our ball retention in open play is very poor at times and can definitely be improved upon.
2. I think SC has now worked out that Harper and Cisse are his best two CM's and that Cisse is decent at making the extra man in the box. When he came on at Saints he had clearly been given licence to get forward as often as possible. Ironically this tactic actually cost us the goal in that Hunts attempted pass to him in Saints box gave the ball away with us all out of position. My guess would be that these two will play on Friday.
3. Both examples you use are what pro's would refer to as transitions i.e when there is a sudden change of possession. This is when all sides are most vunerable. Interestingly, Doobs was criticised for backing off Phillips at Brum and then made the opposite decision at Southampton in coming to the ball. The outcome both times was a goal. Just shows the danger that comes from giving the ball away cheaply.
Great analysis as always Ollie.
I think we should finish second this season and go up, but honestly who knows?
I hope that Watford's new open style of play allows us to beat them convincingly on Saturday. That's as far ahead as we can look really.
by bishbosh92 » 05 Jan 2009 14:27
by OLLIE KEARNS » 05 Jan 2009 15:20
by Hoop Blah » 05 Jan 2009 16:07
by brendywendy » 05 Jan 2009 16:20
by OLLIE KEARNS » 05 Jan 2009 16:22
by Hoop Blah » 05 Jan 2009 18:13
brendywendy LOL at fluking a 46 game long season with 106 points
nowt flukey about it as can be seen by his continued success with todays lesser team
and ive heard coppel critique bad performances every time weve had one this season
by brendywendy » 05 Jan 2009 18:17
by OLLIE KEARNS » 05 Jan 2009 18:31
by Archie's penalty » 05 Jan 2009 18:34
OLLIE KEARNS Would have to agree that the lack of a Plan B is one weak point in what is otherwise a top notch manager. He rigidly sticks to his 4-4-2 structure even when it's not working or he is lacking the right personnel to play it. Aside from rare 4-5-1's v Arsenal and "man to man" v Man U of course.
Does anyone remember the Blackburn game at home when we lost 1-2 ? We dominated the first half and could easily have been more than 1-0 to the good. Mark Hughes then made some tactical changes and we had no answer.
Tugay absolutely ran the show in the second half playing in a football equivalent of a quarter back role. All that we had to do was drop one of our front two in to stop him getting the ball and we would have counter balanced the change that they made. But, we marched on with our 4-4-2 and lost the game.
That said the "4-4-2 and get it forward quickly" tactic is pretty much a war of attrition and previous posters have alluded to the need for the oppostion to match our fitness and intensity levels if they are to avoid defeat. Something that most aren't able to do in all fairness. SC's overall game plan and the way he fits players into his jigsaw is top class. If he could only add the ability to tweak things into a Plan B when needed then we'd be an even better side. Although he'd probably be managing Man U by then
by OLLIE KEARNS » 05 Jan 2009 19:01
Archie's penaltyOLLIE KEARNS Would have to agree that the lack of a Plan B is one weak point in what is otherwise a top notch manager. He rigidly sticks to his 4-4-2 structure even when it's not working or he is lacking the right personnel to play it. Aside from rare 4-5-1's v Arsenal and "man to man" v Man U of course.
Where would you place Coppell in a list of British managers in the last 25 years?
by Archie's penalty » 05 Jan 2009 19:08
OLLIE KEARNSArchie's penaltyOLLIE KEARNS Would have to agree that the lack of a Plan B is one weak point in what is otherwise a top notch manager. He rigidly sticks to his 4-4-2 structure even when it's not working or he is lacking the right personnel to play it. Aside from rare 4-5-1's v Arsenal and "man to man" v Man U of course.
Where would you place Coppell in a list of British managers in the last 25 years?
That's a difficult one Ar.P for a couple of reasons.
1. I don't watch all other managers as closely as I do SC for obvious reasons. The Blackburn comment was borne from being at the game and being able to form an opinion at a given moment in time. Something I can do at Reading week in week out but only on odd occasions for other sides / managers.
2. He hasn't managed a top class side where the required skill set and associated pressures are very different. There was the Man City debacle (for which we may one day find out the true reasons for him leaving) but aside from that he operates in a similar structure time and time again.
So, I would say he is one of the very best managers at achieving success levels that are far in excess of the clubs financial levels i.e over achieving. That comes from having complete conviction in the way he wants his team to play and the ability to identify the players that can fit into that pattern. It's been called the Reading way but it's reallly the SC way if you look at his past.
On the other hand it's hard to place him in the upper reaches because he hasn't managed under the different circumstances and pressures that a top club impose on the manager. In fact you could argue that top clubs haven't come in for him because they recognise the lack of a Plan B as his achilles heel.
What I would say is he is the perfect manager for a club like ours and we should cherish him while he's here. Hope that kind of answers the question
by OLLIE KEARNS » 05 Jan 2009 19:24
by Archie's penalty » 05 Jan 2009 19:30
OLLIE KEARNS Too early for an era just yet I guess and I still wonder if he'll stay on next season one way or another. I'm also very interested to see what he does in this transfer window. He's always said that the Chairman will back him with money if he asks for it and I think we're one good striker away from taking a huge step towards promotion. Will he adopt "top manager syndrom" and go for it or will he buy someone from the Turkish Second Division I guess we'll know soon enough.
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