Micky
Well-Known Member
I wouldn't describe Mourinho's tactics as sophisticated. I would say that Wenger is a sophisiticated tactician but this very often gets his teams exposed at the very highest level. The reason that Inter beat Bayern in the final was because they played percentages and also played a rigid formation that gave very little space to Barca in their own half (perhaps this is what you mean by sophisticated tactics?). I agree with the majority of your comments but I still think that their are managers out their that get a great deal of success with simplicity.That's because that's how our only successful international performance was played. It was revolutionary back in 1966, no one had seen a style and a system like that before and no one one knew how to play it. But the English game hasn't evolved from then, it's stuck in Alf Ramsey's style. Still living off it.
It has nothing to do with foreign/domestic managers. Bobby Robson lucked his way through to a semi-final thanks to two-dives against a mediocre Cameroon side and a semi-wondergoal against a mediocre Belgium side, but other than that no English manager has done any better than Sven or Capello. Besides, Fabio Capello playing a patient, non-direct approach, are you joking?! Have you ever watched any of his sides play?!
It's the type of players we producing that is at the crux of the problem. We put strength and pace above technical ability and intelligence. We're obsessed with producing certain type of players (i.e. the short pacey players, the playmakers and the big strong players who are good in the air). No matter how quick or strong the type of players we produce are, we come up against modern, technical teams like Germany and Spain and they pass us off the park. We can barely get the ball off them. They teach us footballing lessons and we don't learn from them. We continue breeding players based on one or two moulds and certain attributes. A team of technically gifted and intelligent players will beat us any day of the week. Everyone knows it, it's been commented on so many times before, but nothing ever gets done about it.
But yes, there is still a distrust of tactics in English football and a feeling that there's a certain way we should play (4-4-****ing-2 - Mike Bassett) and I think that Clough quote is partly down to it (Clough and his deification really has had a horrible influence on English football overall). Yeah, that was 40 years a go mate, why do you think that applies to the modern game? The sophisticated tactical computer programmes and tactical developments with the game since, mean that tactics are needing to be more thorough and detailed than ever.