Five most important facets of the game ranked

Five most important facets of the game ranked

1. Counterpressing
2. High intensity pressing
3. Possession based attack (slow build up)
4. Counter attacking
5. Defending with low intensity press

>it's an ameriburger pretends to be an intellectual episode
1. 4
2. 4
3. 2
4. Get stuck in
5. Powerful throw-in to the area

>Five most important facets of the game ranked

>1. Counterpressing
>2. High intensity pressing
>3. Possession based attack (slow build up)
>4. Counter attacking
>5. Defending with low intensity press

>tf
>tt

how about this
1. Ball
2. In
3. Goal
There's only three aspects of the game and it doesn't matter how you accomplish them

>1. Counterpressing
>2. High intensity pressing

also known as gegenpressing also known as everyone run after the ball like retards and get 8th in the bundesligapressing

t. dirtmad customer

>englishfootballingsuccessexplained.txt

That's the most british post I've read in a while.

>Nice gameplan against teams who use counterattack with speed.

We won a world cup by loosely following that plan
Just because we haven't perfected it like you doesn't mean we don't understand the basic principles of ball in goal

You seem to misunderstand that Subotic also has a fair amount pace and will definitely get to that ball before either blue
He's also great in the air so isn't going to lose a 50/50

That guy is handling three jobs at the same time in your scenario,
- guarding striker
- guarding the wing players
- watching the long ball to the wing area.

Piszczek isn't going to do nothing when the ball gets lumped over the top
Gundogan should also be going with the central midfielder
This is all irrelevant anyway as Piszczek is marking the only one with any pace in this setup anyway and has 10 yards on him
Subotic can easliy get to the hoof
Also Germans don't play hoofball

>Long ball is hoofball
if Gundogan follow the MF, then the 2nd striker is unguarded, opponent can play trick-pass from the pressurised player.
The key issue is that Klopps traded "2 vs 3" situation with a pressure applied.
It may work against clubs with possession and slow play, but against speedy attack like aguuuuero, hazard and kane, there is a danger lurking out there.

Literally Ferguson tactics there.

this is hoofball we're talking here
there's too much pressure on blue with the ball for him to calcluate a long ball over the top
by the dortmund team in the pic its still prime klopp era, the tactics of long balls you mentioned earlier did work in that season when dortmund were bottom at the winter break but that's because their key players that implement the gegenpressing got sold or were injured through most of that season anyway

nice 2013 tactics there
game has evolved now onto ironic anti-counterpressing where you deliberately pass the ball to the opposition to lose it so when they counter attack you are in the position to retrieve the ball and counter attack the opposition then give the ball to your meme forward who misses

>have decent CMs
>pass the ball quickly against meme pressing
>??????

That dortmund team was evenly matched with a shitty Arsenal team lmao

Numbers 1, 2 and 3 should be adaptability.

It's fine playing Klopps high-pressing system, Peps Barca possession-based attack or Mourinho's Inter counter-attack, but they've all been exposed with counter tactics.

He wasn't the greatest tactician ever, but Ferguson had a lot of success because he was willing to sacrifice his own style to get a win in anyway possible. See the 2007/2008 CL semi-final vs Barca, both legs.

They did reach a Champions league final, a DfB pokal and win the league twice m8
Arsenal won two FA cups

My point exactly. Any team capable of just passing the ball without a thousand touches coulda matched their meme shit, Arsenal was somehow able to trade wins with Dortmund despite being shit everywhere else (CL wise, not beating on PL dross).

1. Getting fookin stuck on
2. Long balls
3. Abusing ref without geting sent off
4. Time wasting
5. Hoofing the ball clear from your penalty area

#realfootball

>no long throws
>no big lad/small lad partnership up top

shitty list 2bh

I suppose you did have a point if it was that they didn't come up against any possession based teams during their champions league run and this was before Pep came to Bayern so they were still stuck playing athletic Heynckes football that didn't prioritise possession

It wasn't even so much in keeping possession, you just had to have competent midfielders playing deep to avoid the meme press then you where good because it requires so many players to leave their positions to get the ball. Just survive that initial press and you where good, their CL run was bizarre because teams where so afraid of being pressed that they were just panicking before Dortmund even acted, wasting posession easily, especially Real.