They do it in the same way as in possession: free movement of pressing with replacement of each player. Give a match of theirs a watch because it's genius really and adds a whole new value of pressure, with it being so unpredictable for the opponents in possession.
@@arsenalogist4285right but they better not lose the ball when doing this so what do they do immediately after losing the ball after the CB drives all the way down the field etc
Peoples talk much about the Premier League, La Liga and even Bundesliga and me like a fan of football obviously love all of them, but I really believe that Serie A deserves more attention in the last years, we always have some interesting teams to watch. A few years ago we had Napoli of Sarri, then Atalanta of Gasperini in his prime, Sassuolo of De Zerbi, Lazio of Inzaghi with a nice team, Inter with Conte, Milan with a great season with Pioli winning a tittle after many years, and recently Roma's Mourinho that was not exactly beautiful but with the "passional football" only just Special One can give us, amazing Napoli of Spaletti, Bologna of Thiago Motta and of course Inter of Inzaghi. Watch Serie A guys, is very fun 🇮🇹
Serie A is very boring to watch. Too many draws and 0-1 score lines. You can't just waste 1.5 hours of your precious time that way. I'd rather watch Bundesliga matches.
@@obinnaifem8181bundesliga is the boring league. All the teams play a ridiculous my high line and whoever gets in behind the most win the matches. Feels like a FIFA match really. But each to their own I guess..
I see your point but lemme ask you a question: if you love chess and you are intrigued by its tactic, do you prefer to see a well played chess match, with mind battles and strategies, or just two people that move their pawns on the chessboard? The dumbest league is Premier League where players move with no cognition, running back and forward continuously causing stupid counterattacks. It's like see kids playing football. @@obinnaifem8181
@@kevtrot6731how is that boring? Goals galore, transition football, high turnovers, wingbacks, number 10s (remember those??). A great showcase of sport
Positional football killed my confidence as a young player. I was shunted to right-back and in games where I felt we were totally dominant, I would attack like a striker and score bags of goals only to be yelled at by the coach. I like Motta's philosophy. Trust that all your players are fine footballers and let them express themselves within a tactical structure.
I love it, I feel like creativity and freedom has been lacking in the sport recently. Like Scaloni’s comments on players being too reliant on positioning, and not being encouraged to be creative.
Nagelsman, Xabi, Arteta, and Motta. Hopefully they continue to grow and make football interesting again. Sometimes i wish all of them could face off again Klopp and Pep. Older generation coach vs new one. Especially Xabi and Nagelsmann.
Nagelsmann is overrated.. as much as Tuchel and Pochtinho.. just hype media managers.. To be fair Nagelsmann could prove me wrong but he needs a real challenge.
Would've loved him to stay at Barça a bit longer than he did. Funny how all these former Barça players have interesting interpretations of football. Pep, Arterta, Xavi, Motta, Rafa Marquez... can't wait till Busquests is a coach you definitely see something.
Purist, I've been loving this deep look at coaches that you're doing If I could suggest another name to put on your list, it would be Sebastian Hoeneß and his Stuttgart side, looks like a very interesting team from a tactical point of view and I'm excited to see them at Champions League next year and to see the development of Hoeneß as a coach
I can’t express enough how excited I get every time you upload; this is definitely my absolute favorite channel on YT at the moment. Would’ve loved more frequent uploads but if it affects the quality of your videos, I’d prefer to stick to this current model.
Love to hear it :) I upload as frequently as possible given the time to research, write and edit. But I hear you. Long-term my goal is to release more content.
Late comment that’s probably never going to see the light of day, but I would very much like to see your take on Xabi Alonso as well? This has little to do with Barca’s managerial candidates and more to do with curiosity.
I have been watching Barcelona for more then 20 yr now, this is how they use to play with passing and movement. Denial alves and messi was so good doing this on the right wing. His such a Barcelona coach but laporta would not go for him now.
One of my favorite players of his to watch is Jhon Lucumí. Left footed CB who plays on the right side and constantly moves into the midfield. Seems to grow each game with Motta
Sounds like pure Cruyff philosophy to me . The positions should not be locked, they should be fluid and interchangeable keeping the passing angles constant.
Love these longer-form videos on the less discussed coaches- so much of the tactical knowledge out there revolves around the Prem so always good to hear about the under appreciated geniuses. P.S. I think that guy wants you to break down prime Inzaghi
This guy could take Barcelona to another level if they can get him the proper pivot, pedri can be an upgrade from zirkzee as a deep lying playmaker who is the central node of possession, barcas center backs are also very good on the ball and can make runs forward
I had seen some glimpses of Bologna this and last season but this video does make me excited for this style of play. Combining the ridgid philosopy of pep but allowing players to interpretate space and keeping it together with some roles like Zirkzee and Ferguson
so far their biggest weak point has been how slowly they are able to develop if an opponent parks the bus. since they are focused on try to create and exploit spaces, and they only really accelerate when those are there, if the passing lanes are clogged, they really have no other plan that switch it back and try again in another zone. this being said, that's hardly an issue only they have, and of course if this system was used on teams with an higher level of players (no offense for bologna, but this video shows well why they are depending on zirkzee), they would be more able to create chances on tight spaces as well.
Please do a video about Liverpool 2.0. Its really interesting how Jurgen Klopp changed his midfield and it turned out to be great. Please give us more insight.
Love the content. Off this I'd love to see Motta at Barcelona as I feel the way players are brought through La Masia would benefit from the freedom Motta's style provides.
To beat the press, your players need to run with the ball, and create numerical overloads where the ball is. When more and more teams adopt this philosophy, pressing will become less effective, and teams will start defend with more low block zonal marking again. And the circle will be complete 😂
Lewis Ferguson top of their FotMob ratings, and can certainly play at a higher level. To be made captain, as a foreigner, a new player, and a young player, is testimony to how highly rated Motta rates him.
Positional freedom I think may sometimes lead to turnovers under high pressing team. Thiago Motta is an excellent manager with his new approach to game is quite remarkable and easy to learn.
Motta is incredibly experimental, but I suspect his innovations will serve others who come after, who will evaluate and ultimately perfect the thesis, more than Motta himself.
I think there is a mistake made here in the assumption that positional football is players being static. What Guardiola means is that players should be in the right position, but they should always move to find the free space, or occupy the space so other players can associate with them. So positional football requires movement to search for the empty space.
Interesting to see former top class midfield players now applying there vision of how to use space as managers?? Motta at Bologna, Alonso at Leverkusen, Guardiola at Man. City!!!
I grew up in the late 90s and started watching football in the early 00’s and as fascinating as this is, this’s why we’ll never see A Gaucho, Zidane, Messi etc again, because managers want to be the stars now, and most players are being coached to fit a system rather than express their technical capabilities more often. Bar a few, most teams are known as just having a good style of play instead of the quality of their players. It’s the reason why bar, Vini, Rodrygo, Musiala, Foden and a few more, almost all the WC players today are WC just because they have great stats(G/A) ie Haaland, Mbappe, Mo Salah, De Bruyne…great output numbers but not particularly exceptional footballers.
Great video. A question though. This development in football is maybe in danger of being ‘unplayable’? By that I mean you still have to communicate, educate and implement the tactic. Having a great idea but if your players can’t understand it or it’s too much to actually carry out? Footies players not always known for their brains!
So it's like a motion offense in basketball? That was where my mind went to for a comparison. In the middle and final thirds it has a lot of similarities to cycling in hockey (especially the half-board to behind net cycle).
he is on his wat to coaching stoke city next season and i can't wait to see him shiny shiny at santiago lumpur come on thiago neves 😍😍😍😍😍 deal almost done last night secretly with chelsea fc
This is partially how Leverkusen works this season. Just that they have really talented players who can play soo well through tight spaces so Leverkusen plays even more in the tight spaces... And Leverkusen's ability to do fast counters and
Actually what Motta is doing is to get his players to "find" a new formation depending on how the opponent plays. This concept is not new as the generic purpose of total football is to have a team that can easily adapt to different positions on the pitch. However, total football was more specific on how players control possession in spaces and without spaces which required very intelligent players. Motta's style touches on the idea of players playing in positions which brings the best out of their ability and also their team. Motta setups the team in a starting formation which allows the team to be compact in spaces. From there onwards, it is about how the players move based on their unique skillsets to counter the opponent. So in summary, Motta's team are trained to play different formations which they use depending on whether they are attacking or defending.
My thoughts after the video: Define the roles you want your players to have and how those roles work with other players' roles. Physically tell them "Ferguson I want you to make runs and create space for Zirkzee. Zirkzee I want you to exploit the space Ferguson creates for you. I want you both to become best friends on the pitch. " Motta uses Maximum participation, which means what? It means that the entire team is active in certain phases of the game. This is something Bielsa also talks about. He wants players to be active during a move. What does this actually mean on the pitch tho? I understood it this way: where building plays near our goal, let's say to the right. The right-back has the ball under pressure. The left winger who is the player furthest from the ball right now is not free from the responsibility he must do what he thinks is best for the team, whether that is to run in behind to create space for the team or that is coming close to the ball giving an extra option, that is up to him but he has to do what he thinks is right, he needs to participate, this is the same for every player on the team. What is the difference between this Bologna team and Inzaghi's Inter? -I feel like they are very similar. They both exemplify movement and freedom of movement. With Inter with can see Dimarco(the wingback) bomb forward and join the play on the right side in the final third completely leaving his position. With Bologna we see Zirkzee drop down and help in build-up and then see a CB bomb forward and attack space. Both teams seem to counter-press and both teams are good at it since they have plenty of players close to the ball. Both teams are relational and positional so what is the difference? I guess they feel so similar because I am not fluent in the language of relationism(yet), it is precisely the same as when an American watches football for the first time, they can watch a Kloop team and a Pep team and proclaim them to be exactly the same because they can't see the nuances an avid football analyst can. They are not fluent in the language of football. And I am not fluent in relationism and in need of a translator, therefore I ask: what is the difference between Bologna's style of play and Inter's. I guess that in relationism the difference in how two teams play comes from the difference in the player's playstyles, roles, and relations. Bologna have a very technical, playmaker as their striker while Inter have two strikers who are a tad bit more traditional. Their roles are also different: Zirkzee seem to help more in build-up while Thuram and Martinez play in behind and between the lines. This means that space will open up in different areas of the pitch and therefore movement will be different even though just one role and playstyle is different. Of course, there are a bunch of other differences but to me, it still feels like they are two teams who share very similar philosophies in some regard. And Purist amazing video as always!
Thanks for the in-depth thoughts. I think one of the things that differentiates this team with Inter, is although Inter seem relatively ‘free’, they tend to maintain regular angles and distances between players. Making their movement more ‘rotation’, than the kind we see from Bologna in this video. Here players get very close, or very far apart, and the structure becomes unclear. Even when Inter’s players move a lot, there’s still (most of the time) a reasonably clear structure that allows consistent ball circulation. And then, like you say, the differences in players makes a big difference.
Not that I'm trying to knock this style of play but we haven't seen this at a high enough level with world class players for it to be considered a good tactic. Movement and overloads have existed for a long time but totally disregarding structure will prove to yeild inconsistent results. How do you drill patterns of play?
I'd say such approach is extremely hard to coach. Even at highest professional level, not many players can follow a non-positional structure. Try this with reckless players like Bruno & Rashford. 😅😅😅
Analysis of Bologna out of possession :)
th-cam.com/video/M9yJHWydu2Y/w-d-xo.html
Excellent work
what software do you use for the graphics?
I'd like to see the video of Bologna out of possession!
I think it's just normal movement, nothing new or complex
Yesssss
They do it in the same way as in possession: free movement of pressing with replacement of each player. Give a match of theirs a watch because it's genius really and adds a whole new value of pressure, with it being so unpredictable for the opponents in possession.
@@arsenalogist4285right but they better not lose the ball when doing this so what do they do immediately after losing the ball after the CB drives all the way down the field etc
@@peterhulse7239fullbacks and DMF move on CB. They're stay on the back
Peoples talk much about the Premier League, La Liga and even Bundesliga and me like a fan of football obviously love all of them, but I really believe that Serie A deserves more attention in the last years, we always have some interesting teams to watch. A few years ago we had Napoli of Sarri, then Atalanta of Gasperini in his prime, Sassuolo of De Zerbi, Lazio of Inzaghi with a nice team, Inter with Conte, Milan with a great season with Pioli winning a tittle after many years, and recently Roma's Mourinho that was not exactly beautiful but with the "passional football" only just Special One can give us, amazing Napoli of Spaletti, Bologna of Thiago Motta and of course Inter of Inzaghi.
Watch Serie A guys, is very fun 🇮🇹
Serie A is very boring to watch. Too many draws and 0-1 score lines.
You can't just waste 1.5 hours of your precious time that way. I'd rather watch Bundesliga matches.
Don't forget Vincenzo Italiano's Fiorentina. They play some incredible football.
@@obinnaifem8181bundesliga is the boring league. All the teams play a ridiculous my high line and whoever gets in behind the most win the matches. Feels like a FIFA match really. But each to their own I guess..
I see your point but lemme ask you a question: if you love chess and you are intrigued by its tactic, do you prefer to see a well played chess match, with mind battles and strategies, or just two people that move their pawns on the chessboard? The dumbest league is Premier League where players move with no cognition, running back and forward continuously causing stupid counterattacks. It's like see kids playing football. @@obinnaifem8181
@@kevtrot6731how is that boring? Goals galore, transition football, high turnovers, wingbacks, number 10s (remember those??). A great showcase of sport
Positional football killed my confidence as a young player. I was shunted to right-back and in games where I felt we were totally dominant, I would attack like a striker and score bags of goals only to be yelled at by the coach. I like Motta's philosophy. Trust that all your players are fine footballers and let them express themselves within a tactical structure.
I love it, I feel like creativity and freedom has been lacking in the sport recently. Like Scaloni’s comments on players being too reliant on positioning, and not being encouraged to be creative.
Nagelsman, Xabi, Arteta, and Motta. Hopefully they continue to grow and make football interesting again. Sometimes i wish all of them could face off again Klopp and Pep. Older generation coach vs new one. Especially Xabi and Nagelsmann.
Nagelsmann is overrated.. as much as Tuchel and Pochtinho.. just hype media managers.. To be fair Nagelsmann could prove me wrong but he needs a real challenge.
@@zorashkiclueless, go read about what he did with hoffenheim at 30/31 since you clearly think he ‘hasn’t had a challenge’
Ruben Amorim
I never understood what Nagelsman has achieved and why he is considered a great coach?
Would've loved him to stay at Barça a bit longer than he did. Funny how all these former Barça players have interesting interpretations of football. Pep, Arterta, Xavi, Motta, Rafa Marquez... can't wait till Busquests is a coach you definitely see something.
Purist, I've been loving this deep look at coaches that you're doing
If I could suggest another name to put on your list, it would be Sebastian Hoeneß and his Stuttgart side, looks like a very interesting team from a tactical point of view and I'm excited to see them at Champions League next year and to see the development of Hoeneß as a coach
I’ll check them out 🫡
yeah, you should. watched them last weekend... I was so impressed.@@thepurist_
can do you prime Filippo Inzaghi player analysis@@thepurist_
oh yes!
can do you prime Filippo Inzaghi player analysis plz@@thepurist_
please do make a vid on them out of possession, and I love your vids, keep em coming!
I can’t express enough how excited I get every time you upload; this is definitely my absolute favorite channel on YT at the moment. Would’ve loved more frequent uploads but if it affects the quality of your videos, I’d prefer to stick to this current model.
Love to hear it :) I upload as frequently as possible given the time to research, write and edit. But I hear you. Long-term my goal is to release more content.
can do you prime Filippo Inzaghi player analysis@@thepurist_
can do you prime Filippo Inzaghi player analysis plz
@@thepurist_
Late comment that’s probably never going to see the light of day, but I would very much like to see your take on Xabi Alonso as well? This has little to do with Barca’s managerial candidates and more to do with curiosity.
Scaloni does something similar in Argentina. He said in some interviews that the main thing about his team are the player roles and not the positions.
Scaloni puso a 10 número 10 a jugar + el dibu. Ojala se vuelva tendencia, que aburrido se ha vuelto el fútbol ultra medido sin el 10.
It feels a lot like Total Football of the 70s and 80s by Rinus Michels and Cruyff
It’s call functional play
Copyright: Marcelo Bielsa
Interesting style of play Motta has. Also love Zirkzee’s ability to play in such tight spaces, controls the ball amazingly
I have been watching Barcelona for more then 20 yr now, this is how they use to play with passing and movement. Denial alves and messi was so good doing this on the right wing. His such a Barcelona coach but laporta would not go for him now.
He's too young.
He needs to get more experience
He is 4 years older and has way more experience than Guardiola had when he took over Barca.@@saikhzikrullah2628
Who is denial Alves ???😂😂😂😂😂 he is 99.99% done for juve btw
This man is seriously underrated 🐐🔥
This is similar to my type of philosophy that i had been thinking in my mind when i start coaching
What happened to the regular barca tactical analysis?? I used to eagerly wait for the video after big matches😢
One of my favorite players of his to watch is Jhon Lucumí. Left footed CB who plays on the right side and constantly moves into the midfield. Seems to grow each game with Motta
And I’m now seeing that he has been highlighted in the video:)
Also Calafiori is top top top🔝
wow even Thiago Motta is a coach now? Feels so old
lol. That’s what I first thought too
He's a coach for a long time now he even managed Genoa
Well thiago isn't old.. he is a coach but young coach so... he turned 41 so take 2 years from him he is 39 so.. he is young.
A video about Leverkusen would be interesting
Would be super interested in seeing another video on Bologna's off the ball tactics please do make that video 🙏
Sounds like pure Cruyff philosophy to me . The positions should not be locked, they should be fluid and interchangeable keeping the passing angles constant.
Rinus Michels philosophy
Cruyff philosophy= guardiola= positional play
It’s remind me brazilian football and futsal.
Love these longer-form videos on the less discussed coaches- so much of the tactical knowledge out there revolves around the Prem so always good to hear about the under appreciated geniuses.
P.S. I think that guy wants you to break down prime Inzaghi
This guy could take Barcelona to another level if they can get him the proper pivot, pedri can be an upgrade from zirkzee as a deep lying playmaker who is the central node of possession, barcas center backs are also very good on the ball and can make runs forward
99.99% done deal to juve
100% done deal Juventus
I had seen some glimpses of Bologna this and last season but this video does make me excited for this style of play. Combining the ridgid philosopy of pep but allowing players to interpretate space and keeping it together with some roles like Zirkzee and Ferguson
Another very exciting upcoming Coach is Farioli, worth a look into as well.
Great analysis as always.
Great to see Thiago and Xabi emerging as great coaches, having a style of play very different from the positional bullshit
I said it this on lots of facebook pages I mentioned Motta, Valverde, De Zerbi, Alonso, Michel they are class ❤
Great watch & listen, thanks.
👍
True difference of scouting smartly and not breaking the transfer market on top flop star players for no reason
He's done a great job.
Glad to see Bologna doing so well. This system works when you have the right players, Motta tried it at Genoa and it failed miserably
Love the video! I would suggest a video on Ruben Amorim Sporting CP
so far their biggest weak point has been how slowly they are able to develop if an opponent parks the bus.
since they are focused on try to create and exploit spaces, and they only really accelerate when those are there, if the passing lanes are clogged, they really have no other plan that switch it back and try again in another zone.
this being said, that's hardly an issue only they have, and of course if this system was used on teams with an higher level of players (no offense for bologna, but this video shows well why they are depending on zirkzee), they would be more able to create chances on tight spaces as well.
Please do a video about Liverpool 2.0. Its really interesting how Jurgen Klopp changed his midfield and it turned out to be great. Please give us more insight.
of course a video for "Out of possesion" would be very good to see
Love the content. Off this I'd love to see Motta at Barcelona as I feel the way players are brought through La Masia would benefit from the freedom Motta's style provides.
Best video on Bologna so far. Excellent work mate.
To beat the press, your players need to run with the ball, and create numerical overloads where the ball is. When more and more teams adopt this philosophy, pressing will become less effective, and teams will start defend with more low block zonal marking again. And the circle will be complete 😂
Smart work plus the zeal to help others, nothing heats that🎉🎉🎉
Great video. Try Arne Slot next time. He's been fabulous across teams now for consistently since 2019
we need the video on the out of ball phase of bologna
Lewis Ferguson top of their FotMob ratings, and can certainly play at a higher level. To be made captain, as a foreigner, a new player, and a young player, is testimony to how highly rated Motta rates him.
Positional freedom I think may sometimes lead to turnovers under high pressing team.
Thiago Motta is an excellent manager with his new approach to game is quite remarkable and easy to learn.
You produce the best footbal content on whole youtube
The Mens England U21 Team play like this too
you never did real madrid tactics ?
i saw carvajal as pivot against atleti in one scenario and i don't understand why
Motta is incredibly experimental, but I suspect his innovations will serve others who come after, who will evaluate and ultimately perfect the thesis, more than Motta himself.
I love the current serie a league, post juve domination has made the league so sk competitive. the quality of coaches is brilliant
I think there is a mistake made here in the assumption that positional football is players being static. What Guardiola means is that players should be in the right position, but they should always move to find the free space, or occupy the space so other players can associate with them. So positional football requires movement to search for the empty space.
Would really like a deep dive on Ruben Amorim. Been hearing so much about him recently
I can't imagine the amount of training it would take to get players used to this
Yes please cover his defensive tactics! 🙏
Interesting to see former top class midfield players now applying there vision of how to use space as managers?? Motta at Bologna, Alonso at Leverkusen, Guardiola at Man. City!!!
I grew up in the late 90s and started watching football in the early 00’s and as fascinating as this is, this’s why we’ll never see A Gaucho, Zidane, Messi etc again, because managers want to be the stars now, and most players are being coached to fit a system rather than express their technical capabilities more often. Bar a few, most teams are known as just having a good style of play instead of the quality of their players. It’s the reason why bar, Vini, Rodrygo, Musiala, Foden and a few more, almost all the WC players today are WC just because they have great stats(G/A) ie Haaland, Mbappe, Mo Salah, De Bruyne…great output numbers but not particularly exceptional footballers.
Their match against inter last week really impressed me even though they lost.
Great video.
A question though. This development in football is maybe in danger of being ‘unplayable’? By that I mean you still have to communicate, educate and implement the tactic. Having a great idea but if your players can’t understand it or it’s too much to actually carry out? Footies players not always known for their brains!
So it's like a motion offense in basketball? That was where my mind went to for a comparison.
In the middle and final thirds it has a lot of similarities to cycling in hockey (especially the half-board to behind net cycle).
I'm very interested in Bologna's out of possession tactics.
excellent break down. got my sub
he is on his wat to coaching stoke city next season and i can't wait to see him shiny shiny at santiago lumpur
come on thiago neves 😍😍😍😍😍
deal almost done last night secretly with chelsea fc
Enjoyed this video on a very good side
An Italian club having a Scottish captain is special
Graeme Souness captained Sampdoria back in the 80s as well. Great leader.
@@SKa-tt9nm where's pogba in all of this?
yes please to another video on the out of possession faze
This is partially how Leverkusen works this season. Just that they have really talented players who can play soo well through tight spaces so Leverkusen plays even more in the tight spaces... And Leverkusen's ability to do fast counters and
Yes, for the out of possession video.
Also, in transition too please.
Of course, he was in Barcelona.
Més que un Club ❤️💙
Would love to see that Bologna out of possession analysis! Great content! 🙏🏾
Actually what Motta is doing is to get his players to "find" a new formation depending on how the opponent plays. This concept is not new as the generic purpose of total football is to have a team that can easily adapt to different positions on the pitch. However, total football was more specific on how players control possession in spaces and without spaces which required very intelligent players.
Motta's style touches on the idea of players playing in positions which brings the best out of their ability and also their team. Motta setups the team in a starting formation which allows the team to be compact in spaces. From there onwards, it is about how the players move based on their unique skillsets to counter the opponent. So in summary, Motta's team are trained to play different formations which they use depending on whether they are attacking or defending.
Total fotboll just a new namn of Santos ginga
My thoughts after the video:
Define the roles you want your players to have and how those roles work with other players' roles. Physically tell them "Ferguson I want you to make runs and create space for Zirkzee. Zirkzee I want you to exploit the space Ferguson creates for you. I want you both to become best friends on the pitch. "
Motta uses Maximum participation, which means what? It means that the entire team is active in certain phases of the game. This is something Bielsa also talks about. He wants players to be active during a move. What does this actually mean on the pitch tho? I understood it this way: where building plays near our goal, let's say to the right. The right-back has the ball under pressure. The left winger who is the player furthest from the ball right now is not free from the responsibility he must do what he thinks is best for the team, whether that is to run in behind to create space for the team or that is coming close to the ball giving an extra option, that is up to him but he has to do what he thinks is right, he needs to participate, this is the same for every player on the team.
What is the difference between this Bologna team and Inzaghi's Inter?
-I feel like they are very similar. They both exemplify movement and freedom of movement. With Inter with can see Dimarco(the wingback) bomb forward and join the play on the right side in the final third completely leaving his position. With Bologna we see Zirkzee drop down and help in build-up and then see a CB bomb forward and attack space. Both teams seem to counter-press and both teams are good at it since they have plenty of players close to the ball. Both teams are relational and positional so what is the difference? I guess they feel so similar because I am not fluent in the language of relationism(yet), it is precisely the same as when an American watches football for the first time, they can watch a Kloop team and a Pep team and proclaim them to be exactly the same because they can't see the nuances an avid football analyst can. They are not fluent in the language of football. And I am not fluent in relationism and in need of a translator, therefore I ask: what is the difference between Bologna's style of play and Inter's.
I guess that in relationism the difference in how two teams play comes from the difference in the player's playstyles, roles, and relations. Bologna have a very technical, playmaker as their striker while Inter have two strikers who are a tad bit more traditional. Their roles are also different: Zirkzee seem to help more in build-up while Thuram and Martinez play in behind and between the lines. This means that space will open up in different areas of the pitch and therefore movement will be different even though just one role and playstyle is different.
Of course, there are a bunch of other differences but to me, it still feels like they are two teams who share very similar philosophies in some regard.
And Purist amazing video as always!
Thanks for the in-depth thoughts. I think one of the things that differentiates this team with Inter, is although Inter seem relatively ‘free’, they tend to maintain regular angles and distances between players. Making their movement more ‘rotation’, than the kind we see from Bologna in this video. Here players get very close, or very far apart, and the structure becomes unclear. Even when Inter’s players move a lot, there’s still (most of the time) a reasonably clear structure that allows consistent ball circulation. And then, like you say, the differences in players makes a big difference.
Good stuff mate!
I really like to see an end to possession play and horizontal passes!
I would like to see the video on tactical analysis of Dorival Jr for game against Emgland
next barcelona manager i hope 🙌🙌
Ten Hag used this against Liverpool last weekend with Fernandes and Anthony at the back
Video on Ruben Amorim would be TOP.
Really good analysis. I do prefer more positional play. I think the level of creative freedom should only be given to highly creative players.
I thought you would cover Tuchel in your german coach period. I'd really love to learn more about his tactics
Tuchel is 3-4-3 haram ball 1-0 win
I would love to see him coach Marseille.
Not that I'm trying to knock this style of play but we haven't seen this at a high enough level with world class players for it to be considered a good tactic. Movement and overloads have existed for a long time but totally disregarding structure will prove to yeild inconsistent results. How do you drill patterns of play?
analyse what thiago motta would bring to ac milan
i also thought lucumi was called lucimi
Mate, great content! You should consider making a video about CR7 and Bruno Fernandes' former club - SPROTING CP
Despite his lack of experience, I would like to see him at Barcelona
Sir I love your videos
Please do a video on Thiago Motta’s Bologna out of possession
Tim Walter played exacly the same system for years at Hamburger SV
Is it possible to see the trainning sessions for that kind of play?
that 2:18 Beukema movement😂
MID FIELDERS ARE ALWAYS THE BEST COACHES
My coach 🤝🔥
Untouchable comme Verratti and Motta
Zirkzee looks like a futsal pivot, my boy motta just know How to make that
They are doing this with no big money. Incredible
Remo Freuler has been one of Europe’s best players for 6 or more years now
I'd say such approach is extremely hard to coach. Even at highest professional level, not many players can follow a non-positional structure. Try this with reckless players like Bruno & Rashford. 😅😅😅
you should do vicenzo Italiano. he seems very interesting.
I've been quiet now for far too long and I must expose the conspiracy. This guy is 100% Seb Stafford-Bloor
Can you do Sebastian Hoeneb next
Excellent
This style looks like holland by 1974! Players switching positions. Ajax 2019 was also the same.