@@babogoten3081 it will work, totally but you can't do it all game, yo be able to sustain such pressure the defenders should be extremely good dominating the ball or they have yo kick it yo the other side fast, the problem is that it is very risky
My dad is Dutch-Indo and used to show me videos as a kid. The Orange Machine with Cryuff was amazing. They should have one at least one World Cup in the 70s. One the greatest teams of all time.
In my humble 70 year old opinion, the greatest few weeks of soccer the world has ever seen! Unforgettable! And as a Dutch dude, so proud still! This is art!
This system requires top footballers everywhere on the pitch. And a superior awareness of each other to hunt in packs and move so fluidly to be unmarkable..
My father has told me quite a bit about this total football that the Dutch played back then. About the national team and Ajax. I enjoy watching the Dutch rushing like crazy for the ball. Amazing play.. for it's time though. Football has evolved so much since then. It's a lot faster, a lot more technical. Seeing the pressure the Dutch apply, I noticed many chances to counter it. By today's standards, they would've been torn apart. I'm baffled by the lack of support their opponents get by teammates when on the ball. That being said, it's not a knock on the way football was played then, nor on the players. It's just the way it was. I'm just very used to today's way of playing football, but I still appreciate those great generations that have come before.
I am as old as your father and a Dutchman, Your father saw it, we loved it...I did not see the game of 74 but I was sad in 78...as a ten year old...Search "Rinus Michels", on TH-cam and you know more about total football...
Football is faster now for sure,more off ball than with ball,but technically downgrade. What the top players did with those equipments and pitch is fantastic.
Yeah, but by today the Dutch would also play it differently. Nowadays many teams practice the total football and Tiki Taka idea and things keep evolving. You can't really compare racing drivers like Jim Clark or Juan-Manuel Fangio with Mika Hakkinen, Michael Schumacher, Kimi Räikönen or Max Verstappen. Different times, technology, rules and training.
Este gran equipo con ese fútbol, debió ser campeón en Alemania 1974....una pena .... Para mi siempre demostró con su juego ser el mejor equipo de ese mundial 👏👏👏
It worked perfectly because what we defined as a cardable tackle in today's game was a very normal tackle in the 70s, 80s and 90s and to some extent early 2000s. This style of pressing would never work in today's game, the refs whistle would go off every 2mins, and there would be a lot of yellow cards and some would eventually become red cards.
The Netherlands is sucha mystery, having been so incredibly good, for so many years but never managing to win the world cup (three silver) and only winning one European championship (1998) is quiet sad, especially looking at the team now, they didn't even manage to qualify for 2016 Euros. It feels like the Netherlands chance to ever reach real success is all but gone now, i know, i know, never say never, but i remember Van Basten, and my generation all feared Holland cus of players like Kluivert, Van Nistleroy, Edgar Davids, Overmars, Jaap Stam and the De Boer brothers, oh my what players! Certianly forgetting some in there but you get the idea, it feels like the Netherlands have nothing like that now days, and it feels quiet sad. Big salute to the Netherlands from a Swede! ❤
Talvez essa tenha sido a última seleção a assustar o mundo com uma inovação. O futebol se modernizou, as equipes se estudam muito e sobra cada vez menos chances para surpresas como o Carrossel Holandês. A Espanha de 2010 surpreendeu com o tiki taka, mas não inventou nada, foi só uma excelente aplicação do que já existia.
@@deniscostadenis4461 Cara, nenhum time na época fazia esse tipo de marcação igual fazia o Ajax... Nem na época, nem antes. Nenhum tinha esse estilo de jogo em bloco... Então sim, independente de nível de adversário, é revolução. Ou você vai meter o louco e falar que Pelé não foi revolucionário ao ver um vídeo dele driblando pedreiros?
This reminds me of when we played when we were 6 and 7. Six or seven players going for the ball. Odd to watch but effective defensively. I'd imagine it would've taken a lot of energy to maintain this for 90 minutes.
Do not let your opponent have the ball whatever the consequences! I am in my fifties and still cannot cope with the fact that Johan The Great defaulted on Argentina '78.
This high presssure works well if you score goals in the match, but if you fail, is exhausting physically, and you can receive goals in counter attacks.
Exactly bosz tried this tactic multiple times at leverkusen dortmund and lyon it didnt work out well. Eventually teams will squeeze out the weak spots.
@@valterjosedemedeirosjosede4879 KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK a piada do século. Baseado no quê? A única geração brasileira que sequer chegou a uma semifinal em quase 30 anos, não revolucionou em nada o futebol taticamente, como a Hungria de 54 e Holanda de 74. Não foi sequer o melhor Brasil a perder uma Copa, que foram as seleções de 1998 e 1950. Há coisas que só podem ser explicadas por fanatismo e emoção.
Don't miss this excessive slide tackling at all.. It's a stupid move, exclusively destructive with little chance to actually win the ball and should always be the last option. Not even talking about the risk of injury.. Smart defenders don't slide tackle if they don't absolutely have to
Especially in the last decade we are seeing top clubs revisiting this tactic (city, liverpool). The main goal is to put on early pressure and concurring the ball at the opponent’s half. This creates a lot more chances, since the game takes place on the opponent’s half. Simply less ground to cover. This team has literally revolutionized the game and still is, amazing!
@@brainimp not as aggressively indeed, but have you ever wondered why we don’t see the traditional playmaker anymore in modern football? It’s because of the use of high press by top clubs
@@floris44 not as aggressive because now the high press is more organize, the position of the player is more important than cluelessly chasing the ball.
danke Nachbar. Als Niederländer war ich schon immer ein bisschen neidisch auf die fußballerischen Leistungen Deutschlands. Wenn wir nur eine Weltmeisterschaft hätten, hoffe ich, sie einmal in meinem Leben zu erleben.
It’s useless comparing todays teams with teams from the 70’s. Same for comparing players from different era. Messi couldn’t play the same way in the 70’s like he does today. Football evolved and every era has it’s heroes. One thing i know is that Johan Cruijff changed football more than any other player. As a player and as a coach. The way Barca played tiki taka under Guardiola was all because he learned it from Cruijff. Maradona and Pele both incredible players, but only as players. They didn’t helped the sport evolve like Cruijff did. And that makes a very big difference.
Imagine your first game against The Netherlands in 1974 ..you get the ball and look to pass it and six tall crazies in organger all come at you. Very disruptive. Brilliant and demanding.
No they won't , these teams won't play same the tactics . Football tactics keeps eveloving and the Dutch team introduced many new things and contributed very much to the development of tactics . For every era you should find the best tactic to win your era and it's very stupid to compare tactically 2 teams that played in different eras
This is the kind of special stupid comment 🙄. Comparing eras in sports makes no sense . Those were special players; they were all top players back then as Barcelona one day (2009-12)had top players to perform at a high level. Some stupid kids in the future will say the same about Barcelona of this era .
Amphetamines. WC 1974 was the war of European amphetamines vs South American steroids. Amphetamines won. By WC 1978, South Americans were using amphetamines too, so the intercontinental gap disappeared.
Ahí está el tema. Que fueron LOS PRIMEROS. LOS QUE TUVIERON LA BRILLANTE IDEA. Después el resto fue inspiración, influencia, copiar y mejorar, pero el PIONERO es el PIONERO
This is not Total Footbal. The Total Footbal philosophy refers to the players adopting different roles throughout the game. They are not confined to playing a certain position, rather they organically flow into different positions when defending or going forward. I saw this first hand at the Dallas Cup in 1997 when U19 Ajax with John O'Brien destroyed my brother's team in the Super Group. The Ajax players were constantly floating into various positions: Defender pushes forward and stays up top, midfielder drops back as cover with the forward replacing the midfielder. This went on and on the whole game. The only one staying put was the keeper. The crowd was totally mesmerized. So much passing, so much movement. Nobody was cheering, just watching a truly beautiful game. I wish teams still played this way, but with the game being so technical now and players solely perfecting their one position, that Total Footbal era is sadly long gone.
That is just silly. Total Football was defined by the playstyle of Rinus Michels' teams in the early seventies: Ajax and the Dutch National team '74. Check your facts.
@@eddyborremans2546 Rinus Michels' philosophy was that no field player should be fixed into playing one position. The game was to be fluid with players interchanging positions on offense and defense 90 minutes. Total Football
@@josephfarrugia2350 Since your country will never be the champion of anything, you have become a resentful loser and slanderer of the greats who always win 🇦🇷✌️⭐⭐⭐⚽
@@josephfarrugia2350 Since your country will never be the champion of anything, you have become a resentful loser and slanderer of the greats who always win 🇦🇷✌️⚽⭐⭐⭐
You may have heard the phrase 'total football' mentioned at some point. This is what that is. It was a concept created by Rinus Michels, the coach of this Dutch side and Ajax, where many of these players came from. Michels had borrowed the phrase from Joseph Goebbels' speech about 'total war.' Total football means that the whole team is involved in getting the ball, all the time, and then going forward, all the time. They almost won. Now, everybody tries to play like that, but Michels and Cruijff invented it.
The 1974 World Cup was a watershed when overall football replaced individual technical football. It ended the Brazilian football dynasty. From the Dutch defeat of Brazil 2-0, the Netherlands officially introduced a concept to the international football world. Football must cooperate as a whole to attack and defend. Both. Brazil, which prides itself on its personal skills, was knocked down by almighty football in 1974, and the football legend officially came to an end. Although it took them 28 years to adapt to both offensive and defensive football, it was not until 2002 that they could win the World Cup again. Football tactics are changing with each passing day. If you don’t advance, you will retreat. But almighty football is indeed a major breakthrough in the history of football tactics. It is a pity that the Netherlands met the host country in the World Cup finals twice at that time. It was really God’s will ⚽️
The Dutch took the Italian catenaccio style, applied it to everyone in front of the back four then made it infinitely more manoeuvrable and what we today call the gegenpress was born. Never utilised better than by the Dutch and slotted into their Total Football style beautifully You can see where the label ‘the best team to have never won the World Cup’ As a Scot, it would be horribly remiss of me if I didn’t mention Archie Gemmill’s wonder goal against the Dutch in 1978
No. That pressing is the opposite to catenacio. Was madness. Pressing with 6 players and then atacks by the sides like ajax 72. In my opinion the best tean are the hungarians of 54 they were magics.
Looks crazy, almost like a battle :D It is obviously not the best option, since it is energy consuming, but it is entertaining, and might be super effective if triggered at the right moment. It is amazing, when you see someone experimenting and thinking outside the box on high level, betting that much this way.
The problem isn't energy consumption but that you're in big trouble if you can't steal the ball if you've put all your eggs in the same basket in that way
Defensively it resembles a lot to Gegenpress, the only difference is the very fluid player positioning on the pitch, all of them are like we are all marking, we are pushing for the ball. The players are literally attacking the carrier of the ball completely limiting his passing options and so the transition after winning a ball could come from any player. It limits the vision of the ball carrier at certain times, 5-6 players are limiting the space of the potential ball movement. It's genius
@@bryan-cv2ew Today fouls are less aggressive, everyone pretends to fall but still some of it's principles are being applied today, especially when they spot the playmaker, teams are applying pressure to certain areas of the pitch, with 2-3-4 men on the ball.
@@dreadalex yes but its highly organized. the presses are designed to stop build up play. You never see 5 players commit on a single player simultaneously today. back when this sort of rushing nonsense was played, there wasn’t really the threat of ball playing CBs and midfielders that could pin point pass to athletic one of kinds, in under a second. the average players were bad, and the great players were all generally goalscorers, not centerbacks or midfielders
@@bryan-cv2ew Well I think this sort of pressing actually creates this total football, their transition when winning the ball makes their positioning fluidly based and not structural. If you see for instance Guardiola's variation or Klop, the players are always moving in their areas in defence and holding their positions on the pitch. This here if the ball moves to the right the players from the left side are closing in the available passing spaces, from the right side the same and the players who are playing in the center are moving slightly left, or slightly right but what is impressive is the transition when winning the ball every player can run forward with the ball and I think that fluid positional structure of Michels is based on the way the team presses the ball holder on the pitch and the transition phase when winning the ball. In their build up play the players are holding their positions of course winning some meters and having again more freedom, the center backs are actually involved in the attack and taking positions for a cross while Cruyff Neskens are more lurking outside to win again the ball or take a shot from outside of the area, it's very fascinating the way they move on the pitch.
Man, you got to see,this was 1974, football was played totally different back then. Until the Dutch came and breaked the way open, allowing football to be what it is nowadays. So don't question it with your actual knowledge, but embrace the moment of the biggest transformation in the game. Without these men the game would not be nowadays what it is and we all love it for. This here is history in the making!
@@Signofevil_Smile4theCam Yeah that's true, i just found it funny how much the game has evolved, that even lateralizing and going back which we consider basic football at kid's level wasn't applied at top tier level back then
Modern football who still using this tactic is Liverpool under Jurgen Klopp, but still not too extreme like this. I watch Liverpool play a lot, one thing i notice is even when they are pressuring while defensive, they also counter attacking as soon as they retrieve the ball back, Rock n' Roll. The most exciting match when they do this is againts Barcelona in 2019, 2nd leg UCL semifinal. Barcelona the team who is known to be a good at controlling the ball under pressure is suffering in this match, they being swarm in all side in the pitch. What a joy to watch Jurgen side 👏🏻
Pity you weren't there to advise all those world cup coaches who faced Holland! I can imagine your arrogant pompous tone while explaining: "Here hold my beer, let me tell you how to play...."
The main reason this worked as often as it did was because the passing, spacing and movement wasn't at modern elite standards. It relied on making teams bunch and panic. While occasionally effective today when used in a targeted manner, it's easily passed over if the opposition holds their line.
In fact it was because the off side rule at the time did not contained a passive player - if a player was further the last defensive player, it was an off side - it didin't matter he was or not particulary on the play itself, the ref call it and the play stopped. So, lots of off sides. When the rule changed , it was much more difficult to call an off side and invalid the play cause someone coming from behind the lines could attack the ball, with the play were kept on going, even with 5 players on off side position since they were not on ball's directed position
This is obviously revolutionary stuff, but it's also naive compared to modern high pressing / gegenpressing and wouldn't work well today. They took the whole world by surprise with this at the time though. It helped to get them to two World Cup finals and they probably should have won at least one of them.
@@truthoverfalsehood__8757 they would have to adapt their pressing game to take into account that a) if you tackle like that you will lose 3 players to red cards every game and b) modern teams are used to high counterpressing and can play the ball over the top of the press, or in behind, thus countering the counter press ;) Of course, they were all incredible players, so they would be able to adapt, but I doubt it would still look anything like what we see in these clips.
@@AndrewSowerby With todays players and training schedule this pressing would even be more effective. Your concerns are valid , however we have very endurant and fast full backs today that could recover passes above the line quit well , also the more you sychnronise the pressing the more the oppnent falls into offside we saw that barcelona did this very well. High pressing today is noone near this , pressing is mathematicaly speaking a exponential function the more players apply more pressure the much more the likleyhood of the opponent loosing the ball becomes , if 2 or 3 players press thats not even half the effect than if 4 players press , if 4 or 5 players press thats not even half as effective as if 6 players press. I guarantee you if any team would ultra press like the netherlands with some minor tweeks but with the same or more agressivness and commitment and risk then that would absolutley be very very effective.
They were playing like they were high on cocaine. As a team, they were better than Brazil '70. By the way, an alternative history question: who do you think would have prevailed in a clash between The Netherlands 1974 and Brazil 1970?
They weren't better. Brazil '74 (without Pelé, Gerson, Torres, Tostão) nearly score 2x0 at 1st half time. Netherlands '74 had their problems, almost didn't qualify to World Cup if it wasn't the referee against Belgium.
@@Leonardo-ir1xl Right, the offside not granted. But this is the life, everything converged onto the team that proposed the better football. Alternative history (which is bullshit 😀) says that Belgium would have gone home after the first round.
While ae are on the topix of alternative history... I am curious what would be happen for Poland of Lubański was not injured in 1973. Outsanding Poland's star. For better or for worse (just as Portugal could lose with France in 2016 IMHO if Cristiano was not injured)
@@JohnDoe-uw9nq Why? Do you believe that Cruijff's transfer to Barcelona in the summer of '73 weighed against Holland's team spirit? West Germany was by no means weaker from '72 through '74, as reigning European champions with a lot of time available to prepare in friendlies. Please elaborate on your opinion.
No pero esto era pressing asfixiante y despues los contrarios no la podian recuperar. Esta pensado. Rinus michels era un genio. Lo eligieron el mejor dt de europa de todos los tiempos.
@@miguelaprendizaje.2918 Yo sé, solo digo que la imagen me recordó mucho a esos partidos desordenados en el patio del colegio, todos yendo detrás del balón como pirañas.
@@miguelaprendizaje.2918 Sí. Y encima se ve espectacular, algo así como una estrategia de los Supercampeones. Ojalá el fútbol real volviese a ser así de creativo. Imaginate a diez tipos de anaranjado cayéndole a Messi en el partido anterior.
Unica coisa que eu vejo como positivo é com relação ao impedimento que eles faziam no outro time. De resto eram todos atrás de uma bola. Faltava malícia nos adversários.
Any team in the top 3 divisions of any European league would absolutely destroy them in 2022. Amazing how poor the tactics, quality, and use of space was by the opposition. Football really has come very far.
I believe that Tite's tactic was similar and failed miserably in the 2022 world cup. Today teams play in lines without the offensiveness observed in the 1976 cup, so the tactic used by Tite has been outdated.
Lots of bad offside calls... they took advantage of the fact their tactics were so unusual and the linesmen weren't used to that so they called offside for a lot of chances that just weren't
Seemed like a very risky strategy, reason why nobody does it anymore, it’s easy to prepare for it before hand. Just need to have 1-2 fast players next to the last defender and De Bruyne in mid field and this strategy will fall apart really quick against todays teams.
It was easier to be offside back then, if you played the ball to a teammate when any player on your team was offside, it counted as an offside, which is why you see the defender's trying to bring the ball forward by dribbling past 6 players instead of clearing it. Bonkers rule
Me and the Bois on pro clubs
Hahahhaha
😂😂😂😂
Reminds me of playing FIFA 13 online back in the day, everyone abused this type of ultra high press.
I can't believe a team could play like that. Seemed so chaotic, but extremely well-coordinated at the same time.
I think this type of play would not work now because opponent will dive when they are pressured.
Reminds me of playing FIFA 13 online back in the day, everyone abused this type of ultra high press.
@@theawesome1rjc weren't AC Milan still doing it over 15 years later? With great success and the trophies to show for it i might add.
Looks like school playground football..
@@babogoten3081 it will work, totally but you can't do it all game, yo be able to sustain such pressure the defenders should be extremely good dominating the ball or they have yo kick it yo the other side fast, the problem is that it is very risky
My dad is Dutch-Indo and used to show me videos as a kid. The Orange Machine with Cryuff was amazing. They should have one at least one World Cup in the 70s. One the greatest teams of all time.
In my humble 70 year old opinion, the greatest few weeks of soccer the world has ever seen! Unforgettable! And as a Dutch dude, so proud still! This is art!
Humble and dutch in one sentence. The irony.
You sir, & those who witnessed this style of play for the first time in those very years, are lucky people.
This system requires top footballers everywhere on the pitch. And a superior awareness of each other to hunt in packs and move so fluidly to be unmarkable..
My father has told me quite a bit about this total football that the Dutch played back then. About the national team and Ajax. I enjoy watching the Dutch rushing like crazy for the ball. Amazing play.. for it's time though. Football has evolved so much since then. It's a lot faster, a lot more technical. Seeing the pressure the Dutch apply, I noticed many chances to counter it. By today's standards, they would've been torn apart. I'm baffled by the lack of support their opponents get by teammates when on the ball. That being said, it's not a knock on the way football was played then, nor on the players. It's just the way it was. I'm just very used to today's way of playing football, but I still appreciate those great generations that have come before.
I am as old as your father and a Dutchman, Your father saw it, we loved it...I did not see the game of 74 but I was sad in 78...as a ten year old...Search "Rinus Michels", on TH-cam and you know more about total football...
@@EricvanDorp191 so glad that he won finally an européen title. Rinus deserve more with holland team. From morrocco with love.
Football is faster now for sure,more off ball than with ball,but technically downgrade.
What the top players did with those equipments and pitch is fantastic.
Yeah, but by today the Dutch would also play it differently. Nowadays many teams practice the total football and Tiki Taka idea and things keep evolving.
You can't really compare racing drivers like Jim Clark or Juan-Manuel Fangio with Mika Hakkinen, Michael Schumacher, Kimi Räikönen or Max Verstappen. Different times, technology, rules and training.
It was that type of pressing that the USA played against England last night, making England look bad.
Este gran equipo con ese fútbol, debió ser campeón en Alemania 1974....una pena .... Para mi siempre demostró con su juego ser el mejor equipo de ese mundial 👏👏👏
Subbed not just for the great video but the fact that the music wasn’t the same hi-NRG 200 bpm clubmix of a Tory Lanez song that I’m used to hearing.
Gracias por subir este material digno de biblioteca. Al alcance de la mano.
I was 1 year old when this took place but I’m sure even then I would’ve been able to tell Uruguay’s wingers to stay wide. It’s a great video!
th-cam.com/video/0wSEJy5Cr54/w-d-xo.html
wow, i didnt know this even existed, its crazy seeing it working perfectly
It worked perfectly because what we defined as a cardable tackle in today's game was a very normal tackle in the 70s, 80s and 90s and to some extent early 2000s. This style of pressing would never work in today's game, the refs whistle would go off every 2mins, and there would be a lot of yellow cards and some would eventually become red cards.
netherlands 74 were the greatest show on earth just AWESOME!!
This is hilarious and effective. Absolutely terrifying
The Netherlands is sucha mystery, having been so incredibly good, for so many years but never managing to win the world cup (three silver) and only winning one European championship (1998) is quiet sad, especially looking at the team now, they didn't even manage to qualify for 2016 Euros. It feels like the Netherlands chance to ever reach real success is all but gone now, i know, i know, never say never, but i remember Van Basten, and my generation all feared Holland cus of players like Kluivert, Van Nistleroy, Edgar Davids, Overmars, Jaap Stam and the De Boer brothers, oh my what players! Certianly forgetting some in there but you get the idea, it feels like the Netherlands have nothing like that now days, and it feels quiet sad. Big salute to the Netherlands from a Swede! ❤
It has its limits but man i enjoyed it. One orange spirit Moving in the same direction with one purpose: Wonderful
Talvez essa tenha sido a última seleção a assustar o mundo com uma inovação. O futebol se modernizou, as equipes se estudam muito e sobra cada vez menos chances para surpresas como o Carrossel Holandês. A Espanha de 2010 surpreendeu com o tiki taka, mas não inventou nada, foi só uma excelente aplicação do que já existia.
Da pra dizer q uma seleção revoluciona como no vídeo apenas pq o adversário é horrível?
@@deniscostadenis4461 Cara, nenhum time na época fazia esse tipo de marcação igual fazia o Ajax... Nem na época, nem antes. Nenhum tinha esse estilo de jogo em bloco... Então sim, independente de nível de adversário, é revolução. Ou você vai meter o louco e falar que Pelé não foi revolucionário ao ver um vídeo dele driblando pedreiros?
Muita maconha na cabeça
@@deniscostadenis4461 Uruguai, Argentina e Brasil estão neste vídeo. Suponho que todos são horríveis, né? Kkkkk
Uruguai e Argentina eram fracos
This reminds me of when we played when we were 6 and 7. Six or seven players going for the ball. Odd to watch but effective defensively. I'd imagine it would've taken a lot of energy to maintain this for 90 minutes.
Amphetamines. WC 1974 was the war of European amphetamines vs South American steroids. Amphetamines won.
These tackles in todays game would be 20 red cards in this video!
Do not let your opponent have the ball whatever the consequences! I am in my fifties and still cannot cope with the fact that Johan The Great defaulted on Argentina '78.
I remember at the time I was so disappointed, then the background story ,
Argentina was a dictatorship at the time we were never going to win the final against them they made sure of that
Johan didn't play that tournament...
@@010Jordi Well, you were a few centimetres away in the end.
@@010Jordi netherlands almost made a gol in the end. Fillol was defeated. They played to win.
This high presssure works well if you score goals in the match, but if you fail, is exhausting physically, and you can receive goals in counter attacks.
Back then, it was effective.
Exacle
@@gostodemaisdaroca4052 is that why they didn't win anything?
So it works when you score goals. Wow what bright insight thanks.
Exactly bosz tried this tactic multiple times at leverkusen dortmund and lyon it didnt work out well. Eventually teams will squeeze out the weak spots.
Amazing!
In my opinion, the best team of the history.
Foi a seleção canarinho de 82,mas nem o carrocel holandês e nem a canarinho foram campeãs.
@@valterjosedemedeirosjosede4879 KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK a piada do século. Baseado no quê? A única geração brasileira que sequer chegou a uma semifinal em quase 30 anos, não revolucionou em nada o futebol taticamente, como a Hungria de 54 e Holanda de 74. Não foi sequer o melhor Brasil a perder uma Copa, que foram as seleções de 1998 e 1950. Há coisas que só podem ser explicadas por fanatismo e emoção.
Brasil from 1970
@@morpheussandman3984
Amazing team!
But, the Mecanical Orange meant a revolution in football history, Brazil 1970 not. Is my opinion.
Look at those tackles back in the day... Amazing 😍
Don't miss this excessive slide tackling at all.. It's a stupid move, exclusively destructive with little chance to actually win the ball and should always be the last option. Not even talking about the risk of injury.. Smart defenders don't slide tackle if they don't absolutely have to
@@user-ve7hn2dh8h you are gay
Especially in the last decade we are seeing top clubs revisiting this tactic (city, liverpool). The main goal is to put on early pressure and concurring the ball at the opponent’s half. This creates a lot more chances, since the game takes place on the opponent’s half. Simply less ground to cover. This team has literally revolutionized the game and still is, amazing!
non of them are doing it this aggressively, it would be suicidal in the modern game with the modern offside rule and athleticism of modern players
@@brainimp not as aggressively indeed, but have you ever wondered why we don’t see the traditional playmaker anymore in modern football? It’s because of the use of high press by top clubs
@@floris44 not as aggressive because now the high press is more organize, the position of the player is more important than cluelessly chasing the ball.
wtf not at all, nobody does this
@@mauriciolandos4712 lol these guys
The Netherlands have always great players, they definitivly deserve to win the worldcup someday,
it`s a football nation.
Btw i am german.
danke Nachbar. Als Niederländer war ich schon immer ein bisschen neidisch auf die fußballerischen Leistungen Deutschlands. Wenn wir nur eine Weltmeisterschaft hätten, hoffe ich, sie einmal in meinem Leben zu erleben.
@@Frank009-fl Das habt ihr euch auch mal verdient, ernsthaft. Warum das bisher noch nicht geklappt hat ist mir ein Rätsel.
@@199gSauerkraut das ist mir auch ein rätsel.😃
They have blown it several times. 74, 78, 98, 10.
@@Andrew-fy9wu90 USA they had by far the best team
It’s useless comparing todays teams with teams from the 70’s. Same for comparing players from different era. Messi couldn’t play the same way in the 70’s like he does today. Football evolved and every era has it’s heroes. One thing i know is that Johan Cruijff changed football more than any other player. As a player and as a coach. The way Barca played tiki taka under Guardiola was all because he learned it from Cruijff. Maradona and Pele both incredible players, but only as players. They didn’t helped the sport evolve like Cruijff did. And that makes a very big difference.
Klopp has taken inspiration from Cruyff too, concerning the high pressure (full gas) football.
This is how we would play during u8 days lol.
Everyone running behind the ball 😂😂
Imagine your first game against The Netherlands in 1974 ..you get the ball and look to pass it and six tall crazies in organger all come at you. Very disruptive. Brilliant and demanding.
Well put sir. You described how players of that era would think & feel meeting that brilliant Dutch side of the 1970s.
I think the modern teams of today would have wiped the floor with these classic teams.
No they won't , these teams won't play same the tactics . Football tactics keeps eveloving and the Dutch team introduced many new things and contributed very much to the development of tactics . For every era you should find the best tactic to win your era and it's very stupid to compare tactically 2 teams that played in different eras
This is the kind of special stupid comment 🙄. Comparing eras in sports makes no sense . Those were special players; they were all top players back then as Barcelona one day (2009-12)had top players to perform at a high level. Some stupid kids in the future will say the same about Barcelona of this era .
I think modern teams would have a really hard time adapting to the awful pitches and equipment of the time... Not to mention the brutal tackling
@@timothylowe996 and let's not forget those tackles!
You think so???
Beautiful vid 👏🏼 Identical to me holding the 2nd defender button and slidetackling up a few yellow cards in Fifa 2005 😅
Probably the country that deserves a world cup most
Coach: ok boiis who's gonna marking Jairzinho
Boiis: yes
Amphetamines. WC 1974 was the war of European amphetamines vs South American steroids. Amphetamines won. By WC 1978, South Americans were using amphetamines too, so the intercontinental gap disappeared.
Esa táctica funcionó en una época donde el fútbol no era estructurado cómo lo es hoy en día
No. Tambien lo uso el milan de arrigo sachi y muchos otros equipos. Si se hace bien es muy bueno.
@@miguelaprendizaje.2918 El Bilan de Sacchi di Patate vino 10 años despues, cabron...
se joga assim hoje.
Ahí está el tema. Que fueron LOS PRIMEROS. LOS QUE TUVIERON LA BRILLANTE IDEA. Después el resto fue inspiración, influencia, copiar y mejorar, pero el PIONERO es el PIONERO
This is not Total Footbal. The Total Footbal philosophy refers to the players adopting different roles throughout the game. They are not confined to playing a certain position, rather they organically flow into different positions when defending or going forward.
I saw this first hand at the Dallas Cup in 1997 when U19 Ajax with John O'Brien destroyed my brother's team in the Super Group. The Ajax players were constantly floating into various positions: Defender pushes forward and stays up top, midfielder drops back as cover with the forward replacing the midfielder. This went on and on the whole game. The only one staying put was the keeper. The crowd was totally mesmerized. So much passing, so much movement. Nobody was cheering, just watching a truly beautiful game. I wish teams still played this way, but with the game being so technical now and players solely perfecting their one position, that Total Footbal era is sadly long gone.
That is just silly. Total Football was defined by the playstyle of Rinus Michels' teams in the early seventies: Ajax and the Dutch National team '74. Check your facts.
@@eddyborremans2546 Rinus Michels' philosophy was that no field player should be fixed into playing one position. The game was to be fluid with players interchanging positions on offense and defense 90 minutes. Total Football
Clockwork Orange.
00:03 The Argentinian player with the ball: "Oh fuck, Oh fuck, OHH FUCK! There they come!"
Pero cuatro años más tarde les rompimos bien el orto y salimos CAMPEONES. Y ya son ⭐⭐⭐🇦🇷⚽
@@killing.emojis you stole that championship, through massive corruption, threatening players, etc.
@@josephfarrugia2350 You don't even believe your own words, you asshole
@@josephfarrugia2350 Since your country will never be the champion of anything, you have become a resentful loser and slanderer of the greats who always win 🇦🇷✌️⭐⭐⭐⚽
@@josephfarrugia2350 Since your country will never be the champion of anything, you have become a resentful loser and slanderer of the greats who always win 🇦🇷✌️⚽⭐⭐⭐
Assisti aos jogos dessa copa e o carrossel holandês surpreendeu todos nessa copa com esse sistema tático incrível.
You may have heard the phrase 'total football' mentioned at some point. This is what that is.
It was a concept created by Rinus Michels, the coach of this Dutch side and Ajax, where many of these players came from.
Michels had borrowed the phrase from Joseph Goebbels' speech about 'total war.'
Total football means that the whole team is involved in getting the ball, all the time, and then going forward, all the time.
They almost won.
Now, everybody tries to play like that, but Michels and Cruijff invented it.
If you press pause in some parts, you can see 5 to 8 players looking for the ball. All the 90 mins. That was crazy. Suspicious
The 1974 World Cup was a watershed when overall football replaced individual technical football. It ended the Brazilian football dynasty. From the Dutch defeat of Brazil 2-0, the Netherlands officially introduced a concept to the international football world. Football must cooperate as a whole to attack and defend. Both.
Brazil, which prides itself on its personal skills, was knocked down by almighty football in 1974, and the football legend officially came to an end. Although it took them 28 years to adapt to both offensive and defensive football, it was not until 2002 that they could win the World Cup again.
Football tactics are changing with each passing day. If you don’t advance, you will retreat. But almighty football is indeed a major breakthrough in the history of football tactics. It is a pity that the Netherlands met the host country in the World Cup finals twice at that time. It was really God’s will ⚽️
I have no idea how this could work, looks like a long ball would break all this preassure xd
Yeah, all those World Cup coaches needed you to tell them how!
Ahh, the times before getting slightly tapped meant roll around on the ground begging for a foul...
The Dutch took the Italian catenaccio style, applied it to everyone in front of the back four then made it infinitely more manoeuvrable and what we today call the gegenpress was born.
Never utilised better than by the Dutch and slotted into their Total Football style beautifully
You can see where the label ‘the best team to have never won the World Cup’
As a Scot, it would be horribly remiss of me if I didn’t mention Archie Gemmill’s wonder goal against the Dutch in 1978
No. That pressing is the opposite to catenacio. Was madness. Pressing with 6 players and then atacks by the sides like ajax 72. In my opinion the best tean are the hungarians of 54 they were magics.
Catenaccio is more like "parking the bus" with good pressing
The great dutch team, best team ever❤
th-cam.com/video/0wSEJy5Cr54/w-d-xo.html
Brazil 1970 still the best .
Best team ever, but no trophy to prove that. Pfhht.
Notice, it's always 3 players surrounding the opposing player who has the ball.
amazing video
Looks crazy, almost like a battle :D It is obviously not the best option, since it is energy consuming, but it is entertaining, and might be super effective if triggered at the right moment. It is amazing, when you see someone experimenting and thinking outside the box on high level, betting that much this way.
The problem isn't energy consumption but that you're in big trouble if you can't steal the ball if you've put all your eggs in the same basket in that way
@@s22t Yeap, probably this one is bigger.
They don't do it the whole game dumdum, only part of the time and they won quite easily
Its as energy consuming for the opponent who looses the ball and now has to face either a direct counter attack or a strong posession of the ball.
A pack of wonderful wolves !
Era un fútbol muy tosco, esa presión hoy en día no sería problema para un equipo top.
This is how I played fifa for the first time
What a beautiful thing
Total Football that we have lost nowadays..
Sono stati come i Beatles, tuttora insuperabili!
High pressure + Counter is the way to win.
They formation keep changing every seconds😃😃
The most revolutionary team in soccer history... I was young but i Remember anyone shocked watching them play!
Football
Football
I wonder where the footage from the final against West Germany is.
Modern pressing is just improvised version of this tactic
It’s not improvised. There are triggers
Defensively it resembles a lot to Gegenpress, the only difference is the very fluid player positioning on the pitch, all of them are like we are all marking, we are pushing for the ball. The players are literally attacking the carrier of the ball completely limiting his passing options and so the transition after winning a ball could come from any player. It limits the vision of the ball carrier at certain times, 5-6 players are limiting the space of the potential ball movement. It's genius
try this today, and you’ll lose double digits. not genius, it was just that the skill ceiling was very low back then
@@bryan-cv2ew Today fouls are less aggressive, everyone pretends to fall but still some of it's principles are being applied today, especially when they spot the playmaker, teams are applying pressure to certain areas of the pitch, with 2-3-4 men on the ball.
@@dreadalex yes but its highly organized. the presses are designed to stop build up play. You never see 5 players commit on a single player simultaneously today.
back when this sort of rushing nonsense was played, there wasn’t really the threat of ball playing CBs and midfielders that could pin point pass to athletic one of kinds, in under a second. the average players were bad, and the great players were all generally goalscorers, not centerbacks or midfielders
@@bryan-cv2ew Well I think this sort of pressing actually creates this total football, their transition when winning the ball makes their positioning fluidly based and not structural. If you see for instance Guardiola's variation or Klop, the players are always moving in their areas in defence and holding their positions on the pitch. This here if the ball moves to the right the players from the left side are closing in the available passing spaces, from the right side the same and the players who are playing in the center are moving slightly left, or slightly right but what is impressive is the transition when winning the ball every player can run forward with the ball and I think that fluid positional structure of Michels is based on the way the team presses the ball holder on the pitch and the transition phase when winning the ball. In their build up play the players are holding their positions of course winning some meters and having again more freedom, the center backs are actually involved in the attack and taking positions for a cross while Cruyff Neskens are more lurking outside to win again the ball or take a shot from outside of the area, it's very fascinating the way they move on the pitch.
It’s a pity they lost 3 finals by playing total football. They deserved more glory
2010 final wasn't really total football. In fact, it was quite negative and violent. Cruyff himself complained about it.
Like watching school kids play football where they ALL just chase the ball.
Innovative tactic in its time but they would be annihilated today.
The Netherlands should at least have enjoyed winning one World Cup!
This would be easily countered if the opposition played lateral and backward passes, somehow they though only forward passes and dribbles were allowed
Man, you got to see,this was 1974, football was played totally different back then. Until the Dutch came and breaked the way open, allowing football to be what it is nowadays. So don't question it with your actual knowledge, but embrace the moment of the biggest transformation in the game. Without these men the game would not be nowadays what it is and we all love it for. This here is history in the making!
@@Signofevil_Smile4theCam Yeah that's true, i just found it funny how much the game has evolved, that even lateralizing and going back which we consider basic football at kid's level wasn't applied at top tier level back then
Yeah, all those world cup coaches needed you to give them this tactical advice back then!
Modern football who still using this tactic is Liverpool under Jurgen Klopp, but still not too extreme like this. I watch Liverpool play a lot, one thing i notice is even when they are pressuring while defensive, they also counter attacking as soon as they retrieve the ball back, Rock n' Roll. The most exciting match when they do this is againts Barcelona in 2019, 2nd leg UCL semifinal. Barcelona the team who is known to be a good at controlling the ball under pressure is suffering in this match, they being swarm in all side in the pitch. What a joy to watch Jurgen side 👏🏻
Barcelona had things of it when they lost the ball.
Isnt this how they do it today? 40 years ahead of time id say.
0:46 seconds is an insane and hilarious way to get someone offside
Yes 😅 like watching seagulls flee waves at the shoreline
Reminds me of playing FIFA 13 online back in the day, everyone abused this type of ultra high press.
EA FC 24 META:
Kkk. Que pelada era essa, parecia futebol de criança todo mundo onde a bola tava, bastava inverter o jogo e já era
Pity you weren't there to advise all those world cup coaches who faced Holland!
I can imagine your arrogant pompous tone while explaining: "Here hold my beer, let me tell you how to play...."
The main reason this worked as often as it did was because the passing, spacing and movement wasn't at modern elite standards. It relied on making teams bunch and panic. While occasionally effective today when used in a targeted manner, it's easily passed over if the opposition holds their line.
Say that to the Liverpool CL winning team couple of seasons back lol
In fact it was because the off side rule at the time did not contained a passive player - if a player was further the last defensive player, it was an off side - it didin't matter he was or not particulary on the play itself, the ref call it and the play stopped. So, lots of off sides. When the rule changed , it was much more difficult to call an off side and invalid the play cause someone coming from behind the lines could attack the ball, with the play were kept on going, even with 5 players on off side position since they were not on ball's directed position
With this tactics no offside and no goal just fight for ball
A lot more sliding tackles then than now.
This is modern football in overdrive. Press a man to get him to make a mistake, so it won't matter that you leave another player open.
In Brazil, this is also knowed as 'Bololô' Atack, 'Muntueira' defense.
Well trained 👏🏻
This tactics it's pretty use today even.
This is obviously revolutionary stuff, but it's also naive compared to modern high pressing / gegenpressing and wouldn't work well today. They took the whole world by surprise with this at the time though. It helped to get them to two World Cup finals and they probably should have won at least one of them.
This would even work today , probably even better than back then.
@@truthoverfalsehood__8757 they would have to adapt their pressing game to take into account that a) if you tackle like that you will lose 3 players to red cards every game and b) modern teams are used to high counterpressing and can play the ball over the top of the press, or in behind, thus countering the counter press ;)
Of course, they were all incredible players, so they would be able to adapt, but I doubt it would still look anything like what we see in these clips.
@@AndrewSowerby With todays players and training schedule this pressing would even be more effective.
Your concerns are valid , however we have very endurant and fast full backs today that could recover passes above the line quit well , also the more you sychnronise the pressing the more the oppnent falls into offside we saw that barcelona did this very well.
High pressing today is noone near this , pressing is mathematicaly speaking a exponential function the more players apply more pressure the much more the likleyhood of the opponent loosing the ball becomes , if 2 or 3 players press thats not even half the effect than if 4 players press , if 4 or 5 players press thats not even half as effective as if 6 players press. I guarantee you if any team would ultra press like the netherlands with some minor tweeks but with the same or more agressivness and commitment and risk then that would absolutley be very very effective.
The midfielders had it easy those days so this surprise tactic worked. They could n't do that nowadays.
They were playing like they were high on cocaine. As a team, they were better than Brazil '70. By the way, an alternative history question: who do you think would have prevailed in a clash between The Netherlands 1974 and Brazil 1970?
They weren't better. Brazil '74 (without Pelé, Gerson, Torres, Tostão) nearly score 2x0 at 1st half time. Netherlands '74 had their problems, almost didn't qualify to World Cup if it wasn't the referee against Belgium.
@@Leonardo-ir1xl Right, the offside not granted. But this is the life, everything converged onto the team that proposed the better football. Alternative history (which is bullshit 😀) says that Belgium would have gone home after the first round.
While ae are on the topix of alternative history... I am curious what would be happen for Poland of Lubański was not injured in 1973. Outsanding Poland's star. For better or for worse (just as Portugal could lose with France in 2016 IMHO if Cristiano was not injured)
Alternative history: if the WC was in 1973, holland would have crushed west germany.
@@JohnDoe-uw9nq Why? Do you believe that Cruijff's transfer to Barcelona in the summer of '73 weighed against Holland's team spirit? West Germany was by no means weaker from '72 through '74, as reigning European champions with a lot of time available to prepare in friendlies. Please elaborate on your opinion.
in Italy this is called "Calcio totale"
It's Beautiful 70s Golden Era of this Sport, Now Soccer it's soo Boring I Sleep Watching França x Austrália.
This how my Tuesday night men’s team wants to play
Así se jugaba en el colegio, todos corriendo detrás de la pelota.
No pero esto era pressing asfixiante y despues los contrarios no la podian recuperar. Esta pensado. Rinus michels era un genio. Lo eligieron el mejor dt de europa de todos los tiempos.
@@miguelaprendizaje.2918 Yo sé, solo digo que la imagen me recordó mucho a esos partidos desordenados en el patio del colegio, todos yendo detrás del balón como pirañas.
@@karlimo4034 eso es verdad. Quizas saco el sistema de ahi. Si se te avalanza un horda de 10 tipos enloquecidos no podes pensar con la pelota 😄
@@miguelaprendizaje.2918 Sí. Y encima se ve espectacular, algo así como una estrategia de los Supercampeones. Ojalá el fútbol real volviese a ser así de creativo. Imaginate a diez tipos de anaranjado cayéndole a Messi en el partido anterior.
Esteticamente parece eso, se necesita un estado fisico superior para realizar esa tarea de pressing.
Unica coisa que eu vejo como positivo é com relação ao impedimento que eles faziam no outro time. De resto eram todos atrás de uma bola. Faltava malícia nos adversários.
What sport is this?
This is like Galatasaray in 2017 , when we had technical director Igor TUDOR
Any team in the top 3 divisions of any European league would absolutely destroy them in 2022.
Amazing how poor the tactics, quality, and use of space was by the opposition. Football really has come very far.
Notice the average time between getting knocked down and getting back into play is like 5 seconds max. Now players roll and act.
I imagine Maradona humiliating the clockwork orange as well as against England in 1986 :-)
Literally eleven guys behind a ball
Imagine the commentary of these game
0:02 when you enable the "attacking mode" in FC mobile.
Why this tactic stopped..today with faster n more skillful players it will still be effective n fun to watch
Ah...the days of any one player offside...ur all offside, thank god it has been refined
what is the name of the song on the video?
I believe that Tite's tactic was similar and failed miserably in the 2022 world cup. Today teams play in lines without the offensiveness observed in the 1976 cup, so the tactic used by Tite has been outdated.
Lots of bad offside calls... they took advantage of the fact their tactics were so unusual and the linesmen weren't used to that so they called offside for a lot of chances that just weren't
Video unavailable?
Happy hour is available!!
Seemed like a very risky strategy, reason why nobody does it anymore, it’s easy to prepare for it before hand. Just need to have 1-2 fast players next to the last defender and De Bruyne in mid field and this strategy will fall apart really quick against todays teams.
It was easier to be offside back then, if you played the ball to a teammate when any player on your team was offside, it counted as an offside, which is why you see the defender's trying to bring the ball forward by dribbling past 6 players instead of clearing it.
Bonkers rule
A lot off teams do it,but you need to be an oiled machine too pull it off and have a lot off confidence