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[Albion] Fabian Hürzeler - A fab thread on our manager and his tactics



singing4seagulls

Well-known member
Apr 2, 2017
217
Ok, let's get into a good sensible discussion following that.

My takeaways:
  • It's Villa, we shouldn't be that surprised by the result
  • We lost Webster and with that our solid defence partnership. Likewise Georginio up front. That was always going to make this game hard, as less regular players get up to speed and build partnerships.
  • Not going to dig on the starting lineup, as we were the better team in the first half
  • We had a very close free kick, a penalty shout denied + a few harsh decisions.
Some important context. Sometimes football is unfair.

That said, my question's re the manager:
  • Pedro was best player on the pitch. Felt like he should have stayed on to support Welbeck.
  • We always seem to concede from counter attacks. Watching Rashford on a couple of attempts, you could see he was a threat. How can we learn to deal with that better.
  • With the above in mind, was taking Dunk off really needed? Whilst he doesn't have pace he's got experience and positioning. Cashin coming on when they had pacy threats felt wrong and was proven so.
  • The subs more generally didn't get the reaction we needed. If anything it felt we were more in control before them.
I'm sure there's more as I digest, but interested to hear others views.

We're not going to win them all and Villa are a very good team with some very classy players, so some perspective needed. But that scoreline is disappointing for what was a game it felt at half time was winnable.
 




singing4seagulls

Well-known member
Apr 2, 2017
217
On a positive front, a bunch of players like Minteh should be well rested to really take it to Palarce.

I do wonder if Fab was preserving people (even Dunk) for that as he knows how important it is.
 






macbeth

Dismembered
Jan 3, 2018
4,535
six feet beneath the moon
Ok, let's get into a good sensible discussion following that.

My takeaways:
  • It's Villa, we shouldn't be that surprised by the result
  • We lost Webster and with that our solid defence partnership. Likewise Georginio up front. That was always going to make this game hard, as less regular players get up to speed and build partnerships.
  • Not going to dig on the starting lineup, as we were the better team in the first half
  • We had a very close free kick, a penalty shout denied + a few harsh decisions.
Some important context. Sometimes football is unfair.

That said, my question's re the manager:
  • Pedro was best player on the pitch. Felt like he should have stayed on to support Welbeck.
  • We always seem to concede from counter attacks. Watching Rashford on a couple of attempts, you could see he was a threat. How can we learn to deal with that better.
  • With the above in mind, was taking Dunk off really needed? Whilst he doesn't have pace he's got experience and positioning. Cashin coming on when they had pacy threats felt wrong and was proven so.
  • The subs more generally didn't get the reaction we needed. If anything it felt we were more in control before them.
I'm sure there's more as I digest, but interested to hear others views.

We're not going to win them all and Villa are a very good team with some very classy players, so some perspective needed. But that scoreline is disappointing for what was a game it felt at half time was winnable.
pretty much every tactical decision i saw tonight seemed to me to be made with palace in mind. would that be the case had we not lost 3-1 to them at home earlier, who knows, imo probably not.

defensive issue really is something that needs to be addressed in the summer, webster has been brilliant but much like lamptey can’t be relied on. and everyone else in the LCB position is just too slow. unfair to criticise cashin after about fifteen minutes, but i do wonder, having watched him at derby, why we thought a slow centre back who isn’t really that good in duels would be someone who could improve us defensively, even if his build-up data is sky high.

not that it would ever be acceptable for a manager to ‘throw’ a game with one eye on the next match, but everything really does boil down to sunday now. win, and it’s probably worked out how i’d want it to, lose and all of a sudden it’s three defeats on the bounce and the negativity resumes again.
 




singing4seagulls

Well-known member
Apr 2, 2017
217
pretty much every tactical decision i saw tonight seemed to me to be made with palace in mind. would that be the case had we not lost 3-1 to them at home earlier, who knows, imo probably not.

defensive issue really is something that needs to be addressed in the summer, webster has been brilliant but much like lamptey can’t be relied on. and everyone else in the LCB position is just too slow. unfair to criticise cashin after about fifteen minutes, but i do wonder, having watched him at derby, why we thought a slow centre back who isn’t really that good in duels would be someone who could improve us defensively, even if his build-up data is sky high.

not that it would ever be acceptable for a manager to ‘throw’ a game with one eye on the next match, but everything really does boil down to sunday now. win, and it’s probably worked out how i’d want it to, lose and all of a sudden it’s three defeats on the bounce and the negativity resumes again.
Good post.

That's also how I'm seeing it.

Palace is always a big game, but it feels like it is coming at a pretty critical part of the season.

Let's hope the players are rested enough and we give it everything.
 




tigertim68

Well-known member
Sep 3, 2012
2,902
Ok, let's get into a good sensible discussion following that.

My takeaways:
  • It's Villa, we shouldn't be that surprised by the result
  • We lost Webster and with that our solid defence partnership. Likewise Georginio up front. That was always going to make this game hard, as less regular players get up to speed and build partnerships.
  • Not going to dig on the starting lineup, as we were the better team in the first half
  • We had a very close free kick, a penalty shout denied + a few harsh decisions.
Some important context. Sometimes football is unfair.

That said, my question's re the manager:
  • Pedro was best player on the pitch. Felt like he should have stayed on to support Welbeck.
  • We always seem to concede from counter attacks. Watching Rashford on a couple of attempts, you could see he was a threat. How can we learn to deal with that better.
  • With the above in mind, was taking Dunk off really needed? Whilst he doesn't have pace he's got experience and positioning. Cashin coming on when they had pacy threats felt wrong and was proven so.
  • The subs more generally didn't get the reaction we needed. If anything it felt we were more in control before them.
I'm sure there's more as I digest, but interested to hear others views.

We're not going to win them all and Villa are a very good team with some very classy players, so some perspective needed. But that scoreline is disappointing for what was a game it felt at half time was winnable.
My question is why does he keep picking Gruda , he might have potential but we let 2 better players go out on loan , when Gruda should be the one out on loan , I really can’t see what he does for the team attacking wise , has never looked like scoring, needs to bulk up , find some pace from somewhere , never seen a youngster been given some many chances in the Premier that Produces so little on the pitch
 




Seasider78

Well-known member
Nov 14, 2004
6,083
The starting 11 was to rest players who were clearly knackered from the international travel and weekend slog and the subs were to rest the remainder who were knackered and protect against further injuries. There were very few what looked like tactical changes. 45min in looked like we might get away with it but eventually difference in quality showed.
 


Jimmy Grimble

Well-known member
Nov 10, 2007
10,246
Starting a revolution from my bed
The unbeaten streak came as a result of a few things.

1) Adam Webster’s form
2) The tactical decision to use Minteh as a hybrid winger/wingback.
3) The tactical decision to play more direct - going long to Welbeck/Rutter/Pedro early and playing for second balls if the first pass didn’t come off.
4) Playing with greater intensity and on the counter press, which ties in with point 3.

Unfortunately, none of those 4 things were noticeable tonight (some for obvious reasons).

If FH is looking to continue with the same tactics that have served us during the good run, we are heavily reliant on a Welbeck/Pedro combination up front and Minteh in his hybrid role. Otherwise the direct football and counter pressing simply will not work with the other players we have.

Realistically, FH is going to have to display some tactical ingenuity again because we haven’t got the patterns of play to unlock sides. We are relying on individual moments of magic and they’ve dried up - certainly in open play - only 1 goal from our last 6 games has been from open play. There’s also a case that there’s now a blueprint to stop this system we’re currently playing.

There’s not enough time between now and the Palace game to deploy a new system so for Saturday it has to be back to Welbeck and Pedro with Minteh on the wing. After that, FH might have to try something new.
 


chickens

Have you considered masterly inactivity?
NSC Patron
Oct 12, 2022
3,135
Ok, let's get into a good sensible discussion following that.

My takeaways:
  • It's Villa, we shouldn't be that surprised by the result
  • We lost Webster and with that our solid defence partnership. Likewise Georginio up front. That was always going to make this game hard, as less regular players get up to speed and build partnerships.
  • Not going to dig on the starting lineup, as we were the better team in the first half
  • We had a very close free kick, a penalty shout denied + a few harsh decisions.
Some important context. Sometimes football is unfair.

That said, my question's re the manager:
  • Pedro was best player on the pitch. Felt like he should have stayed on to support Welbeck.
  • We always seem to concede from counter attacks. Watching Rashford on a couple of attempts, you could see he was a threat. How can we learn to deal with that better.
  • With the above in mind, was taking Dunk off really needed? Whilst he doesn't have pace he's got experience and positioning. Cashin coming on when they had pacy threats felt wrong and was proven so.
  • The subs more generally didn't get the reaction we needed. If anything it felt we were more in control before them.
I'm sure there's more as I digest, but interested to hear others views.

We're not going to win them all and Villa are a very good team with some very classy players, so some perspective needed. But that scoreline is disappointing for what was a game it felt at half time was winnable.

Yup, I thought we’d managed to pen Villa back for the most part in the first half. It was clear that Villa’s game plan was to break on the counter attack, but in the first half we managed to mop up the breaks that Villa did manage. In the second half we didn’t, and luck played a part, as did individual errors. A tough match for Cashin to get his first minutes in, but he has to find his PL legs at some point, and at least now he understands what’s involved.

Hürzeler’s preference is to push everyone forward and compress the space in which the game’s being played. Emery knows this and Villa (to be fair to them) largely soaked up the pressure without allowing us much in the way of clear chances, and managed to break successfully three times.

If we intend to continue playing this way, I don’t see an alternative to having pace in our back line and midfield to be able to recover and reset when we lose possession and the break is on. Once we’d conceded FH was urging everybody up the pitch, which played a part in us conceding our second and third.

In the PL, a well-set defence can largely negate even a good attacking side, and reduce them to half-chances. Tonight demonstrated that admirably, unfortunately to Villa’s benefit. As an aside, I also dislike putting more than two subs on at a time, as it means a significant percentage of the team on the pitch are trying to find the rhythm of the game at the same time.

This felt to me like FH trying to move back toward his original ideas on how we should play, I fear with the same results as before, leaving us vulnerable on the break. We (along with most other teams in the PL) look toothless in the face of a well-organized and “in position” defensive unit, and if we continually throw our entire team forward, then we inevitably leave space in behind. There’s no way of balancing that short of pegging back up the field towards our own goal, or alternatively not compressing the space as much, leaving us unable to maintain the desired intensity.

TLDR:- A bit of everything, Villa soaked up the pressure and sprung the trap successfully three times, I like to think that FH will reflect on this. It’s really tough to weave through a crowded penalty area, and the real chances in the PL come when the opposition defence haven’t been allowed to organize. I don’t like Villa, but despite our all-round play being pretty good tonight, they gave us a lesson in effectiveness.
 






Jimmy Grimble

Well-known member
Nov 10, 2007
10,246
Starting a revolution from my bed
Yup, I thought we’d managed to pen Villa back for the most part in the first half. It was clear that Villa’s game plan was to break on the counter attack, but in the first half we managed to mop up the breaks that Villa did manage. In the second half we didn’t, and luck played a part, as did individual errors. A tough match for Cashin to get his first minutes in, but he has to find his PL legs at some point, and at least now he understands what’s involved.

Hürzeler’s preference is to push everyone forward and compress the space in which the game’s being played. Emery knows this and Villa (to be fair to them) largely soaked up the pressure without allowing us much in the way of clear chances, and managed to break successfully three times.

If we intend to continue playing this way, I don’t see an alternative to having pace in our back line and midfield to be able to recover and reset when we lose possession and the break is on. Once we’d conceded FH was urging everybody up the pitch, which played a part in us conceding our second and third.

In the PL, a well-set defence can largely negate even a good attacking side, and reduce them to half-chances. Tonight demonstrated that admirably, unfortunately to Villa’s benefit. As an aside, I also dislike putting more than two subs on at a time, as it means a significant percentage of the team on the pitch are trying to find the rhythm of the game at the same time.

This felt to me like FH trying to move back toward his original ideas on how we should play, I fear with the same results as before, leaving us vulnerable on the break. We (along with most other teams in the PL) look toothless in the face of a well-organized and “in position” defensive unit, and if we continually throw our entire team forward, then we inevitably leave space in behind. There’s no way of balancing that short of pegging back up the field towards our own goal, or alternatively not compressing the space as much, leaving us unable to maintain the desired intensity.

TLDR:- A bit of everything, Villa soaked up the pressure and sprung the trap successfully three times, I like to think that FH will reflect on this. It’s really tough to weave through a crowded penalty area, and the real chances in the PL come when the opposition defence haven’t been allowed to organize. I don’t like Villa, but despite our all-round play being pretty good tonight, they gave us a lesson in effectiveness.
Yup, I thought we’d managed to pen Villa back for the most part in the first half. It was clear that Villa’s game plan was to break on the counter attack, but in the first half we managed to mop up the breaks that Villa did manage. In the second half we didn’t, and luck played a part, as did individual errors. A tough match for Cashin to get his first minutes in, but he has to find his PL legs at some point, and at least now he understands what’s involved.

Hürzeler’s preference is to push everyone forward and compress the space in which the game’s being played. Emery knows this and Villa (to be fair to them) largely soaked up the pressure without allowing us much in the way of clear chances, and managed to break successfully three times.

If we intend to continue playing this way, I don’t see an alternative to having pace in our back line and midfield to be able to recover and reset when we lose possession and the break is on. Once we’d conceded FH was urging everybody up the pitch, which played a part in us conceding our second and third.

In the PL, a well-set defence can largely negate even a good attacking side, and reduce them to half-chances. Tonight demonstrated that admirably, unfortunately to Villa’s benefit. As an aside, I also dislike putting more than two subs on at a time, as it means a significant percentage of the team on the pitch are trying to find the rhythm of the game at the same time.

This felt to me like FH trying to move back toward his original ideas on how we should play, I fear with the same results as before, leaving us vulnerable on the break. We (along with most other teams in the PL) look toothless in the face of a well-organized and “in position” defensive unit, and if we continually throw our entire team forward, then we inevitably leave space in behind. There’s no way of balancing that short of pegging back up the field towards our own goal, or alternatively not compressing the space as much, leaving us unable to maintain the desired intensity.

TLDR:- A bit of everything, Villa soaked up the pressure and sprung the trap successfully three times, I like to think that FH will reflect on this. It’s really tough to weave through a crowded penalty area, and the real chances in the PL come when the opposition defence haven’t been allowed to organize. I don’t like Villa, but despite our all-round play being pretty good tonight, they gave us a lesson in effectiveness.
Agreed. FH likes to compress high and win turnovers in a counter press. It’s extremely high risk - especially with the personnel we had starting tonight. It’s reliant on physical dominance, positional intelligence and an element of luck in the bounce of the ball. The more physically dominant and intelligent you are the less concerning the luck element is. It’s also a system which burns your players out, particularly if you’re not getting into winning positions and able to ‘cruise’ games out.

Injuries and fatigue have left us looking weaker on this front. It’s why I said above that FH needs to add another string to our tactical bow, otherwise we are going to drop off.
 


Mo Gosfield

Well-known member
Aug 11, 2010
6,425
Too little physicality on the pitch for 70 min. Subs too late. Missed Rutter..Webster..Minteh and for 70 min...Baleba.
Starting line up far far too lightweight.
 




Oh_aye

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2022
2,594
We were rhe better team despite injuries.

2 schoolboy errors did for us.

We didn't have the nous or mentality to come back from those errors.

Villa pushed on and punished us.
 


CheeseRolls

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 27, 2009
6,338
Shoreham Beach
Anyone remember Spurs coming down earlier in the season?

Ange set them up for an agressive pressing game, on the back of a tricky midweek European game. Spurs were the better side in the first half and constantly caused us problems with their aggressive pressing. The second half they were knackered and despite throwing on fresh subs, we wound up comfortable winners.

Anyone else see a pattern here?
 


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