Did you see Wilson's article cause most of the replies were covered in his brilliant expose`.
Of course managers go with three at the back to get the best
Juventus under Conte have played three at the back for years and been immensely successful. I appreciate England is the bastion of conservatism but if 3 at the back is not the solution, then how do you suggest we will address the problems I highlighted:
1. the massive gaps we leave when we lose possession in midfield;
2. Fazio's limitations against fast strikers,
3. Bentaleb and Mason ineffectiveness to cover the defence
4. Our vulnerability from playing the high press and the constant 1 vs 1 situations we saw against Leicester and even more against Manure
5. The gaps we leave especially on the flanks and the lack of shape which is so patently obvious
6. and the isolation of our striker with midfielders taking forever to join the attack when we get the ball back..
The same way other teams that play 4 at the back solve them.
Or are you seriously saying that 3 at the back is the only way to solve those things?
1. This is not unique for us, nor for a back 4. A back 3 does very little to solve this. Yes we have to work on when and how many of our full backs and deep midfielders push forward.
2. This is not unique for us, not for a back 4. Plenty of teams play defenders that are fairly slow. Demichelis did very well for City last season. Hummels is outstanding and slow, has been so for a very high pressing Dortmund. Pique is slow, for a high pressing Barca he was very good. It's about frequencies.
3. Disagree. They did rather well against for example Chelsea and Everton. It's about developing that and other partnerships to improve. There's absolutely no reason to think a 4-2-3-1 can not be solid.
4. Did we play a high press against Leicester and United? Was only occasionally from what I remember. We were exposed, but guess what, so are teams that play 3 at the back at times.
5. A back 3, playing wing backs wouldn't leave us with gaps wide?
6. Again, not isolated to us, not isolated to a 4 at the back system.
You're seemingly claiming that a back 3 system would leave us (1) with more players covering the central defenders, (2) with more cover wide leaving fewer gaps, (3) with more players back covering for counter attacks, (4) with more players further forward supporting the strikers when we attack on the break and (5) with more players further forward to allow us to press higher. This seems rather impossible to me.
3 at the back is certainly a decent way to go about things. As is a back 4. I'm often a bit surprised by the rigid nature of formations and quite interested by managers like LvG, Bielsa, Rodgers and Pep that seem willing to move away from the accepted norms and get results that way. I see absolutely no reason to think that a back 3 is inherently not a good idea, but I equally see no reason to think that a back 4 is inherently not a good idea.
I fail to see how you're argued successfully in support of why a back 3 would be better for us at this time. You've claimed that it is better, but that's a very different thing.