braineclipse
Steve Sedgley
Up until the Arsenal game there had been quite a bit of consistency I thought.In defence of Nuno, his identity as a manager is that he’s pragmatic. That he isn’t going to come to a club with his pre planned playbook and roll it out exactly as he did before. Poch’s identity was pressing, using youth, full backs high, attacking football.
So I think in Poch’s first few games, we got what he was trying to do. Some players could handle it, some couldn’t. Maybe what we are seeing is Nuno going through a process of figuring it out. It looks like he’s tried a few different styles to see what really suits the players we have.
At Wolves he had some great long passers in the team so there was a lot of long switches of play, and he probably wanted to see what we could do in that respect yesterday. He’s tried going high press from the off. He’s tried the counter. He’s tried patience until the second half.
I kinda wish he had settled on something before the season started, but he literally didn’t have all the players available. And if his identity as a manager is pragmatism, we are seeing the manifestation of that right now. Maybe after 10 games we’ll be 8th, and maybe after 38 we’ll be 5th. I am hoping he is learning a lot from this, about what the players can and can’t do. And he’s using it all to get us into the perfect system for us. Maybe the sheer extent of the experimentation means the learnings are more pronounced.
I’m saying this as much in hope as expectation. Because I really don’t want us to have to get on another path with another guy again. And I really hope Nuno‘a authority sustains itself through this experimentation period if that is indeed what he is doing.
Varying between a higher press and standing off more is to me a feature of his style, not him changing it.
Counter attacking when we can is a consistent feature of his style. Just that teams realise that this is our main (sometimes only) threat. Stop us from counter attacking and you more or less nullify us as an attacking force.
I think going long quite a bit is also part of his style. The way we did it against Arsenal, as shown in that Carragher video, that was new. Getting players forward around the initial duel is vital to succeeding when playing long balls, but there's that and there's leaving a ton of space to be exploited when you lose the ball.
We quite literally got into a situation where Arsenal could have based their entire attacking strategy on just giving us the ball, be organised and wait for the long ball. Dier or Sanchez in controlled possession wasn't a good thing for us, it was a good thing for them.
That cannot happen again. It shouldn't have been allowed to happen at all of course, but Nuno will adjust.