Scott Munn is an entirely fictional character made up so we can pretend Levy is no longer involved in foot all operations.
He's a corporate guy; not a football recruitment guy.
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Scott Munn is an entirely fictional character made up so we can pretend Levy is no longer involved in foot all operations.
Ange has risen to where he is by doing this very thing in lower leagues, most recently in Scotland where he had a squad that could easily overpower everyone else he faced. But he will never have that here, not at Spurs, nor at any big club in leagues where the competition is much nearer to you every week than what he's seen before.From his point of view, he has no reason to worry about pressing. If he was asked to describe his picture perfect football match, it would be something like this:
Push everybody but 2 CB's forward towards the opponent's own half to put them on back foot. Force them to get behind the ball with 10 men. Basically besiege and entrap them inside their own box. Took the initiative from the beginning and never give it away for 90 minutes.
If this brand of football is actually obtainable and sustainable, there is indeed no need to consider pressing a coordinated team effort that needs to be worked on. Just focus on your attacking patterns and movement, assert yourself over the opposition, and the need to press would disappear by default. Because even when you lose the ball, it would happen in a circumstance where opposition is so far deep into their own half, with so little men in front, that they'd almost instantly give the ball back without any special effort on your part.
That's obviously not how it works in reality though. We routinely lose the ball in midfield, or even inside our own half trying to play out from the back. They can play out from the back themselves, putting us on backfoot. It's not necessarily players' fault. Even a well coordinated team press is not immune to getting beaten on occasions.
It seems that his only response to all these aforementioned possibilities is to shrug his shoulders and double down. His ideas are perfect, but his players are letting him down because they're not errorproof. If only they were.
Our biggest hope of attracting someone who's stock is currently up is them seeing what we currently are and recognising that specific shards of what we do well are what they want to base their football around too.
Essentially; someone that thinks we need to be tweaked and refined, rather than completely re-invented yet again.
Even City are struggling to perform normally without their Balon D'or talisman Rodri. The cavalier "attack is who we are mate" philosophy is idealistically appealing but practically suicidal. Other astute and aware managers with well drilled squads are able to take advantage of these singularly focused strategies with regularity- a testament to the competitiveness of the league. Ange's strategy is just affording way, way too many big chances, shots, whatever attacking situation stat you want to call it, to our opponents, and that weakness is being exposed in our incredibly inconsistent, but overall poor record.I don't think City or whomever you'd like to name could be successful over the long term doing what he does, you'd just exhaust everyone, and the results would be random like what we see.




Even with the mega rich teams the league is very competitive.
The perfect testament to the competitiveness of the Premier League would be Chelsea spending a billion quid and becoming champions again.
The PL is City, the Sky Sports establishment and 1 or 2 small clubs who don't have European football that year maintaining the illusion.
Well, lower table Prem still seems to pay more than most of the rest of the continent- for both players as well as coaches. It may not be 'relatively' competitive between Ipswich Town and Chelsea, but it's relatively extremely competitive as a whole, pound for pound, versus any other league.
The perfect testament to the competitiveness of the Premier League would be Chelsea spending a billion quid and becoming champions again.
The PL is City, the Sky Sports establishment and 1 or 2 small clubs who don't have European football that year maintaining the illusion.
Napoli won Serie A. Come back to me when Everton or Spurs win the PL.Well, lower table Prem still seems to pay more than most of the rest of the continent- for both players as well as coaches. It may not be 'relatively' competitive between Ipswich Town and Chelsea, but it's relatively extremely competitive as a whole, pound for pound, versus any other league.
I watch a good amount of La Liga and the bottom 17 clubs (all except RM, AM or Barca) there would get creamed week in, week out, by the average lower half Premiership club (of which we currently constitute, btw).
Ok buddy- sorry this got personal for you.Napoli won Serie A. Come back to me when Everton or Spurs win the PL.
He could have City level money and still not succeed down here. There is simply too much competition throughout the league for a very, very 1 dimensional manager to succeed.Ange has risen to where he is by doing this very thing in lower leagues, most recently in Scotland where he had a squad that could easily overpower everyone else he faced. But he will never have that here, not at Spurs, nor at any big club in leagues where the competition is much nearer to you every week than what he's seen before.
We will never have a group of players who can forcibly impose their will on everyone they meet in the PL and in Europe, and physically you can't sustain that type of effort over the number of fixtures there are without having a deep squad which we won't ever have, because the chairman manages the team by the ledger and not by the results.
I don't think City or whomever you'd like to name could be successful over the long term doing what he does, you'd just exhaust everyone, and the results would be random like what we see.
Ok buddy- sorry this got personal for you.
I'm trying to make a point about how ruthless and competitive our league is- naive strategies get found out and abused. Ergo Ange's being stubborn about a naive strategy is going to net hurt us long term.
The competitiveness and quality of the Premier League is, quantitatively, a bit of a myth created by Sky.The league is ruthlessly physical. Every team is packed with athletes and can bully you if you aren't at it physically. Then those teams that do it really well qualify for Europe and can't maintain the physical levels playing twice a week so drop down the table. The clubs with the resources, or the willingness to spend their resources, buy a deep enough squad to maintain the physical levels to compete twice a week. Then there is the recovery protocols and the incentive for doping, which nobody really wants to acknowledge but is almost certainly happening.
I get that the product looks competitive and in a way it is but only to the level that smaller clubs can get wins and finish above bigger clubs. If you really want to challenge the clubs that win the PL, that's a very different story and it's not that competitive at all.
Daniel Levy is a billionaire. I'd cuddle him by the fireplace, and then laugh at you plebs from my box seat.Did Daniel tell you that before or after cuddles by the fireplace?
The competitiveness and quality of the Premier League is, quantitatively, a bit of a myth created by Sky.
Which is the point of UEFA's system for awarding the extra CL places, and why the PL missed out.
Serie A, objectively, is probably the most competitive league in the way the old First Division was. Clubs regularly finish toward the top one season and toward the bottom the next. Lazio, Napoli, and even Roma have had brilliant seasons and then fallen back. And they do pretty well in European competitions, as well - hence walking the extra spot race last season.
But their TV contract has always been shit and all their stadiums are dilapidated, so Italian football gets severely underrated.
Of course UEFA fucked up the system after just 1 year because a bunch of thick people moaned about it and couldn't understand it.Which is the point of UEFA's system for awarding the extra CL places, and why the PL missed out.
The competitiveness and quality of the Premier League is, quantitatively, a bit of a myth created by Sky.
Which is the point of UEFA's system for awarding the extra CL places, and why the PL missed out.
Serie A, objectively, is probably the most competitive league in the way the old First Division was. Clubs regularly finish toward the top one season and toward the bottom the next. Lazio, Napoli, and even Roma have had brilliant seasons and then fallen back. And they do pretty well in European competitions, as well - hence walking the extra spot race last season.
But their TV contract has always been shit and all their stadiums are dilapidated, so Italian football gets severely underrated.
Italy are currently safely 2nd and being buffered by Belgium and Portugal between them and Spain. I would expect they will get an extra place again this year.Last year was a bit of a one off wasn’t it? They’re not on it this year and weren’t most other years. When was the last time an Italian team won a European cup? Any European cup.
England just had a serious off year. This season it will walk the 5th spot, which is incredibly Spursy tbh.
Italy are currently safely 2nd and being buffered by Belgium and Portugal between them and Spain. I would expect they will get an extra place again this year.
They got one last year, and would have the year before as well. In my opinion, Italy has overtaken Spain as the 2nd best league. Spain would have gotten an extra place by this system 18-19, 19-20, 20-21 but Spain is heavily buoyed by the same 2 clubs every year where Italy has a more even distribution of quality.