In terms of number of goals conceded that's a bit harsh I think. We were no worse than the teams around us in 4th-7th.
But if you look at number of goals conceded per minute out of possession, then it
does look dogshit; we were second worst in the league, conceding once every 21.5 minutes that the opponents had the ball. To put that in context, if we had had 50% possession that would have been 80 goals conceded over the season.
Luckily there's three components to stopping the opp's from scoring:
- don't give them the ball
- win the ball back quickly if you do give it to them
- make it hard for them to score during the times between (1) and (2)
So obviously we were dogshit at (3). But we were best in the league at (2), and decent at (1) (ie 7th best). (I put some stuff in the Tactical Autopsy thread related to this a while back).
Those three components are obviously related; the higher you press, the better you do on (2), but if the press fails then you're more exposed. Also if your first priority during defensive transition is to win the ball quickly, rather than dropping back into defensive shape, then you're vulnerable if it doesn't work (and also increase the risk of conceding set pieces, but that's another can of worms...).
Playing such a fluid structure as we do when in possession, we can also be in a pretty compromising shape at the moment of turnover. This is one of the areas I expect to see improvement this year: keeping that fluidity but being more mindful of what our defensive transition will look if we do lose the ball. It my be my imagination but our attacking shape has stayed more balanced to my eye during preseason when the youngsters have been on the field, Bergvall in particular.
In Ange's team talk before the QPR game he put a big emphasis on thinking ahead, "
the most important thing is the next action, next action always in your mind. When you have the ball what's the next action; what do we do next, what do I do next? If we lose the ball, next action? What do I do next, what do we do next, that's always our Focus."
As others have pointed out elsewhere, a couple of transfers in to improve our ball retention while still threatening the opponent's defence (ie not just tiki-taka) should help reduce the number of turnovers we concede in vulnerable positions. Gray and Bergvall look both press-resistant and able to penetrate the lines; the obvious caveat their age and experience. Solanke hopefully an upgrade too. An experienced DM and a dribbly RW still on a lot of TFC wish-lists too, with a couple of weeks left in the TW.
I'm eagerly anticipating watching how Spurs rise to the challenge of tweaking a system, that gave reasonable results in season 1, into something that can do significantly better in season 2. It won't be easy.