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Football fullbacks dance

 Football Spice
The fullbacks' Dance

In the previous post, comments session. kamikaze kontiki asks:

How do you ask your wingbacks and centre-backs to react when one of the wingbacks is beaten?

"Here is what I have been told by a guy I played with. If the wingback is beaten and the attacker has a clear passage forward the CB has to move to cover him. Because by moving from the centre outwards to the flank, the CB both covers the angle on the cross and can push the winger away from the penalty box. The WB coming from behind on the other hand; has no chance of either preventing a cross or stopping the winger from cutting in. So, his best option is to move towards the penalty area to cover the CB's position.

Now this seems obvious to me but I see not just Barça but a lot of English teams who are supposedly more defensively disciplined not practicing this. This commonly happens at Barça with Dani Alves but he has greater pace so sometimes he manages to get back and make a second challenge. The clearest examples were when we used Sylvinho (eg. at the Vicente Calderon last season) who, when he was beaten used to move towards the centre but then discover that Puyol hadn't moved out to the flank to attack the man on the ball."



I think the game against Almeria sparked this question. What you mentioned about the CB moving to cover the opponent player in possession at the flank is all true. That’s the traditional form. The reasons why it is not happening differs case by case, but the main factors involved are the following:

- It’s always a priority to secure numerical superiority in the heart of the defense (center) all the time. If the opponents have a forward running into the box then there is a need to have two defenders to check him, besides creating sufficient cover. The trick is that if the opponent is attacking your left flank, the center back moves out to check him while your right fullback moves to the center to act as a second CB. This way you defend against the player in possession on the flank, and at the same time you secure two players in the center. 

- The increasing need of the fullbacks to contribute offense wise makes them both bomb forward sometimes at the same time. That leaves the Center backs with limited resources to invest on the flank under attack. They try to delay the defensive interception by securing the center till an additional player Fullback/Holding midfielder track back to offer more help. This sometimes comes too late. The movement of the opponent on the opposite flank may keep the fullback too busy to cut to the center. Even though –as I mentioned above- securing the box is the priority.

- The quality of the player attacking from the center plays a major role in making his teammate life much easier on the flank. It’s a simple trick: If you are a forward attacking the box with your teammate countering with the ball on the right flank, work on the right center back, prevent the right Center back from handing you to the left CB. As long as you can achieve that, the Right CB will not feel secured enough to open to the flank. You choose the right moment to surrender to the LCB releasing the RCB so he moves to the flank but only too late. Then you fake and change direction demanding the cross in the space. 

- It doesn’t have to be a tactical defect all the time. It’s the defense quality (Communication, anticipation, and positioning) Vs the offense quality (Pace, skills, movement). Sometimes the counter attack is too fast for the defense to organize. Keep in mind that attacking spaces is always easier than covering spaces.

I am one of the most offense oriented coaches you can demand, but I start my offense plan by securing defense. I do NOT compromise when it come to the defense stability. Basically because offense efficiency is not dependent on the NUMBER of players you throw forward, but on how secure the players serving offense feel when they attack the opponent’s third. If your players move forward without keep looking backward they can do better offense. They will need to do fewer transitions which will save their energy for the job in hand rather than in travelling back and forth. What do I do to counter the Fullbacks issue depends on the resources in hand. 

I like to have one offense oriented fullback (Alves like), one CB who can play as a holding midfielder as well (Pique like), and the other fullback to be capable of playing as a CB (Abidal like). And I guess you remember me demanding this structure since ever, which gladly happened last season(though we are still not as efficient in perfecting it). 

The offense oriented fullback stretch the field from his flank, and a midfielder or a roaming forward stretch the field from the other flank to cover the lack of contribution of the defensive fullback. This way you open the field wide but still you have three players in the back acting as CB trio, with a holding midfielder in front. It will be an endless ramble to explain how the four players can beat any scheme they will face during the game through a systematic (trained) combination of movement-positioning-covering chains. This way you are secured defense wise and the rest of the team can move forward with ease. Six players with extremely offensive roles while team in possession can generate all the scoring opportunities needed to win, and create a show as well. 

When the team loses Possession (and this is another defect in Barcelona’s system), players roles differ. There is a need for more positioning play without giving up high pressure. Usually only four of the players apply high pressure based on the position of the ball, the fifth and sixth will be unemployed in that specific period. Instead of marking players high in the offense field they need to withdraw and create a line with the holding midfielder to shield defense, cover the players applying pressure and delaying any counters. We are still not doing so.

I mentioned above that one of the Center backs has to be able to play as a holding midfielder. One of the defects of having three static center backs is that sometimes the opponents keep only one player in your area. Hiring three players to defend against one is a waste of resources. In that case, the CB with holding midfield qualities move forward to act as a holding midfielder pushing the team offense more to the opponents third. But aren’t we bouncing back to the two CB structures that caused the entire problem? No because unlike fullbacks the holding midfielder can move deeper toward your own area faster than the counter, because he is closer to the box than a fullback who is attacking the opponent’s flank. That will give your team more time to organize the moment the team lose possession so that when the opponent reach your own are, you will be ready with a well structured defense to break down their attack or delay it till your teammates make the transition.

But how possible is it to have an Alves, Abidal, and Pique in the same squad? Don’t bet on it. That’s why there are some other alternatives based on the player’s available. 

If you have two offense oriented fullbacks and two center backs (and may be none of them is capable of playing as a holding mid), then you need to use two holding midfielders so that when the team set offense the two fullbacks attack the flanks and one of the two holding midfielders act as a third CB. The Center backs reacts to the holding midfielder movement like the umbrella. The holding midfielder is the ring you pull up and the more you pull it the more the Center backs open wide.

You may only have one holding midfielder and three center backs with two offense oriented fullbacks. Then I will directly switch to 3-3 structure with three center backs with my fullbacks acting as advanced wing backs on the sides of the holding midfielder.

And the assumptions never end… As it’s also important to analyze the team you play against as well.


My weekly column on Total Barca:
Barcelona 2010, better or worse
The unsung Heroes of Barcelona: Fullbacks
Barcelona’s injury woes; turning Crisis into Opportunities

Previous Articles on Football Mood:
Shopping tour, Cesc, Silva or Villa: Who will join Barcelona?
Advocatus Diaboli: Barcelona youth academy, Overrated.
Scoup Group: Our Football Mood News Agency
Barcelona 2010, Tactical Ramble.
Who score goals for Barcelona?
From Ronaldinho to Ibra, Txiki in number
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Posted by Ramzi on 09:51. Filed under , , . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0

4 comments for Football fullbacks dance

  1. Thanks for the explanation, Ramzi.

    A few questions and clarifications.

    By numerical superiority do you mean that the defense has to outnumber the available strikers in the centre? Is it ok to do this at the cost of allowing the attacking winger (who has possession of the ball) to enter the penalty area?

    This seems risky to me because considering this is a break and the penalty area is not crowded the winger has a lot of space available to get past 1 challenge and take a shot at goal. Or he could at the very least win a penalty (and I would note that when players are already moving at speed it much easier to go past a man or win a penalty while this would be much harder for say a static striker who first recieves a pass and then begins to move.)

  2. Thanks Ramzi, you mentioned a few things I hadn't considered such as chosing the situation where you get the maximum possible cover even in the incident of the defender failing in a one-on-one with the attacking player.

  3. Ramzi, it seems like your old friend has agreed terms with Ivory Cost!
    cheers

  4. I hope Marcelo and our center backs are reading your blog :D

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