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1 Nov, 25 tweets, 5 min read
Mikel Arteta's Arsenal are one of the most exciting teams in world football, and they're due to explode. In the below mega-thread I discuss why Arteta's tactics are conducive to enabling the team to do just that once they mature and blossom from kids into men.

THREAD.
Against Spurs, Arsenal started well pressing wise which enabled them to assert their technical quality on the game which saw them go 2-0 up before scoring a 3rd shortly after. However, in the 2nd half, Spurs had 62% of the ball & forced the passive Arsenal back into a deep block.
The theme continued in the next game against Brighton where Arsenal started well pressing wise because the game was in its most frantic period (the start of the game when everybody is fully fit) before being forced back into a deeper block & having only 42% of the ball overall.
Arsenal's pressing structure was flawed against Brighton's 3 at the back system as The Seagulls had a spare man each time when building play. This combined with Arsenal's lack of aggression to get back up the pitch and press high saw Brighton dominate proceedings.
This worrying trend continued when Arsenal started well yet again pressing/aggression wise against Crystal Palace before being forced back into a deep block yet again where The Gunners accumulated only 43% of the ball at The Emirates against a Palace side without Zaha and Eze.
This is where concerns arose surrounding Arteta's tactics - there is simply no way a weakened & technically average C. Palace side should be dominating the ball against Arsenal away from home, particularly when their tactics didn't even afford them an overload in the build-up.
However, in the next game against Villa, Arsenal produced their most complete performance of Arteta's reign by directly addressing the structural pressing issues against back 3 teams but also, and more importantly, vastly improving upon their lack of aggression in previous games.
ARS pressing high enabled the team to reliably use tactical qualities that Arteta affords the team such as an overload in the build-up, positional play in the final third, etc, etc, to good effect thanks to the signings Arteta made in the summer which added top technical quality.
In previous seasons, Arsenal could only produce high quality moments as opposed to performances because his team didn't have the required physical or technical level to control games as a whole despite the top tactics Arteta afforded the team. Now, player quality ain't an issue.
However, despite Arsenal's win against Leicester, the negative trend in which The Gunners started well pressing wise which saw them control the game with the ball continued, & it saw them go 2-0 up, but they were far too easily pushed back for a possession based team after that.
Leicester had 64% of the ball and from Arsenal's perspective that is not good enough for their possession based ideology.

However, there was a clear difference in this game compared to other previous games. Arteta's Arsenal showed intent to be more aggressive late on.
Leicester sustained pressure with far too much ease & Arsenal were living dangerously in the beginning of the second half but when Arsenal did eventually get out thanks to Ramsdale's top technical quality, they stayed out & took control away from Leicester in the 70-80th minute.
Arsenal controlled the game with & without the ball within this time period which is a stark contrast between the majority of the aforementioned games where they defended deep in these late moments. Arsenal pressed Leicester high which enabled the team to get out & keep the ball.
It's crucial to note that pressing isn't the be all and end all of football but it's a staple philosophy within any possession based team. There is not a single team in world football who play out from the back and don't press high. Why? Because the two go hand in hand.
The key aspect of possession based football centres around control and if a team builds play out from the back only to fall back into a deep block as soon as possession is lost then they have no sustainment of attacks, pressure or control. It defeats the purpose.
Pressing enables teams to get the ball back as quickly as possible, and with the ball this is when good possession based teams are in control, as stated by Guardiola below.

So, to those who say Arteta intentionally defends deep late on, I can assure you that that notion is false
It is absolutely normal to defend deep at some moment in every game. Every team in world football has to do it. However, the difference between the top teams centres around their intent to get out and to stay out to stamp their control on games. They are dangerous at all times.
The likes of City & Liverpool defend deep in moments, but they always have the intent to get back up the pitch & to press high again, & this can be seen in the sense that they are always dangerous & can score in any moment - the same cannot be said for Arsenal when defending deep
So, why aren't Mikel Arteta's Arsenal aggressive enough when he knows that the team must be aggressive and consistently press high because they're a possession based team? Because the squad lacks experience. They will carry out the managers instructions as they grow together.
Saka, for example, lacks the experience to be a reliable outlet at the highest level. Smith-Rowe is the same. They fade from games - more experienced players don't. Gabriel doesn't have the experience to control a high line and to maintain aggression positionally for 90 minutes.
On an individual level, Arsenal's players are capable of anything, but none of Tomiyasu, Saka, Smith-Rowe, White, Gabriel, etc, etc have ever reliably competed at the elite level and they are central cogs in Arteta's system. They are needed to maintain the teams aggressive threat
If Saka and Smith-Rowe aren't reliable outlets, Arsenal can't get out. If Gabriel isn't holding the line as high as he should, Arsenal fall back and become too passive. It requires experience and braveness to push up the pitch and press high. It's easy to fall back & be passive.
Falling back into a deep block is a way of shirking responsibility. Arsenal's players aren't doing that, but they merely lack the experience at the *highest* level to carry out their roles reliably which in turn sees the entire unit suffer & sit back when Arteta wants to press.
However, this is nothing but a positive. Arsenal's squad are capable of doing the hardest things but merely lack the mental experience to carry it out at this exact moment, but they're all on the same career trajectory. This squad will peak together, and the players are special.
Arteta wants Arsenal to press high and control games with the ball. The structure is there and the players all have the technical & physical qualities to do it along with top mentalities to improve individually. However, they all lack experience, but given time, they'll explode.

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More from @EBL2017

31 Oct
It was obvious Dean Smith & Villa's model is deeply flawed. The systems Smith plays are old-school & flawed and the transfer market approach is similarly archaic. They are not building towards a specific system - Villa simply signed players they think are good with no clear plan.
Right there Villa scored because Buendia and Watkins are good players but their methods of chance creation are reliant on player quality. They are legitimate relegation contenders despite having top, top players like Ollie Watkins and Danny Ings because of the tactical imbalance.
And right there they conceded because their pressing structure was bang average. Smith is a very average coach, but Villa's fundamental approach to long-term progression is very poor. The only way to rebuild is to pick a manager with a good & set system before building around it.
Read 4 tweets
30 Oct
The Arteta revolution continues. It's all starting to become very clear that Arteta's tactics are superb now that he has the players to replicate them. Next step for Arsenal is to maintain that aggression from minute 1-90, but the intent to do that is clear from a tactical POV.
However, let's not get it mistaken - the game could have went either way today. Leicester were woefully individually in the first half and still pinned Arsenal back a lot of the time. ARS also scored two relatively fortunate goals. 2nd half LEI sustained pressure & were unlucky.
The same theme occurred again for Arsenal - they were superb early on when they were at their physical peak and they excelled technically and controlled the game early on. Then they were forced back due to a flawed press, and then 2nd half lacked aggression & could've conceded 3.
Read 5 tweets
30 Oct
Leicester are a top team and a v. difficult match up for Arsenal. In possession they play a 3-2 shape in the build-up with the wingbacks pinned high and wide. Iheanacho drifts to the right half space BTL, Maddison goes to the left half space BTL, & Vardy is the focal pt.

THREAD. Image
This on-ball shape enables an overload in the build-up, compactness in defensive transition, good chance creation methods on the sides in settled attacks.. this combined with their technical & physical level means they can force ARS back, play through their press & win MF duels.
It's in the latter two instances where someone like Jamie Vardy comes alive in transition, & that become even more evident when Leicester retrieve possession high up the pitch within their asymmetric 5-3-2/4-4-2 high press (wingbacks press opposition fullbacks making it a 4-4-2).
Read 12 tweets
25 Oct
Manchester United 0-5 Liverpool.

In-depth analysis.

THREAD.
The game started off in a toe-to-toe manner when energy was high so it was all about winning 2nd balls, technical quality & pressing. Each team did well in this sense & United did really well at one point to play out of Liverpool’s press before leaving Fernandes in this position.
United’s press was well structured in certain phases of play after this too with standard pressing triggers matching up - winger on fullback, midfield on Liverpool’s interiors, Fernandes dropping onto Henderson before pressurising the CB’s, CB's stepping high when required...
Read 28 tweets
16 Oct
My views have been articulated on a number of occasions. Solskjaer shot himself in the foot by signing Ronaldo which created unrealistic short-term expectations and in turn mass pressure on himself to win now when this team aren't ready to do so.
The Ronaldo signing also created more problems in the sense that the team now has two luxury players, one of which also being Pogba, and there's few teams who press well with 1 luxury player, let alone two, so they're easy to keep the ball against which is a *MAJOR* problem.
Solskjaer may get sacked as a result of the Ronaldo signing which has seen this team being regarded as title challengers when they're simply not as complete as the likes of LFC & City. The structure is good yet the balance within it is not, but that's Ole's fault for signing CR7.
Read 11 tweets
16 Oct
Rodgers tactically outwitted Solskjaer today. Previously, United-Leicester fixtures consisted of head-to-head 4-2-3-1 vs 4-2-3-1 match ups so it was essentially a battle all over the park. However, today, Leicester implemented a 3-2 build-up shape which destroyed United's press.
Below we can see last seasons fixture where both teams built and pressed way in the same way so tactically neither team had the edge (Evans and Justin out of picture in the second picture). It was all about individual player quality on the day.
However, this season, Rodgers created an overload in the build-up against United's pressing line. Partey was the third CB in possession so this completely discombobulated United's pressing structure. Sancho/Greenwood didn't know whether to press the outside CB or the wingbacks.
Read 10 tweets

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