The Entire History of Football Tactics

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DK FALCON

DK FALCON

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 500
@apa5749
@apa5749 11 күн бұрын
i will never forget the first Liverpool game with Klopp. it was Spurs away. everytime the ball went out of play for a while in the second half, Liverpool players rushed to the bench for water lol
@Utkarsh-w2d
@Utkarsh-w2d 2 күн бұрын
You had me cracking. Just tell me how do I come up with such jokes??
@Reorganiser
@Reorganiser 10 күн бұрын
Fantastic video, but as a german I need to add that Klopp wasn't the initiator of intense, more agressive football. There's actually a clip from 1998 of Ralf Rangnick explaining a ball oriented press. As far as football tactics, he's probably germany's most influential figure in the 21st century, and people like Klopp, Flick or Nagelsmann in particular took on his ideas to create their own styles
@MK-il5vc
@MK-il5vc 7 күн бұрын
Actually came here to point this out, because it's even mentioned in Klopps 1st biography. I think his reputation in world football simply went downhill because of the interim job at United, eventhough he analyzed perfectly what's the actual problem at the club (which was supposed to be his initial job as an advisor). Outside of Germnay he tends to be forgetten quickly for some reason. He's doing a great job for austria aswell and he was essential for leipzigs rise from the 4th tier league.
@Maradonaldinho
@Maradonaldinho 7 күн бұрын
@@MK-il5vc Mr Rangnick was treated terribly at Man Utd, I agree it unfairly damaged his reputation, as he was correct in his evaluation of the squad.
@tombratcher6938
@tombratcher6938 7 күн бұрын
Indeed, the pressing game dates at least back to Viktor Maslov, who se coaching career started in the 1940s
@lucamagonza
@lucamagonza 4 күн бұрын
In addition to Rangnick, it is also important to mention Wolfgang Frank, who also pursued a similar approach inspired by Arrigo Sacchi. Wolfgang Frank was Jürgen Klopp's coach and mentor at Mainz 05
@jusuftopic8469
@jusuftopic8469 7 күн бұрын
I think Diego Simeone is an amazing coach because he first started his career with an ultra defensive 4-4-2 that won him 2 la ligas, but later on started playing 5-3-2 and mastered both. Many people say Atleti play haram ball but i actually enjoy watching their games. He is a mastermind.
@luaaizamil
@luaaizamil 6 күн бұрын
As a real Madrid fan who sees Simeone as a constant pain in the ass, I have to agree he is a tactical genius. Atletico changed their formation 3 times in the last 8 years and their defensive performance is consistently good.
@ricardooliveiradomingues2556
@ricardooliveiradomingues2556 4 күн бұрын
eu acho simeone um treinador mediocre
@Utkarsh-w2d
@Utkarsh-w2d 2 күн бұрын
@@ricardooliveiradomingues2556 Still more league title than you guys.
@jarzhinio
@jarzhinio 6 күн бұрын
I think there are a couple of other rule changes not mentioned in this video, which I think had a massive impact on the evolution of tactics and general play: 1. the back-pass rule. 2. 3 points for a win. Both of these came in the 90s I think, and hugely impacted how teams play. 3 points for a win had a big impact on the mindset, as a win became so much more valuable in any league format competition than a draw. This lead to more in-game tactical switches, gambling when you're team has momentum in a tight match (that itself was only possible after the introduction of tactical substitutions). Also I would note that the modern high press was virtually nonexistent in the days when defenders had an easy, safe ball back to the keeper. The modern-day high press evolved only after it became more fruitful to try and win the ball when the opposition was attempting to start and attack from their own goal line. In the 60s and 70s you couldn't trap a team in their own half like dominant sides do now because a predominant tactic was to give it to the keeper to smash the ball high up the pitch over the half way line often right into the opposition box. Not just tactics and positions but the role of individual players and the type of play which flourishes in a tactical system has evolved greatly because of those 2 rules I think.
@schaffner-816
@schaffner-816 12 күн бұрын
Klopp was neither the inventor nor the primary driving force for the pressing from Germany. Rangnick was talking about pressing on German TV over 5 years before Klopp retired as a player and became a coach. Rangnick wasn't the only one, but for sure the most important one.
@lukagoalvic4084
@lukagoalvic4084 9 күн бұрын
Yeah I feel like he just skipped one of the most important concepts by leaving out Rangnick/Sacchi and instead focused on more popular coaches who were not as influential (Inzaghi, Mourinho).
@derhonk6270
@derhonk6270 9 күн бұрын
@@lukagoalvic4084 But its these popular coaches that broad these tactics from the experimental labs to the highest stages of the world. I'm sure you can justify either choice, but this is the one that will speak more to the general public.
@schaffner-816
@schaffner-816 8 күн бұрын
@@lukagoalvic4084 Same. And they were great coaches. Quite often with greater success than the "OGs". Especially in football where at least some form of adaptability is always needed I feel like "the inventors" often don't have the biggest success. Just to be clear these innovative ideas are never one man just single handedly changing football. It's always a development. And therefore also people like Klopp deserve their recognition. I just have the impression he often gets bonus credit because he has a huge fandom/ following.
@alsenar2
@alsenar2 8 күн бұрын
@@derhonk6270 That's a cheap argument. Everybody with some kind of football knowledge should know about Rangnick. You can't just skip the base and go straight to the top.
@derhonk6270
@derhonk6270 8 күн бұрын
​@ OK Rangnick fanboy, I get it. There is only one to praise and it's good old Ralf. His overwhelming success with minor teams as RB Leipzig and Manchester United proof his superior capabilities as a coach. Honestly, to me it seems as if coaches and especially their tactics are often overrated anyway. They often fail to reproduce success once the conditions change i.e. when they are coaching different teams or after key players leave. Good coaches adept and increase chances for success, but they rarely invent radical new tactics out of the blue and magically create a winning team out of a bunch of goofs.
@gror7849
@gror7849 12 күн бұрын
Banger of a video! My favourite part of today's football tactics is the blend between Total Football, a dash of possession football and the pragmatism of back 3 systems. I am talking here about how Sheffield United and Inter played, and while you would expect to perform at the highest level, Sheffield's overlapping center backs really took the Premier League by surprise in a super successful first season back after gaining promotion! Yes it did not last because they have not evolved beyond that philosophy and teams knew that to expect but it was a major win for football overall!
@presidenteantonioconte1363
@presidenteantonioconte1363 7 күн бұрын
As an Inter fan who knows nothing of Sheffield, I guess this has to do with the talent too. Not too many players are suited for this kind of rotational system, and it’s actually a problem within Inter itself: starters know the rotations by heart, and can read each others’ mind; while backups have to get into rhythm. We’re seeing this with injuries and potential transfers: someone like Pavard, let alone Bastoni, is invaluable to us. It’s a really hard system to implement, and it requires very specific types of players
@federicodeganis5288
@federicodeganis5288 8 күн бұрын
I think you are missing AC Milan in Arrigo Sacchi era, with Gullit-VanBasten-Rijkaard and a strong defence with systematic offside, high pressure and pre-determined schemes
@kaustavpaul7768
@kaustavpaul7768 7 күн бұрын
You have missed a lot, the 343 of Cruyff, the fluid shape of Hungarian golden team, the short lived 532 of Belgium during the end of 2010s and many more.
@Ruda-n4h
@Ruda-n4h 6 күн бұрын
A lot of these tactics have been rehashed at some point and are not as they quite appear. The Dutch in 1974 also employed a diamond midfield and played a high offside line to reduce the space their opponents had to play in. The Brazilians in 1958 and 1970 didn't play 4-2-4 but rather 1-3-3½-2½ with Mario Zagalo and Rivelino providing the two halves.
@javiervargas2488
@javiervargas2488 3 күн бұрын
Maturana's Colombian national team of the early 90-95 used a 4-4-2 diamond formation as well.
@josl1694
@josl1694 8 күн бұрын
The initial invnetor of "Heavy Metal" (high pressing) football was Ralph Rangnick. Schalke 04 played this style of football under his watch. Also Ernst Happel perfected "Total Football". He was the one who invented the 4-3-3. He also adopted some ideas from his footballing career under the"Wunderteam" manager Hugo Meisl. However Happel's tactical idea is the predecessor of Guardiolas Tiki Taka.
@slowtyper95
@slowtyper95 11 күн бұрын
there is a book called Inverting the Pyramid: The History of Football Tactics. I recommend you guys that like to deep down to tactical history
@Francesco_fiordi
@Francesco_fiordi 10 күн бұрын
An amazing book that will deepen your understanding of football. As one newspaper put it: ‘Your team may still lose, but you’ll have a far better idea why they did.’😬
@felipesaavedra89
@felipesaavedra89 8 күн бұрын
Amazing book!!!
@lukagoalvic4084
@lukagoalvic4084 9 күн бұрын
The visual presentation and the idea of this video are amazing. There are also interesting bits about the beginning of football tactics. But I think your characterization of the football from the 90s til now focuses more on the most successful and popular coaches and their specific formations but not on the most influential coaches and the most important tactical concepts. I think the most influential tactic in modern football is the ball oriented defending where you should have referenced Sacchi and then move to modern pressing systems where Rangnick might be important. The whole era of ball oriented defending I think is the main factor why coaches like Guardiola, De Zerbi, Alonso etc had to develop new strategies in possession (positional play, overloading one side to isolate the winger, inviting pressure to escape it, build up with +1) but are also the reason why a lot of teams switched to a more vertical style because they did not want to lose the ball to the opponents pressing. Secondly the recent comeback of man oriented defending as an answer to the new in-possession tactics, maybe with Gasperini (probably the most influential coach in Italy in the last 10 years) as an example is definitely missing. All in all I feel you focus too much on formations and popular coaches instead of the real history of tactics in this video.
@shawnwalrus
@shawnwalrus 6 күн бұрын
Probably the best football tactics animations I've seen, thank you for the hard work in producing this!
@brokentoes7898
@brokentoes7898 10 күн бұрын
4-4-2 wasn't invented in the 90s, it was invented in the 50s/60s and was popular from the 60s onwards (not the mid-2000s as you claim). Good video but some misrepresentation of history regarding one of the most consistently popular formations.
@minot.8931
@minot.8931 8 күн бұрын
Aye.. 1966 World Cup was won with a 4-4-2.
@juergenwj
@juergenwj 4 күн бұрын
Great video! But I missed following things: - Change of the Hungarian system from the WM as Hidegkúti dropped to the midfield - as lot of HU coaches went to Brazil, they also shaped with this the 4-2-4 - 4-4-2 from Lobanovsky - 3-5-2 from the 80s with the Libero, this stand until the end of the 90s in Germany with Liberos in most of the teams (Sammer, Matthäus, Nowotny, ...) - the 4-2-3-1 system with the Spanish influence (Juanma Lillo, Benitez's Valencia, ...)
@jamiesimms7084
@jamiesimms7084 11 күн бұрын
Jimmy Hogan really created a lot of all of modern football and it was mainly perfected by total football, which had the perfect balance of attack and defence, but has not always been fashionable, since it's not so easy for every team to create. Developmental and cultural issues also affects teams being able to create total football. However, it has had many variations, which keep getting developed. Total football emphasises pressing when not in possession. Something that's worth mentioning, is the player's relationship to the whereabouts of the ball, weather in or out of possession. The main focus in German football historically was players having a role, for English football, it's primarily concern was players covering areas of the pitch, in other countries, being around the ball was a player's first job, also some countries loved attacking more, while Italian football, mostly wanted to stop attacks and not concede. Total football addressed and addresses all of the above, along with all of it's variations. Jimmy Hogan is probably the most influential, if there is such a thing, along with Rinus Michel's. Managers and coaches who are popular and famous have an influence on people. Arigo Sacci probably had the perfect blend when he was at AC Milan, especially for teams and players to see the effectiveness of alternations of total football, which seemed to be a template for people to follow. Going beyond total football, the one manger who I would consider as someone who showed what creative and beautiful football could be, was Tele Santana, his 1982 Brazilian side was truly inspirational. People influence each other though and things seem to always go in cycles and old tactics and strategies get renewed. Teams will always try and be better than the rest and what ever other factors come into place, play a huge role in how things play out.
@wanr5701
@wanr5701 6 күн бұрын
Jimmy Hogan was very notable for being way ahead of his English peers at the time; when they are still obsessed with physicality, he emphasised more on technical abilities and went on to coach and teach in continental Europe, where his ideas are far appreciated.
@ImmortaL7294
@ImmortaL7294 9 күн бұрын
I liked the video, but you forgot a crucial change that happened alongside the latest iteration of the offside rule in the early 90s - the adoption of the backpass rule. Football was way more defensive in the 80s than you made it out to be, especially in Italy. Teams were abusing the backpass and virtually made the game unplayable, which necessitated change. The game we know today really started after those two tweaks.
@assemcrghannam5920
@assemcrghannam5920 7 күн бұрын
What is the backpass rule ?
@angelkilier
@angelkilier 7 күн бұрын
@@assemcrghannam5920 The keeper cannot pick up a back pass from a teammate, it has to be kicked.
@zikalokof1challenge414
@zikalokof1challenge414 5 күн бұрын
@@angelkilier Iirc Denmark literally won a Euro by scoring first and then just backpassing until the end of the game
@angelkilier
@angelkilier 5 күн бұрын
@ The 92 Euro (which Denmark won) was the last major tournament before the back pass rule was introduced. I don't remember the details of that final against Germany but Denmark won 2-0.
@zikalokof1challenge414
@zikalokof1challenge414 5 күн бұрын
@ Well they scored and then they became very defensive and backpassing a lot for time to pass. They knew they were facing a better team, so they used that "book" tactic
@SmileypandaYT
@SmileypandaYT 8 күн бұрын
This is genuinly one of the best videos I've ever watched, great job, love from the Netherlands❤
@djKianoosh
@djKianoosh 7 күн бұрын
Argentina's tactical history deserves its own video. La Maquina of River Plate, plus the great teams from san lorenzo and independiente, even Velez, Bianchi's Boca and Gallardo's River Plate.
@baboled8355
@baboled8355 12 күн бұрын
As an italian that's a great video, but there's no way you quoted Inzaghi and not Sacchi's Milan or The italian roaming 10 (Maradona,Zico,Socrates....)
@baboled8355
@baboled8355 12 күн бұрын
Probably a little part on the late '70s Liverpool. Magnificent video btw
@lukagoalvic4084
@lukagoalvic4084 9 күн бұрын
Yeah leaving out Sacchi is criminal. Almost every very new invention in football tactics is either builds on his ideas or is an answer to his ball oriented defending.
@15m.nasywanw.t.14
@15m.nasywanw.t.14 12 күн бұрын
Brroo finally you comebackk😭 miss you
@mtk3755
@mtk3755 12 күн бұрын
Legit revisited the channel few hours back missing him and now he's here guess manifestation works lol
@itemtest1
@itemtest1 6 күн бұрын
Bro this is high quality informative video. I absolutely love it 👍👍
@patrickpowell5430
@patrickpowell5430 4 күн бұрын
The best, most informative video on football tactics I have ever seen. I now understand a lot which before baffled me. Thanks!
@samwansbone2790
@samwansbone2790 9 күн бұрын
Only just found your channel, I knew that football tactics were very interesting to say the least in the 50s but I was blown away by how different they were even not so long ago. Will be interesting to see what tactics look like in 20-30 years time
@Ascendify1
@Ascendify1 12 күн бұрын
Yesss you came back finally with a bangerrr
@OnomeAkpomie
@OnomeAkpomie 9 сағат бұрын
Keep posting more please or tell us when you want to post
@carlosmaffrand2811
@carlosmaffrand2811 8 күн бұрын
Bielsas 343 was missed. In Argentinian football was tryed by Newells and Velez in the 90s, Argentina NT played in 2002, Bilbao used too. Needs outstanding phisical capabilities in wingers and midfilders.
@theflashgordon193
@theflashgordon193 12 күн бұрын
I'm waiting for the rise of false goal keeper
@sawonsarker1676
@sawonsarker1676 5 күн бұрын
Pep already tried this with Ederson.
@philipp3174
@philipp3174 4 күн бұрын
Have you ever seen Manuel Neuer playing in the 2010s? :)
@EdgarRoock
@EdgarRoock 10 күн бұрын
2:29 I don't think it meant forward passes were not allowed. It just meant the other players had to be behind the player passing the ball. So the player could make a cross forward and their teammates sprinted after it.
@user-gz8nt9rb3z
@user-gz8nt9rb3z 10 күн бұрын
It would be fun to see a modern team play a game under these rules
@bionicgeekgrrl
@bionicgeekgrrl 9 күн бұрын
It mirrors the rules of Rugby, so thats possibly where it originally came from. Remember, there were multiple different rules around the country until the 1860s-1870s.
@vmax4steve524
@vmax4steve524 8 күн бұрын
@@bionicgeekgrrl Actually the other way round as football came first until someone picked up the ball and ran with it. It shows the value of the ball playing winger who could beat the fullback and cross from the byline playing everyone on side.
@giuseppe1926
@giuseppe1926 5 күн бұрын
although confusing, the video says exactly that at 2:47
@newremote
@newremote Күн бұрын
@@vmax4steve524 Not correct. The laws of Rugby Football were well established by the 1820s and already allowed handling the ball. The Rugby laws were eventually formally written down in 1845. The laws of Association Football were not established until 1863, as a mix of various football games that were being played at the time, including allowing some handling at first. So the Rugby laws came first.
@1xenosky
@1xenosky 7 күн бұрын
Dude im a southamerican futbol lover, and this is the greatest explanation about Strategyc development of futbol. amazing work!
@djKianoosh
@djKianoosh 7 күн бұрын
only problem is he barely mentions south america and very important and legendary teams and their tactics. would be an entire new video
@1xenosky
@1xenosky 13 сағат бұрын
​@@djKianooshagree, but stilla great introductory woek
@gabrielmartins9799
@gabrielmartins9799 9 күн бұрын
I would love to see a video of you talking about the Copa Libertadores 2024 final. Botafogo played a whole 100 minutes match with 10 players due to a red card in the first seconds of the match. They did some very interesting tactics to overcome this accident and won the game with a 3-1 against Atletico MG! One of the best games that I've ever watched.
@Goomyfan-r6g
@Goomyfan-r6g 2 күн бұрын
Incredible video. Probably your best one. Keep up the good work.
@martinf213
@martinf213 11 күн бұрын
In the mid 80s a 3-5-2 was also played by the danish nationalteam with one libero and 2 man-marking defenders in the back making the outside midfielders cover the entire length of the pitch😊
@derhonk6270
@derhonk6270 9 күн бұрын
In my personal development as a player, the introduction of 4-4-2 by my coaches around U15 had the greatest impact on my play. This is when we went from defending opponents to defending spaces.
@ComradeOgilvy1984
@ComradeOgilvy1984 7 күн бұрын
As someone who played a lot of 442 as a teenager and did a little casual level coaching, that is a big reason why the 442 is used. Responsibility for space is understandable. And even if your wide midfielders get caught out, you at least have 4 defenders and 2 midfielders in a reasonable defensive shape. When the team I coached tried 433, it was easy for the midfield and the forwards to get sucked forward in the attack, and too slow to come back to defend. The situational trigger for racing back to help was much harder for the players to understand. And we had three forwards who were inclined to see their job as lingering up high always, thinking it was someone else's job to defend.
@gliptodonte_
@gliptodonte_ Күн бұрын
A very good video. I understand it's a resume, as it's impossible to cover all tactics and developments of more than 100 years, in a relative short video. Since you mentioned Carlos Bilardo, I have to add that his tactics already had some kind of "total football" in them, as any defender or midfielder could move to attacking, with another player then covering his zone.
@Dartitis-26
@Dartitis-26 21 сағат бұрын
Fun fact, most football fans in Germany that hear about the "WM formation" don't know that this has anything to do with football tactics because of the ambiguousness of the term WM. You see, WM is also short for Welt-Meisterschaft (just like WC is for World Cup), and even more so, "WM" is almost exclusively used instead of "Welt-Meisterschaft" because that word is so long and "We Em" is easily pronouncable in German. Every single German citizen understands the word "We Em" as a World Cup, so when a German football fan who doesn't know about football history hears about the "WM formation" he wonders what that World Cup formation might be. I am interested in football history since I'm 14 or so, and I read about the WM formation quite early (so I knew it was a football tactic), but I always assumed that tactic has had something to do with a World Cup, probably being invented for a World Cup or so. It took me a long time to understand that the name of the formation is only based on its shape and that the ambiguousness of the term is just a coincidence.
@victoriaman117
@victoriaman117 Күн бұрын
Beautiful breakdown of the game. Good job!
@jerovdmeer
@jerovdmeer 4 күн бұрын
Great video! Minor comment: Total Football was merely popularised by Cruyff and Michels. They adopted it from Feyenoord, after their Austrian coach Ernst Happel led them to their Europacup I win in 1970.
@crescentrixx
@crescentrixx 4 күн бұрын
I am so happy DK is finally getting the recognition he deserves really proud of this guy
@joelporsch8093
@joelporsch8093 3 күн бұрын
First of all, thanks for your amazing work. Love it. It's like a small summery of Inverting the pyramide by Jonathan Wilson. However, from my point of view, there are some small mistakes: 1. Brazil's tactics in the 4-2-4 were more concentrating on diagonals and give&gos as on these changes. 2. The 4-diamond-2 was already in use unter Cruijff, as he used the 4-3-3 with a false 9. But apart from these small things, it's a very fantastic video.
@bohnewhatever7562
@bohnewhatever7562 7 күн бұрын
I`m from Germany: Future tactics in football: look at Magdeburg. 2 Bundesliga. The goalkeeper is the 12 man in the build-up game and is involved there. This in combination in a 3-4-3 where the middle defender is more of a floating six
@MydeenBeevi-g4g
@MydeenBeevi-g4g 9 күн бұрын
The tiki taka intro , The bgm Pure goose bumps
@ParkAreLeef17
@ParkAreLeef17 12 күн бұрын
Absolute quality of a video!!!
@PiłkarskiDyzio
@PiłkarskiDyzio 12 күн бұрын
Do Thiago Motta Juventus tactics or Napoli Conte please
@deboedebloedepoep
@deboedebloedepoep 10 күн бұрын
Was looking for this. His philosophy is a 2-7-2 system, but he tilts the tactical pitch layout to a horizontal overview 😮
@Dominic-zr7cx
@Dominic-zr7cx 6 күн бұрын
I believe Anchelotti Diamond with Pirlo sitting was the most complete formation. Having an explosive Kaka behind two strikers was for sure my most favourable in terms of complete congruence tacticaly. Inzaghi & Crespo were lethal in front of goal. Plus as you mentioned Italy need i say more about the back 4. Absolute brick wall. Great video man.
@karo_zolghadri
@karo_zolghadri 9 күн бұрын
Bro that’s such a high quality video ❤
@santanafarraj276
@santanafarraj276 10 күн бұрын
Was waiting everytday for u to post somethig finally ur back
@caronteric
@caronteric 5 күн бұрын
You did a great, educational job. Thanx!
@Saklain98
@Saklain98 5 күн бұрын
One of the best videos I've seen in my life.
@JeroenvanErve
@JeroenvanErve 6 күн бұрын
Thanks, great overview of the football tactics evolution.
@ComradeOgilvy1984
@ComradeOgilvy1984 7 күн бұрын
A fantastic video overall. I wish there was a little time of the end to mention Zerbi and others, who are exploring "attacking ladders" as a means to confound both the common zonal systems and common man marking systems.
@kb9889
@kb9889 4 күн бұрын
4:04 Pep used this formation in attack against Chelsea this weekend. The 2 full backs were the wingers, Marmoush and Foden the inside forwards to make the front 5.
@sitepu1711
@sitepu1711 12 күн бұрын
Hei friend. Can you make video about AFC Bournemouth tactic? Because their performs is so good in this season 🔥
@2wisesilent615
@2wisesilent615 2 күн бұрын
great video mate. please do a video for Andoni Iraola tactics like to see it
@chapsticks2
@chapsticks2 9 күн бұрын
What a video!! Unbelievable, really well made
@jamiesimms7084
@jamiesimms7084 11 күн бұрын
Excellent video, great quality. I don't agree with all of the conclusions or quite all of the formations history. Superb breakdown, history and illustration nonetheless! Thank you.
@robertosalaris3530
@robertosalaris3530 7 күн бұрын
Nice video, but let me give you some contribution to the presented timeline: aggressive 4-3-3 was already put in place by Mr. Zeman when training Foggia in 1992; the attacking midfielder role was introduced by Mr. Mazzone within its 3-4-3 in 1993 when training AS Roma: it was Francesco Totti....
@robertosalaris3530
@robertosalaris3530 7 күн бұрын
On top of that, aggressive ball recovery was introduced by Mr. Arrigo Sacchi when training AC Milan in 1987...
@robertosalaris3530
@robertosalaris3530 7 күн бұрын
Still, the playmaker role put just ahead its own defense line was introduced by Mr. Mazzone when training Brescia in 2000: its name was Andrea Pirlo.
@robertosalaris3530
@robertosalaris3530 7 күн бұрын
Still, an amazing 3-3-4 was introduced by Mr. Ezio Glerean leading Cittadella Padova from fourth division second division in just 3 years.
@mokhatla
@mokhatla 12 күн бұрын
Probably the best KZbin video I've seen in years.
@marimped
@marimped 10 күн бұрын
@mokhatla you need to get out, more...!
@SkyBlue_32
@SkyBlue_32 11 күн бұрын
idk if its just me but the audio sounds off....
@zano4140
@zano4140 9 күн бұрын
I think it’s a AI. The script as well, it’s got loads of odd sentences and word choices. The art for sure is AI. Disappointing.
@Rejinx
@Rejinx 8 күн бұрын
It is AI
@daviddowling21
@daviddowling21 7 күн бұрын
I searched the comments to see if someone else posted about it, the audio is terrible.
@LuukvdHoogen
@LuukvdHoogen 4 күн бұрын
I don't think it's AI, this sounds like noise-reduction filter that is wrongly applied
@KALIL62
@KALIL62 3 күн бұрын
Please, explainvthe role of the goal keeper in Tikitaka. That was the key of all, not just the passing. Great video
@kiingotplaysgames
@kiingotplaysgames 11 күн бұрын
Amazing video!!! I love this. Tactics have really evolved over time
@Neschio
@Neschio 7 күн бұрын
you're simply the best
@jiabulitora3160
@jiabulitora3160 8 күн бұрын
Falso nueve, construzione dal basso, and Sacchi's Milan, man marking vs zone, are all missing topics of otherwise great video
@jburlaa
@jburlaa 3 күн бұрын
One of the best football video ever made
@colinellicott9737
@colinellicott9737 9 күн бұрын
Nice vid thx. Another level of analysis might be to look more at the imbalances created by opposing tactical shapes, also the effect of going down a player, or how many systems to have available for using and how often to change them during a game.
@Fidsch-21
@Fidsch-21 12 күн бұрын
Such a Great piece of an Video. You take explanation to a new lvl. Thx 4the nice content
@asdfds6752
@asdfds6752 4 күн бұрын
Great video! Very well explained and animated. One small comment is not having Arrigo Sacchi and his Milan. That guy revolutionized defense and how to play defense in perfect synchronization to push attackers offside. They also had full court pressing and both these ideas made them one of the best football team in history. BTW I don't support Milan!
@ilijamatanovic4720
@ilijamatanovic4720 6 күн бұрын
Awesome video! However, you have missed a couple of big ones, e.g. the era of the trequartista in Italy and the brief but extremely fun dominance of 4-2-3-1.
@Zraxxyy
@Zraxxyy 6 күн бұрын
Bro Next video on Gasperini's Atlanta Tactics Gasperini's Atlanta last year defeated Liverpool in semi final and won Europa by defeating Bayer Leverkusen in Finals and Now Gasperini's Atlanta are competing with Best sides in the Europe 🌍. Plz make a video on Gasperini's Atlanta Tactics.
@Thunderstorm-17
@Thunderstorm-17 12 күн бұрын
The Goat is back 🐐 🔥
@JohanKritive81
@JohanKritive81 12 күн бұрын
For real 🎉
@RafikontolYuouuoii
@RafikontolYuouuoii 9 күн бұрын
Antony?
@cacheloproblox8674
@cacheloproblox8674 9 күн бұрын
@@RafikontolYuouuoiiTHE GOAT 🐐
@IAMYAMAMA
@IAMYAMAMA 4 күн бұрын
Your goat uses AI
@Thunderstorm-17
@Thunderstorm-17 4 күн бұрын
@@IAMYAMAMA so what everybody uses ai in 2025 at least the videos he makes gives me an understanding of the tactics
@AtNovember
@AtNovember 7 күн бұрын
it's the best video about tactics i ever seen!
@rayeasom
@rayeasom 8 күн бұрын
I’m sure someone would have already mentioned this but the current layout of the football pitch didn’t come into existence until 1902. Having different pitch markings and dimensions also accounts for the differing tactics of the early FA Cup and eventually league games.
@jorgedelmylos
@jorgedelmylos 4 күн бұрын
Excellent video!!
@AntuDef
@AntuDef 4 күн бұрын
I know it's hard to make an entertaining vid when it's too specific. But there are, of course, many other formations, that deserves to be stated (perhaps as a bonus). As many here, I'd like to had my own proposal with the unbalanced counter attacking formation of Didier Deschamps. It consists especially of taking advantage of two forwards (Giroud and MBappe) working as a duo and a midfielder working as a quaterback (Pogba). Giroud was the target man and MBappe the needle that pierces the defence in a sort of 4231 formation. There are plenty of other tactics including a target man. Btw, the formation is only the visible part of the iceberg as there are a bunch of tactics in specific areas of the pitch or in specific moment of the game (the Icelandic throw in for instance, or the free kick wall breaker etc.). Long ago, I saw an argue in a forum about which sport was the most tactical and strategic between Football ⚽ and American Football 🏈. An American was saying : "American Football 🏈 was for sure the most tactical between the two because it had like 180 different tactics in the playbook". American arrogance and ignorance lol I never answered because I was not registered to the forum but that made me laugh as football ⚽ actually has an infinite number of tactics and moves. That is mainly due the fact that in Football one can pass the ball as much as one wants in any direction, while in American Football 🏈 the players can only pass backwards and take only one pass forwards. By the way, Football ⚽ is actually still evolving and will never end to evolve.
@muhammadfaishalrachman72
@muhammadfaishalrachman72 7 күн бұрын
thanks for the knowledge, success for you & this channel :)
@LonKirk
@LonKirk 3 күн бұрын
Very good video. Thank you.
@starman633
@starman633 6 күн бұрын
We forget Jack Charlton's Ireland with the 4-4-2 formation that used long balls to bypass the midfield for the tall, strong-headed attackers, making the midfielders useful for recovering the ball.
@bestzirs
@bestzirs 12 күн бұрын
Wait for new at.madric tactics , Double false 9 🔥🔥
@marcmonnerat4850
@marcmonnerat4850 8 күн бұрын
I grew up in the Servette district of Geneva! Strange to know that ‘catenaccio’ was first used there
@SamrailTanyrverdi
@SamrailTanyrverdi 4 күн бұрын
I think that Flick's tactics will be the future of football.
@SpectreYT12
@SpectreYT12 2 күн бұрын
Hey DK falcon. I want to make tactical videos but don't know how to edit the parts where the individual player tokens move around the pitch, a video on how to edit like you would be amazing!
@javohirroziqov2271
@javohirroziqov2271 11 күн бұрын
Make a video about Vincant Kompany's tactics. I want to see it. Your videos are really impressive and useful
@JayjayCruzPB
@JayjayCruzPB 4 сағат бұрын
Could you please do Walid Regragui Morroco tactics?
@BaKaveh
@BaKaveh 7 күн бұрын
It was full of knowledge ❤
@t2twanks
@t2twanks 6 күн бұрын
Great video, very interesting
@Neintale84
@Neintale84 8 күн бұрын
Push and run football developed by Arthur Rowe deserves a mention here, it was a huge influence towards the origin of total football
@Goatifyreal
@Goatifyreal 12 күн бұрын
man went from football manager mobile to this. kuddos
@Lammie-nt4ks
@Lammie-nt4ks 12 күн бұрын
So thankful ur back ❤
@edwardngh
@edwardngh 12 күн бұрын
just love the way you call gegenpressing heavy metal football 😄
@bercegampu
@bercegampu 6 күн бұрын
the diamond midfield is actually from Lippi Juventus with Zidane AM and Davids DM, also Deschamps and Conte as CM.. and Ancelloti took over
@EdwardAnonsi
@EdwardAnonsi 12 күн бұрын
The goat is frickin back 🤌🏽😩
@triher6291
@triher6291 12 күн бұрын
What a great video mate !!!
@alex0O0O
@alex0O0O 12 күн бұрын
Thank you for this
@milogunther5024
@milogunther5024 9 күн бұрын
Despite the litany of mispronunciations, this is an amazing video
@Rejinx
@Rejinx 8 күн бұрын
it is AI
@seafood1471
@seafood1471 7 күн бұрын
@@Rejinx I thought that too initially, but the English literacy level is too low. Words like "evolutionise" and grammar issues make me think this is a non native English speaker who wrote the script and put it through a text to speech converter, not full on AI. Plus the diagrams a and graphics make far too much sense, use real images properly and are presented in too consistent of a graphical style to be AI in my opinion
@itsakin6418
@itsakin6418 7 күн бұрын
@@seafood1471it was simply an AI for reading out the script but a human did everything else including probably writing the script and the graphics
@lukehunnable
@lukehunnable 10 күн бұрын
Very interesting and entertaining video!
@psumoaji
@psumoaji 12 күн бұрын
Amazing video. Nice mate!
@wotsup9oo
@wotsup9oo 9 күн бұрын
For me the most influential style was the 4 flat defenders after last offside change. However Total football and Tikitaka seen greatly on Ajax, Nederlands, Barcelona and Spain is the tactocally most beautiful football to watch. PS: Gegenpresse sounds more acurate than heavy metal. Heavy metal was just for the orchestra analogy.
@hibyegamer
@hibyegamer 12 күн бұрын
Can u make a video teaching how to analyse your fm24 mobile team, and to put a right tactics, and also player development, and best way to scouting please
@RiduanHasan-t6c
@RiduanHasan-t6c 12 күн бұрын
Please make a video about Johan Cruyff tactic
@BOZ_11
@BOZ_11 12 күн бұрын
he did, and it's not Cruyff's, but Rinus Michels's
@64petee
@64petee 8 күн бұрын
Vic Buckingham...?
@godsoulsukmadewa
@godsoulsukmadewa 10 күн бұрын
Ancelotti invented diamond midfield? Then what was that France's wingless wonder with Platini as attacking midfielder?
@lukagoalvic4084
@lukagoalvic4084 9 күн бұрын
Yeah Ancelotti is a great coach but tactically he is not nearly influential enough to deserve a spot in a history of football tactics video.
@willrichardson1809
@willrichardson1809 6 күн бұрын
I love this, however the Christmas tree was being used in England in the 90's and Venables used it for England in Euro 96 and you can arguably say France used one in world cup in 98
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