Not exact matches
It is the same tactics Tottenham use
against bigger side... They just
sit back absorb the
pressure and hit them on counter because they have quality attacking players such that Dele, Kane, Erikson Dembele....
best formation is 4 -5-1, high
pressure and fast counter attack, something like Klopp did with BvB seasons ago, Ozil vision, Walcott speed and Sanchez class can defeat anyone, passing is good but when opponent like Watford just
sit and wait its hard to pass and score, start game with high
pressure and fast counters than in second half start playing pass game, so with right balance it could be done, something we did
against Liverpool last year on Emirates, first half high
pressure and counter while in second half passing and controling game.
Now we are at home and
against a team that will obviously just
sit back and counter so we need to add as much mobilty forward as possible to
pressure them.
Real madrid vs Bayern is a perfect example of how we should play away, they
sat back and dropped off
against bayern applying 0
pressure in bayerns half and
sitting deep to allow nothing in behind.
my point been you can prepare all you like for the inevitable, it will happen if you are up
against a team with iron will, strong character and the determination to win, and that is why Leicester has been able to grind out wins... they used to
sit back and soak in the
pressure before hitting teams on the break and by January team sussed them out and tried to adopt a pattern to negate that but they found other ways to win, mainly by playing and defending out of their skins and standing up to whatever is thrown at them....
Any win for Arsenal over today's visitors to north London would take the Gunners to just two points behind Chelsea, who currently
sit fifth in the Premier League table and have seen their own top four hopes disappear after losing their long unbeaten home record
against Tottenham last weekend, but a big win for Arsenal could help to pile even more
pressure onto the Blues before they face West Ham later today.
Arsene Wenger went for broke by sending on Theo Walcott, Danny Welbeck and Alex Iwobi at the same time, and that did liven Arsenal up a bit, but
against a visiting defence that were comfortable to
sit deep and soak up
pressure, Arsenal just couldn't find a way through.
No ZIP code, no
SAT score, no median home value, no church or synagogue may be enough protection, they say,
against peer
pressure — even for kids described, as Wakulich was,...