Pressing Analysis: Pochettino, Sampaoli, Guardiola, Bielsa, Rodgers


Pressing Analysis: Pochettino, Sampaoli, Guardiola, Bielsa, Rodgers

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Damo Baresi
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Pressing Analysis: Pochettino, Sampaoli, Guardiola, Bielsa, Rodgers
Jun 30, 2014 TPiMBW 31,155 Views 1



Mauricio Pochettino (the newly appointed Tottenham Hotspur manager), Gerardo Martino (former Barcelona), Jorge Sampaoli (Chile), Eduardo Berizzo (newly appointed Celta Vigo manager), Pep Guardiola – all have the words “press with intensity” inscribed into the playing-style within their coaching philosophy. All directly inspired by Marcelo Bielsa (newly appointed Marseille manager).


Also included in each philosophy of the managers listed above, will be the idea of getting into the pockets of space behind the opposition’s midfield – regardless of the approach they take towards possession. In a recent friendly (pre-World Cup) between South Africa and Australia, the importance of pressing in high areas being coupled with the idea of breaking the opposition’s midfield lines in numbers was highlighted [see video below - analyse positioning of Australia upon freezes]. Like Bielsa, Ange Postecoglou prefers to press with intensity and play ‘vertical football’ (playing into these pockets of space as quickly and often as possible) and since the South Africa friendly, Australia have impressed at the World Cup – despite finishing bottom of 2014’s group of death that included Netherlands, Chile and Spain.



In the English Premier League, we are blessed with a few high pressing teams that we can analyse and take information away from: Rodgers’ Liverpool and Pochettino’s Southampton are probably the two best examples.

Aside from a quick and high back-line, a great detail of understanding is required from the players on the field. This article looks to theorise the many possible pressing triggers into just four categories and provides depth to what otherwise might appear to be unorganised madman-like intense pressing. There is a calculated art in pressing well and it isn’t something you can achieve overnight or by simply drawing on a tactics board. Players need to become automatic actors (habitually, without thought) to trained triggers and understand how and where to set up specific traps. It’s perhaps Hodgson’s failure to recognise that the core of his starting XI at the recent World Cup spend all year pressing high up the field, only to then be asked to sit in a medium to low block for England (but that’s another article within itself). For the same reasons, Adam Lallana’s habitual action upon triggers should be highlighted as a positive reason for Liverpool’s purchase of the midfielder. England’s use of Lallana did not allow for Lallana to press as he does for his club or move into space in a way that benefits the new Liverpool signing.

PRESSING TRIGGERS

Under Mauricio Pochettino, Southampton football club were said to use over fifteen pressing triggers. Fifteen pressing triggers. Given that Pochettino is a former student of Bielsa, it’s not entirely unlikely that so many triggers were installed – after all, Bielsa once said that “there are 26 ways to play football” and “36 ways to communicate through a pass”. It’s therefore not a world away to think Bielsa has used twenty or more specific triggers.

“A man with new ideas is mad – until he succeeds” – Marcelo Bielsa

At a recent World Football Expert Meeting in South Africa run by the world’s greatest coach educator, Raymond Verheijen and his World Football Academy, an established professional football manager revealed his team are sent out with the instructions of only three of four specific triggers, depending on the opposition. It is far more likely that football teams press with three or four pressing triggers in reality. That said, I believe that all these pressing triggers can be theorised into just four categories that are easily followed through a slow implementation of ideas and triggers.

Below I have categorised the many pressing triggers into four categories and then detailed many of the triggers widely used in football.

Four main categories:

Attacking team are not organised/yet to transition into shape that supports ball retention
Opponent’s conditions for control* are not present/yet to be created.
Patterned traps
Pressure in relation to risk
*Define: ‘Control’ = The conditions to execute the desired football actions, i.e. to dribble, to pass, to shoot, to cross etc. Control of the ball is not an objective within itself. Control can be present at arrival without having to take an actual touch to bring the ball under control.

Sub-triggers:

1. Attacking team are not organised/yet to transition into shape that supports ball retention

1a. Opposition remain compact

1b. Six second rule (as above)

1c. Defensive player overload (more of us than them around the ball!)

1d. One vs. one match ups in the final third

2. Opponents’ conditions for control are not present/yet to be created.

2a. Bouncing ball

2b. Poor touch (opponent looks down at the ball to re-attempt)

2c. Ball is on opponent’s weak foot (force action on weak foot)

2d. Ball yet to arrive at the opponent

2e. Slow/backwards pass (rush decision)

2f. Opponent receives the ball flat-footed (cannot play forward)

2g. Pitch/weather conditions (meaning control is created less often)

3. Patterned traps

[See Southampton v Liverpool video - note Lallana's head turn upon first freeze to check the trap can be set] A reoccurring pattern from Southampton is for the ball to be forced inside from the opponent’s defenders and then forced back to the defender (allowing for time to get organised). Thereafter, the ball is forced wide against the touchline where Southampton have a defensive overload to win the ball.

“The touchline is the best defender in the world” - Pep Guardiola

The touchline creates a situation where the opponent’s angles are reduced by 50% and as a result, teams like Atletico Madrid (whose midfield set up narrow), Barcelona (trap: closing the fisherman’s net) and others have found much success forcing the opposition wide into set traps.



4. Pressure in relation to risk

Defending teams that press in high areas will often have three different approaches to pressing the opposition depending upon which area of the field the moment occurs (final third, middle third and defensive third). There are three key types of pressing that can be used in football: man-to-man pressing, zonal pressing and option-based pressing.

TYPES OF PRESSING

Man-to-man pressing: often used in the final third to rush the opponent. The objective is to force mistakes and/or force the opposition into playing the ball long and increase the possibility of losing the ball. This type of pressure typically follows the rule of ‘nearest man’ gets to the opponent as quickly as possible, only to stop within a metre of the opponent. For this type of pressing to be maintained over large parts of the game, it is necessary for you to find ways to manage the tempo of the game in other areas (due to fitness limitations) and also ensure you have an appropriate training methodology for this specific pressing approach

Option-based pressing: a type of pressure used to force the ball into a predictable area, only for players to act quickly upon the pass into the only option left open. This type of pressing is often the basis for setting up traps in different areas of the field. It is important that for your team to close off all other options, they mark tightly other potential options (or go ball-side of his man, rather than stay goal-side), but offering space to the one option you want to force the opposition into.

Zonal pressing: typically used in midfield areas where you force play into a defensive overloaded area (e.g. 4 vs. 3). Forcing play into a set zone before pressing.

“Don’t mark a player, cover the space between two players. The opponent thinks he’s unmarked, making pressing easier” - Pep Guardiola

ADDITIONAL LINKS:

VIDEO 1: Second Southampton FC Pressing trap – again, forced inside then out into a defensive overload - Https://Www.Youtube.Com/Watch?V=SRHGpImbq30

BOOK 2: Coaching the Tiki-Taka Style of Play Book - Http://Shop.Soccertutor.Com/Coaching-The-Tiki-Taka-Style-Of-Play-P/St-B019.Htm

Edited by Damo Baresi: 22/8/2014 09:33:00 PM
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Great article mate.=d>

Thanks for posting it.:)
Aljay
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Just out of interest, at what age/level does pressing after triggers get taught in Au football?

I'd also love to see anything about off-the-ball rotation while in Ball Possession. i.e. when to present for a pass, when to move into a hole created by a teammate's run.

Edited by Aljay: 30/8/2014 10:33:11 PM
Damo Baresi
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Aljay wrote:
Just out of interest, at what age/level does pressing after triggers get taught in Au football?
Edited by Aljay: 30/8/2014 10:33:11 PM


It doesn't get coached in Australia, that's the point. The first the Socceroos were exposed to it was by Guus Hiddink in 2006.
We are a long way behind.
Before that we had Frank Farina trying to get just the defenders to defend. At the Confederations Cup 2005 we conceeded 10 goals in 3 games.
Frank Lowy stepped in. Farina got sacked and Guus got appointed. We then beat Uruguay and went to the 2006 World Cup.

Edited by Damo Baresi: 4/9/2014 11:38:37 PM
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starter for 10 from Paul Cooper GUBOG
THE PRESSING GAME
“I would describe what the journalists call ‘total
football’, as ‘pressing football’. To me, this
expression seems to put the emphasis on the type of
football I was trying to create with Ajax and with the
Dutch national team in the 1974 World Cup. What I
wanted to create was a game in which all ten outfield
players pressed forward all the time – even when we
didn’t have the ball!”
Rinus Michels
A study in 1988 of 16 international matches showed that
possession was won 13% of the time in the attacking
third. A staggering 66% of goals scored were from this
13%.
This game can have a big effect on how your team
performs and is about encouraging the players to defend
from the front. It is quite a high tempo game.
It is also good for conditioning and developing a
physical and mental toughness.

Age Group – U8s to adults

Pitch Size 40 x 20 – or at the discretion of the coach,
but basically a standard 4 v 4 pitch, with a half way
line marking. (you can use two traffic cones at each
side of the pitch)

Number of teams – 2

Team sizes – 4-6 players

Bibs optional

Goals –5 a side or mini soccer goals
The game is played as a standard small sided game with
one condition. If a team wins the ball in the
oppositions half and then goes on to score before the
ball has left that half, they are awarded two goals.
A goal scored any other way counts as just one goal.
Very popular with the players and evokes good team
spirit.
The attacking team need to work as a unit and both
press and close down defenders.



Europe is funding the war not Chelsea football club

Aljay
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Damo Baresi wrote:
Aljay wrote:
Just out of interest, at what age/level does pressing after triggers get taught in Au football?
Edited by Aljay: 30/8/2014 10:33:11 PM

Before that we had Frank Farina trying to get just the defenders to defend. At the Confederations Cup 2005 we conceeded 10 goals in 3 games.
Edited by Damo Baresi: 4/9/2014 11:38:37 PM


Remember it well: Aloisi dominating, Culina debuting and Emerton crossing like a donkey. Never seen a guy wishing he could be on his summer holiday more than Emmo in that Tournament.
GO


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