Inside Sport

What does the new curriculum say about duel strikers


https://forum.insidesport.com.au/Topic2037528.aspx

By Bender Parma - 15 Oct 2014 11:20 PM

Watching the socceroos play, to me it is blatantly obvious that Australia needs to strikers to be successsful.

We simply dont have anyone good enough to play as a sole striker. Scott Macdonald was found not to be good enough at international level and he was probably better than any of our current strikers are ever likely to be. The advantage of the dual strikers is massive.

Firstly, it puts added pressure on the central defenders and puts them in two minds which creates mistakes and increase opportunity to score. Secondly, it means the lone strike has support and allows them to play off each others mistakes and imperfections, meaning that where one striker is often forced into a simple turn over, with two strikers a similar result often opens up a side. I think that it is a must for Australian sides and we simply dont have the players to play with anything but two strikers.

But this seems to be against everything this new curriculum stands for. My question to some of the experts in the curriculum is how does such a system deal with the fact that we simply dont have a skilful or good enough player to play, with one striker up front.

And why is there such a concentration on using a 4-3-3 or 4 2 3 1 at the expense of the tried and tested 4-4-2 which is frowned upon. Even when a 4 4 2 is used nowadays, it usually that ridiculous diamond formation which to my mind is simply a 4-4-2 without any with and without your two central midfielders being willing to get stuck into the middle and tackle a bit (with one playing back one bludging up front).

Do you think that all the new focus (body shape, killer balls, bpo and all that) would translate equally as good to the 442 formation?
By moops - 5 Nov 2014 3:38 AM

Decentric wrote:
Bender Parma wrote:
Decentric wrote:




The 4-4-2 is axiomatically renowned as a good formation to play a lot of aerial crosses. Recently, Kate Cohen has released statistical data to show that there is only about 1% probability to score from crosses.


I havent seen this data.

I wonder though, if this is because the 4 -3-3 formations means there is only one body in the box and the defenders know exactly where to defend. This takes us back to the reason fro this topic. Surely having a second forward would help fix this?


The number 10, or Attacking Mid, when moving up closer to the central striker in the Ball Possession phase of play, creates the 4-2-4 for a short period of time. it i alike having g a second forward.

Also, with the wingers on left and right sides of the pitch, the opposition winger often goes to the far post, creating the second striker.

I was going to say just this, though the CF can make space for a no 10 to run into channels also.
The biggest problem is composure in the box and the no 10 making runs/playing 1-2's and it's mostly due to the players available.