How the Meta in Football Has Evolved | Tactics Explained

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2024
  • Football tactics are constantly evolving. However, if you ever feel like you've already seen modern tactics, that's because you probably have! in this video we'll take a look at how the META in football has developed over the years, and how teams have adapted to the changes in the requirements of the beautiful game.
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Komentáře • 269

  • @TapdotWater
    @TapdotWater Před rokem +92

    One thing I've noticed with Liverpool and teams playing in similar styles to the Gegenpress is that those operating as a 4-3-3 (or 4-1-2-3) use wingbacks instead of fullbacks, and rely on them much less in their defensive half. A lot of the time, these 4-3-3s are starting to look like the modern 2-3-5, and it's been fascinating to see that shape make this unsung comeback

    • @jacobabhoward
      @jacobabhoward Před rokem +4

      very much so, and it is still sound defensively, currently the 3-6-1 is on its way to being the meta, it’s dominating currently in italy and pep is starting to use it himself, it’s a beautiful formation and in the attack gets you into a 2-1-2-5 and is extremely dangerous against a 4-3-3

  • @axe8039
    @axe8039 Před 3 lety +431

    You forgot Arsene Wenger man,he changed the English football,the drinking culture,fitness regime, philosophy everything

    • @FootballMeta
      @FootballMeta  Před 3 lety +129

      Yeah you're right, I think looking back at this video there were more tactics and teams I should have highlighted, but it leaves room for future videos I suppose!

    • @ghostroc
      @ghostroc Před 2 lety +40

      I'm not sure (please correct me if I'm wrong!) that Wenger's Arsenal brought much change in the tactics. It was still 4-4-2, with the two forwards more likely to drift to the 10 position or wings.
      Having said that, no one can dispute the greatness of that Arsenal team, until they lost arguably their most irreplacable player - Patrick Viera.

    • @dialecticsjunkie7653
      @dialecticsjunkie7653 Před 2 lety +34

      I think Wenger's importance as an influence was more in the area of football culture and general level than a specific tactical philosophy. He made a scientific approach to fitness and the importance of tactical finesse (as opposed to just gumption, "wanting it more", etc) to be seen with more respect in the Premier League. The fact is that his tactics were not at all innovative compared to the European continental mainstream, it's just that when he came to Arsenal English football was about two decades behind the continent. Wenger simply made Arsenal catch up with the times without really innovating in an absolute sense.

    • @veenajoshua9461
      @veenajoshua9461 Před 2 lety +12

      @@ghostroc Wenger tactically had the same formation but brought a whole new style of football never seen before in England. I think Wenger coming to Premier league was the turning point for the quality, competition and marketability of the Premier league

    • @maxwest6595
      @maxwest6595 Před 2 lety +3

      This video is focussed more on football tactics...man.

  • @d.z.b1ack317
    @d.z.b1ack317 Před 2 lety +79

    England: *invents football*
    Scotland: let me teach you how to play football *with Scottish accent*

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 2 lety +1

      Hence why the first ever Liverpool team was all Scottish and thus birthed Liverpool’s passing game that has been prevalent until klopp took over

    • @PROPAROXITONO
      @PROPAROXITONO Před 2 lety +3

      @@GuinessOriginal Brazil: Hold my caipirinha...

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 2 lety

      @@PROPAROXITONO Well yes but not in the 1920s or whenever it was. And Barcelona and Spain have arguably had a sangria or two held since then

  • @brunoroedel3173
    @brunoroedel3173 Před rokem +24

    Brazil was actually playing 4-2-4 since 1958, also winning 1962 world cup with this formation. This includes the use of Djalma Santos and Nilton Santos as attacking fullbacks, the greates tactical innovation of brazilian football. Also, Pelé kind of invented the number 10 position, the "ponta de lança", an attacker that was so good that you couldn't let him not touch the ball, he creates and also scores. I wish we could change the Meta today as we did before.

  • @ingsve
    @ingsve Před 2 lety +334

    "Most effective tactics available" is not what a meta is. That's a backronym and folk etymology based on imperfect knowledge of where the expression comes from. Meta is short for metagame which is the game beyond the game i.e. how tactics and counter tactics evolve to beat the currently preferred choices.

    • @TheBshwckr
      @TheBshwckr Před 2 lety +25

      Also when people say X meta in games refer to the most common used tactics instead of the tactics of the best players. It would be like saying we had a Messi meta in 2012.

    • @sdp640
      @sdp640 Před rokem +22

      Just go easy with the words you're using no need to flex your english

    • @fredburns6846
      @fredburns6846 Před rokem +4

      A little history. Meta basically means "after" or "beyond" because some dude wrote a book on physics, and then another after that on everything beyond physics.

    • @Chester-mz2ep
      @Chester-mz2ep Před rokem +23

      The root of the word does not affect what it means now, sorry to break it to you, meta is common for the most effective tactic at current time, that’s it

    • @fredburns6846
      @fredburns6846 Před rokem +21

      @@Chester-mz2ep actually the origin of the word does affect its meaning. Why do you think the first person started using it in regards to videogames? Because its meaning was applicable. And people retrofitting the meaning to "most effective tactic available" doesnt change that.

  • @adolph4267
    @adolph4267 Před 3 lety +156

    Well researched and quite informative. I just got this recommended to me, i’m hooked. Great content. Keep it up bro

    • @FootballMeta
      @FootballMeta  Před 3 lety +8

      Thank you so much! I really appreciate it

  • @Suimega
    @Suimega Před rokem +45

    Most Effective Tactics Available is an interesting retroacronym, because usually what we call the 'meta' stems from the metagame which was initially received as 'a game beyond the game', which is a game of anticipation pertaining to the strength and weaknesses of the tactics your opponent will use. It's true that in today's context, the way we conceive the meta has moved past mere 'anticipation' to become a matter of optimization. But it's the first time I've seen an acronym to describe it.

    • @frosthammer917
      @frosthammer917 Před rokem +3

      The word meta is an old word that has been used in many context for centuries so the acronym (even in the new context of videogames) was definitely tacked on later

  • @nathanrottier7910
    @nathanrottier7910 Před 2 lety +58

    I think we will see a switch back to a more total football, with all players needing to have the technical ability no matter the size, thinking of Vandyck (a center back who is good with the ball). I am personally excited to see where football is going, it is truly becoming a combination of skill and brains in all positions including the keepers (thinking of Enderson's ability to start quick counter attacks from a goal kick). As coach for youth it poses lots of challenges of coaching the importance of understanding the basic principles of the game and developing the technical skill set to meet the challenges presented to a individual athlete. Thank you for your videos they posses lots of great information.

    • @munmunyee
      @munmunyee Před rokem +1

      I concur. The problem with total football is that it requires a high amount of football IQ/pitch awareness as well as team synchronicity. Luckily, I think that youth academies such as Ajax and Bayern have refined their programs to the point in which they have more or less come up with a highly reliable and mostly optimized method to best develop the technical skills and body conditioning in youth players as much as their genetics and lack of time on this earth will allow. I believe that the best aspect for these academies to improve/develop upon now is optimizing a method to instill near-perfect football IQ/pitch awareness akin to Modric, Pirlo, Xavi, and Iniesta.

    • @claudiocerezo1644
      @claudiocerezo1644 Před rokem +1

      Who is Vandyck?

    • @user-tt8ln8fm8s
      @user-tt8ln8fm8s Před rokem +2

      @@claudiocerezo1644 prolly meant van dijk of liverpool

  • @pedrohmartinseco
    @pedrohmartinseco Před rokem +7

    As Brazilian we normally talk about how strong the national team was in 58 and 62 as we won two world cups...the 4-2-4 was already real, in both teams, not only in 70 as you said, so I'd consider as a deserved mention...the 3-5-2 was very strong during the 2000's taking advantage of a strong midfield as META, and where the wing backs provided more balance attacking more than an usual Left/Right Back as the distance to cover was smaller. For the future, I believe regardless the tatics, a more intelligent game in sense of reading the enemy and exploiting their weaknesses like for eg: a very talented and Tiki taka (Barça) won several times Real Madrid and mourinho started to analyze how to counter it, after a few matches, Real Madrid won several games because they understood how to play against tiki taka, which was a very vertical game, very intense defending and long balls to stretch the lines of a compact Barcelona. That duels were amazing and worth seeing as they set a benchmark in reading the game match by match.

  • @chachovalgame
    @chachovalgame Před 2 lety +84

    Man, I was loving the video until the 90's, when you said Premier League began their tactical reign (that would be a lie, because everybody knows the 90's belonged to italian teams, which mostly used 4-1-2-1-2 instead of 4-4-2) and hey, I get it, you're British and you love the Premier League but...if there's been one turning point in the history of the game in the last 20 years, that's the spanish football team.
    "What a surprise", you might be thinking, "a spanish guy praising it's national team". Well, no. Trust me, I'm not a patriot, I'm just a nerd.
    "Offensive" tiki-taka, the one that's about positional play, high pressure and playing in one-two touches to catch the opposite defense off-guard, was a tremendous innovation. The thing is, that can be countered. That kind of play depends on being technically and physically excelent, up to the point of playing both ridiculously fast (doing lots of off-the-ball runs) and accurate near the opposite box to 1) create a clear chance against defensive walls and 2) not losing the ball in a compromising situation, with all your team up in the second half of the pitch, that could leave you completely exposed to counter-attacks. Because that's the irony of the game, you need to attack to win. And if you are constantly, relentlessly attacking without achieving anything, eventually you'll lose your composure and will make mistakes. Ironically, the only man who was ever able to come out victorious against peak offensive tiki-taka (that's Barça prime, no matter what City ever does, sorry) was Mourinho, and he did it with two different clubs (Inter and Real Madrid). And he achieved that by allowing his players to feel they were the underdogs by making them play unapologetically defensive. As in, you don't need to attack to win, trust your lungs and not your feet, so, relax guys.
    And that's why spanish national team changed the game like no other team has done since the 80's (Sacchi). Because they learnt to not to feel the need to attack.
    Let me explain. When they were in the qualifying rounds, they would play offensively, but in the tournaments, they got painfully defensive. I watched every tournament match Spain played between 2010 and 2012 (I don't count the Euro 2008 because that was a different style of play entirely). Until the first 2010 WC match, they played fully aggresive, mirroring Barça's tiki-taka, but with their limitations (Silva was great, but not Messi, and the rest of the attacking front were technically great but apart from Torres -who played the whole WC injured- we didn't have really fast strikers). And they lost the first Game against SWITZERLAND. Because they just did that. They played a brick wall in front of their keeper, resisted for a hour, waited for us to grow impatient, had one counter-attack, won.
    And that made Del Bosque change his mind. In a "f*ck everything, I'm just going to win this thing whether you like to watch It or not" kind of way.
    And he started to play with three defensive midfielders, Iniesta as a classic n°10, Villa as a false winger and a one-legged Torres as a decoy. The midfielders changed their heart. They didn't pass the ball to create spaces between rival players, but to keep it. They played in a way that made sure very, very few things happened during the match. They just played a game called "Let's just pass the ball for 80 minutes and wait until the rivals' mental health completely collapses. Meanwhile, let them think Torres is the real danger here even if he can barely walk and let's hope Villa catches a loose ball inside the box."
    And that stupid tactic made Spain reach the semifinals for the first time ever. There they played offensively for the first time since Match 1 (because they knew that Germany, the 2010 neutral-watcher-favorite, were too proud to play defensively) and won. And in the final, they were the only team actually trying to play football (Netherlands were trying to play MMA that night) and they won.
    And even if they won, it's like they felt they had already had enough strong emotions for a lifetime. for the next tournament, the Euro 2012, they doubled that idea of boredom to the point of being absurd. They made sure NOTHING ever happened during their matches.
    Six midfielders, three of them still defensive, nothing resembling a striker, and the only player actually trying to run towards the opposite goal was the left-back. The only team that ever posed a threat was Portugal, and they almost played Pepe as a midfielder and had the advantage that many of their players were in the spanish league.
    Result: top-scoring team, winning the final 4-0.
    Because all they did was passing horizontally so they would keep possession for the sake of keeping it. Seriously, they barely did any shots per match. The thing is, they had such confidence at that point that they shot once, they scored. I'm spanish and I can honestly say, they were painful to watch. You could tell that what they were doing was remarkable AF, historical stuff, a great achievement, but they were the food equivalent to eating Lego bricks.
    Consequences?
    Two consecutive tournaments (again, only counting 2010-12) without conceding a single goal during the KO stages. Two consecutive major victories.
    More consequences?
    Almost ten years of counter-attack based teams. Physically strong, tactically brilliant, high pressure teams that made sure things actually happened during their matches (and by this I don't mean necesarilly offensive teams). The renaissance of Bayern Munich, Atlético Madrid reaching the Champions League final twice, 2018 France and 2019 Liverpool using pressing midfielders and fast attacking players, the rise of the 3 centerbacks and the offensive fullbacks. Hell, England was dominating the Euro2020 final against Italy until Southgate decided to take out Trippier and Rice (right fullback and defensive midfielder) and Guardiola lost the 2021 Champions League final because he thought he could defeat Kanté, Jorginho and a 5-man defensive line without an extra midfielder.
    Now, defensive tiki-taka is not a magic recipe. That was a historical, ridiculous combination of highly-skilled players at their absolut best nurtured by a fierce rivalry between two of the greatest clubs in the world. Damn, the irony is that even Real Madrid 2016-2018 used defensive tiki-taka (with a static, pasive 3-man midfield, Benzema and Marcelo playing as extra midfielders, and the Big Difference being those slightly fast nobodies called Ronaldo and Bale playing up-front).
    I'm sorry about such a long text but I felt personally attacked by you not including that mention to 1990's Serie A lol. JK, great video anyway :)

    • @Centrioless
      @Centrioless Před 2 lety +3

      Idk, very few teams could adopt tikitaka formation. Some other formations mentioned in this video was so effective, it could even be adopted by small teams.
      Regarding 90's Manu, ppl should realize that ManU back then was a B-class team. Their players were not some superstars, they only relied on local graduates. Coming from their initial place to winning treble was a proof of how effective their tactic was.

    • @soumyasaha8665
      @soumyasaha8665 Před 2 lety +6

      Wow, what an analysis! 👌🏻

    • @isaacshusters1620
      @isaacshusters1620 Před 2 lety +3

      Holy shit

    • @farhanrivin934
      @farhanrivin934 Před 2 lety +10

      This comment is so well written that I've actually read the whole thing.

    • @greatatlas9494
      @greatatlas9494 Před 2 lety

      THANK YOU FOR UR IN DEPTH ANALYTIC. I APPRECIATE THIS INFO .

  • @fmac6441
    @fmac6441 Před rokem +4

    In Brazil in the 50s/60s the most common formation was the 4-2-4.
    Zagallo, two-time champion in 1958/62 and coach of the 1970 national team, became famous for being a winger who returned to close the midfield.

  • @jorgeherrera1074
    @jorgeherrera1074 Před rokem +7

    My grandpa had told me that in the past they used to play with very few defenders and everyone would just try to score and the scorecards were really high. This is the first place I see a mention of this.

  • @davidcripps3011
    @davidcripps3011 Před 2 lety +18

    You forgot Allardyce's 10-0 formation

  • @word_worship_life
    @word_worship_life Před 2 lety +2

    This channel deserves more likes... Well researched and professionally done!

  • @HIM-lk6of
    @HIM-lk6of Před 3 lety +2

    This was pretty cool.
    A nice introductory vid about the major tactical innovations of this beautiful sport.

  • @obedboateng8392
    @obedboateng8392 Před 2 lety +27

    3:09 name a more icon duo than England and cockiness

  • @durge12
    @durge12 Před 2 lety +90

    im surprised you didnt talk for another 5 minutes at the end about how the tactics and formations of the mid 2000s to today are just rehashes of earlier formations but with minor tweaks. i mean what is chelseas 4-3-3 or liverpools attacking fullbacks if not a return to the WW? the biggest tactical changes were realising that a dedicated sweeper wasnt necessary when your goalkeeper was able to come out and play the ball with his feet and playing two strikers wasnt necessary when you had fast wingers to come in from out wide. also surprised you didnt talk about the transition from 4-4-2 wide midfielders, crossing the ball in for tall strikers to 4-3-3 wingers cutting in on the opposite foot to score. arjen robben and cristiano ronaldo turning from LM and RM to RW and LW respectively after leaving the premier league for bayern and madrid. otherwise good video :)

    • @benniecurrie
      @benniecurrie Před rokem

      Agreed. Liverpool's high pressing line is only working because of the strength of the center backs ability to compensate for the right back's defensive weaknesses, BTW, thus the his virtual uselessness on the England World Cup squad.

    • @floriansoll6111
      @floriansoll6111 Před rokem

      Totally agree, I think no other manager has utilized a W-W formation more than Guardiola in the modern day but they all pretty much tend to shape into this in attack. But with Guardiola it's especially obvious, with the way his FBs are undercutting and not overlapping, they also need to be comfortable playing like defensive midfielders, one of the reasons imo why Kimmich was so great for Guardiola at Bayern in the right FB position and why Cancelo is working so well on the left for him despite being right footed.

    • @the_uncle_ted
      @the_uncle_ted Před rokem

      Ronaldo played as one of 3 attackers at United… he didn’t start doing that at Madrid?
      Rooney, Tevez and Ronaldo is known as one of the greatest attacks ever even though it didn’t last very long.

    • @YevOnegin
      @YevOnegin Před 9 měsíci

      He's not that smart, bro. He just read inverting the pyramid the day before recording this.

  • @dicksonh
    @dicksonh Před 2 lety +28

    541 and 343 may be the next meta. Great defence and high energy counterattack.

  • @Rutger2502
    @Rutger2502 Před 2 lety +2

    This is, by far, the most informative CZcams video about football I have ever seen, and probably will see

    • @Rutger2502
      @Rutger2502 Před 2 lety

      I would be very interested in a more in-depth breakdown per decade/time period!

  • @clydemadondo3495
    @clydemadondo3495 Před 3 lety +4

    Bro, you are the best! I think you can come up with the new META

  • @djmattblack
    @djmattblack Před 2 lety +6

    Poch utilized the 4-2-3-1 well, he would push the full backs up high then use the deeper midfielder as a kind of 3rd centre back in a 3-4-3 with Walker and Rose playing almost as wingers and Eriksen and Ali tucking in behind Kane

  • @marcocastellani8348
    @marcocastellani8348 Před rokem +117

    You could have titled the video "How the Meta in ENGLISH Football Has Evolved". By the way, it is widely known that catenaccio wasn't developed by Herrera, but Rappan (Switzerland) and most notably Viani and Rocco, who introduced the sweeper. Also, the 4-2-3-1 was very popular in the early 2000s, used amongst the others by the star-studded Real Madrid of Los Galacticos. I believe it would have deserved a mention, as well as the 3-4-3 or 3-5-2 which characterised highly successful teams like 1990s Ajax, Cruijff's Barcellona, and 2010s Juventus amongst the others.

    • @henriquepontual5361
      @henriquepontual5361 Před rokem +20

      He also pretty much ignored Brazil from the 50's and early 60's. In fact, when he says brazil didnt invent the 424, they were the most successful to use it, he completely forgets to mention that 424 was invented by the same brazil, 12 years earlier.

    • @urint3902
      @urint3902 Před rokem

      cope

    • @JPX3100
      @JPX3100 Před rokem +1

      Not even a thank you from the creator of this videos… 😮

    • @PoucoHabilidoso
      @PoucoHabilidoso Před rokem +1

      True, hate when people make videos and assume that football = English football

    • @wargey3431
      @wargey3431 Před rokem +1

      If he was doing how the English game evolved surely you’d have to mention the 66 squad
      Ramseys Wingless Wonders as they were nicknamed through his use of the 442 meaning that although you had wide midfielders you didn’t have wingers in the tradition sense

  • @WunHungLo99
    @WunHungLo99 Před rokem +4

    I think one major reason for certain developments are changes to the Laws Of The Game eg no keeper back pass, constant evolution of offside rule. Additionally, fitness equipment, the ball itself and playing surfaces have had a major impact as new ways to play, previously not practical, became viable. Generally the Laws have developed in favour of attacking football which again is a major influence over tactics.

  • @SuperLol
    @SuperLol Před rokem +1

    this kind of content makes me feel lucky to be alive in this time and space

  • @EJ-jw9ow
    @EJ-jw9ow Před 2 lety +10

    This was extremely well researched and explained. Probably the best layman's breakdown of soccer ("football") I've ever seen

  • @axe8039
    @axe8039 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic information,just what i needed♥️

  • @juhaniseppala
    @juhaniseppala Před 2 lety +4

    Meta is not an abbreviation. It comes from Greek meaning after or beyond, and is a prefix meaning more comprehensive or transcending.

    • @commentarytalk1446
      @commentarytalk1446 Před 2 lety

      Agree: Meta is emergent. If the current main tactic is X, then the Meta becomes Y in response to X to trump it as such and thus we come to the root of the word "Beyond/Above". :-)
      Aka: "I know that you know that I know..." :-)
      In response to the last question for what the next Meta- will be: I believe the area of the pitch where Jorginho plays or Busquets or Kante and before him (Makalele or Lothar Matthäus before him!) will become ever more pivotal.
      Personally would have loved to have seen Yaya Toure become a maestro in this role/position or even Virgil Van Dyke play here more.
      Looking at the diagrams in this video: A lot of the key action happens here either starting or finishing.

  • @MatteoGualandris
    @MatteoGualandris Před 3 lety +7

    Accurate and useful, great job, thanks! 👏👌

  • @damndaniel605
    @damndaniel605 Před 2 lety +7

    Well researched, tho I think leaving out tiki-taka of spain and barcelona in the 2000s is not doing this era of football diligence, especially when considering how many titles were won by this style vrs mourinho especially

  • @jackywong4956
    @jackywong4956 Před 2 lety +5

    I really think total football will be the ultimate of tactics. In basketball we are starting to have the unicorns where forwards and centers can playmake and have guard skills. To further transform football there will be more and more swtiching and versatility will be valued even more.

    • @vgcreviews8277
      @vgcreviews8277 Před rokem +1

      To an extent, but it's not like we will see attackers play defenders and stuff like that. But we already see this kind of stuff at the highest level. We have seen Guardiola play everyone as a striker, and we have seen him convert wide players into midfield (B Silva) and vice versa (Foden and maybe Grealish). I think the "end game" in football will be WM (we are already seeing), where the WM will be interchangeable, and every attacker will be able to play every attacking position, and ditto for defenders (to a lesser extent imo)

  • @captainsmoke1612
    @captainsmoke1612 Před 2 lety +4

    New system->teams get used to it->teams expose it->new system

  • @killallsuvivors
    @killallsuvivors Před 2 lety +27

    I think the biggest change to tactics in the 21st century has actually came from the officiating of games making defensive football less effective and tackling less relevant to games. This is probably because the open free flowing game is more appealing to the markets which football has struggled to crack.

    • @jarunia17
      @jarunia17 Před rokem

      Also just more enjoyable to watch and play I assume

  • @Chris-nq9nb
    @Chris-nq9nb Před rokem +1

    442 is "synonymous" with the offside trap, not unanimous. A unanimous decision is one where everyone agrees.

  • @totalefootball8637
    @totalefootball8637 Před rokem

    A summary of Inverting The Pyramid book talking about the history of tactics. Brilliant

  • @MrScooter0921
    @MrScooter0921 Před rokem

    Cool breakdown. I think u need legends tho when referencing which team is which, especially if switching them around on the board

  • @kujarukaijetjiriange3963
    @kujarukaijetjiriange3963 Před 2 lety +5

    Please do a video that shows "what was so special of "Wernger's Arsenal" during their invincible season that made it difficult for opponent teams to win.

    • @FootballMeta
      @FootballMeta  Před 2 lety +4

      Good suggestion, I'll add it to the list 💪🏻 thanks!

  • @proudpapagrande
    @proudpapagrande Před 2 lety +1

    I think 3 back systems with ball playing center backs will be the meta. See the most recent Man City v Leeds. Midfielders going wider to open up forward drives from CBs.

  • @theringmaster886
    @theringmaster886 Před rokem +1

    Argentina’s tactics in their recent success at the World Cup appeared to adapt depending on the opposition - with the goal of giving Lionel Messi as much space as possible to weave chaos.

  • @graccusbro2061
    @graccusbro2061 Před 2 lety +8

    6:58 that amazing offside tactics by AC Milan defense (Baresi, Maldini, Tassotti, Costacurta)

  • @sappymustang77
    @sappymustang77 Před rokem

    Been watchin ⚽️ for only since 2018 wc and my take is the next meta is having a tall goalie that is confident enough to come out consistently and be a CB in possession just for an outlet pass or a big clear. Obviously he’s still gettin back and making all the saves but for the buildup he would be part of the passing three in the back to give the team more space up the court.

  • @fahadkayani9902
    @fahadkayani9902 Před 11 měsíci

    Strong urge to become manager now. Lately very intrigued by the deep tactical and training part of football.

  • @BadNewsRuss
    @BadNewsRuss Před 2 lety

    Great video ! ♥

  • @etherealbolweevil6268
    @etherealbolweevil6268 Před 9 měsíci

    One thing I've not noticed is any discussion of the changes to boots, the ball and the playing surfaces. It would be interesting to hear from those who have played at the top level with leather boots, with nailed on studs and blocks of wood in the toes as well as more modern athletic boots; not to mention dubbined leather balls with laces as well as light multipanel fully stitched balls. I'm pretty sure the types of passes and shots have expanded greatly over the time period under discussion. And who can forget the flooded mud baths of pitches which froze solid in winter, or the artificial surfaces so critical to the successful periods of Luton and QPR in the UK. Add/remove heavy cotton / wool clothing soaked in rainwater / mud to the mix for impact on the META. Wednesday night in February at Stoke stuff.

  • @KaroriLucas
    @KaroriLucas Před 8 měsíci

    Great video!

  • @littlewing62
    @littlewing62 Před 2 lety +3

    seems like the trend is only rotating with different interpretations of tactics.. so maybe kick and rush with tall target men will be back

  • @ColonelVonPushUps
    @ColonelVonPushUps Před 2 lety +7

    The meta will be teams that can change formations effectively during the game

  • @petersellars9560
    @petersellars9560 Před rokem +2

    What about Herbert Chapman who's invented the stopper center half, and radically changed the game in the 1920's and 30's. He won the equivalent of the premier league SIX times with two different teams.

  • @nickjack1696
    @nickjack1696 Před rokem

    The funniest thing of the England v Hungary clip is the goalkeeper not diving but instead chasing after the ball like it’s his nephew he’s agreed to watch that just learned about to walk/run

  • @AF-gd7fh
    @AF-gd7fh Před 2 lety

    Fantastic video!

  • @paulandersbullecer3152
    @paulandersbullecer3152 Před 2 lety +1

    Perhaps a striker that is strong, fast, and can playmake as well as bring extreme defensive pressure towards the frontlines will change the meta.

  • @tl8211
    @tl8211 Před 2 lety +3

    4-2-4 was invented in the early 50s and became extremely popular worldwide by the early 60s.

  • @kmacmckee2931
    @kmacmckee2931 Před rokem

    I would love to see successful World Cup Team analogous META analysis ahead of Qatar, with the unique timing and preparation taken into consideration of this WC vs others?

  • @divinewind7405
    @divinewind7405 Před 2 lety

    If i knew the META for future football i wouldn't be on here looking at your (rather interesting) analysis...great video, shame about the background music...✌🏻

  • @sudiptab57
    @sudiptab57 Před 2 lety +3

    No mention on Cruyff's dream team?

  • @hirakpandit4243
    @hirakpandit4243 Před 2 lety +6

    For the next decade, the max formation would be 3-5-2 or 3-4-3. In this there won't be much wingers, rather there will be wing backs who will push up and down depending on attack and defence. And the fiwards will be inside with a focal number 9.

    • @efanferdiantowibowo9610
      @efanferdiantowibowo9610 Před 2 lety

      Yeah. Since attacking fullbacksa and high pressing leave so much space on the wing, hence 3-4-3 becoming more popular.

    • @tobiogunsina8426
      @tobiogunsina8426 Před 2 lety

      @@efanferdiantowibowo9610 ah following in Conte and Tuchel’s path

    • @ibrahimkalmati9379
      @ibrahimkalmati9379 Před rokem

      4-2-3-1or 4-2-1-3 is still most use formation in recent years

  • @DrZaius3141
    @DrZaius3141 Před rokem

    Some form of Total Football is likely to come back. The game is getting increasingly more demanding on players' stamina and even with increased contingencies for substitutions, there will be a breaking point. Someone who can figure out how to rest a few players at a time while the others go full throttle. This would require players to be able to play in both the "resting" positions (generally speaking in the back) and the mobile positions.
    Alternatively, a way of conserving energy while letting your opponent run in a sort of war of attrition might also be something to consider. At times it felt like France tried that against Morocco - giving them the ball and letting them attack. However, given that they barely won against a much weaker opponent on paper, this doesn't sound too promising yet.

  • @johnywfu28
    @johnywfu28 Před 2 lety

    If the attacking team cannot pass the ball behind the line of the center, as they say, the game will be a lot better with the ball going going only at the front. I am very curious for the tactics that going to be used...

  • @Sh76aboo6_MuZkar
    @Sh76aboo6_MuZkar Před 2 lety

    Very informative technically.

  • @harrisjayaraj4485
    @harrisjayaraj4485 Před 3 lety +1

    Amazing content

  • @brianchinhamora5599
    @brianchinhamora5599 Před 11 měsíci

    the M-W formation really took shape in the premier league this season(22/23)

  • @ty8002
    @ty8002 Před rokem

    Bro what’s the ost playing in the background?? @7:17 (and the others too)

  • @nahelmp3
    @nahelmp3 Před rokem

    I think that the meta will be the Diamond 4-4-2 cause we've senn that winning teams often had more midfielders than theirs opponents to control the ball. This and the advantage of having a 10/false 9 to give some space to the strikers/wingers could be deadly in the next years

  • @thomas11eleventm
    @thomas11eleventm Před rokem

    high pressing central/high block with 3 strikers, 2 wingbacks, 1 defensive pivot that plays narrowly.

  • @mambour
    @mambour Před 2 lety

    W-M and no mention of Hebert Chapman and Arsenal in the 30s!

  • @Genrobi
    @Genrobi Před 3 lety +1

    G'job bullet!

  • @retro7362
    @retro7362 Před 6 měsíci

    Thanks this os so good

  • @pavlam7101
    @pavlam7101 Před 2 lety +3

    Across the 70s and the 80s Liverpool were by far the most dominant team with their pass and move philosophy. They won 11 league titles and 4 European cups. In the same period, the two teams you claim dominated the 70s and 80s respectively, Ajax and AC Milan won 9 league titles and 3 European cups and 2 league titles and 2 European Cups with both Milan's European Cup wins coming only after all English teams had been banned after completely dominating European football for the last decade. To talk about META tactics and not mention Liverpool's achievements both on the field and off with their famous bootroom philosophy seems remiss.

  • @EdwardoTheSheep
    @EdwardoTheSheep Před rokem

    Meta has never been an abbreviation. It's short for metagame, meaning the game above the game. It's a term used to describe the game of picking strategies to combat the most effective strategies of other players or teams.

  • @Joe2328
    @Joe2328 Před rokem

    interesting video - Mourinho's line up is basically another W W then?

  • @paulj8213
    @paulj8213 Před 2 lety

    Well done.

  • @kyozaki9838
    @kyozaki9838 Před rokem

    Don't know about anyone else, but doing the formations down-up so the defenders where at the bottom and the attackers at the top, instead of the conventional top down made this seriously hard to follow 😅 very informative though, and a great video just some personal feedback 🙂

  • @dcdc92
    @dcdc92 Před 2 lety

    Who/when was the goal @9:22? Superhuman.

  • @MrWolf-xk8sl
    @MrWolf-xk8sl Před 2 lety +2

    England losing at Wembley will never go out of style

  • @brunoagustinho9895
    @brunoagustinho9895 Před 2 lety

    Amazing👍👍

  • @platonasyfantopoulos1439

    Was your video based on 'Inverting the Pyramid'?

  • @DarthFlauschi
    @DarthFlauschi Před rokem +1

    Klopp already used the High Pressing tactic in the Bundesliga with Borussia Dortmund, he didn`t started it with Liverpool.

  • @familyguyfanboy2
    @familyguyfanboy2 Před rokem

    Bring back the original "knock it long to the big man" style

  • @supitzalan5165
    @supitzalan5165 Před 2 lety +6

    3-5-2, 3-4-3, and 5-2-3 are the new meta in football

    • @lambert8915
      @lambert8915 Před 2 lety +3

      4-2-3-1 is still out there too

    • @lukeg8466
      @lukeg8466 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, good wing backs are super important nowadays

  • @issyjas3309
    @issyjas3309 Před rokem

    The biggest change for me is the lack of creativity and death of the number 10. The magicians have had their magic coached out of them.. You’d think this may be replaced by an increase in dynamic box to box midfielders like Keane, Viera, Gerrard but that’s not happened either.
    Wonder the going rate would be for one of them or a Hagi, Hoddle, Platini, Scholes. Hard to think of many outstanding footballers in this age of the identikit player.

  • @BudiPrasetyoHarsono
    @BudiPrasetyoHarsono Před 2 lety +1

    A chameleon manager like Mancini or Allegri next

  • @PROPAROXITONO
    @PROPAROXITONO Před 2 lety

    The next meta will be versatillity. teams with players capable of change the intire structure of the tatics without change anyone. Players like Fabinho, that can play as cb, rb, dm and others positions, and do it well, will be the key. or CR7, that can play as lw, mc, false 9, striker... if these two are in the same team, they can chage the tatic of the team to adapt to what the adversary is doing in seconds.

  • @johnferguson4869
    @johnferguson4869 Před rokem

    7:02 “4-4-2 was unanimous with the off-side trap” I think you meant synonymous.

  • @zeded509
    @zeded509 Před 2 lety +3

    Without Pep football is incomplete

  • @Rainstorm121
    @Rainstorm121 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this. another unique tactic in the recent 5 years is sacking of club managers

  • @josemikissi4382
    @josemikissi4382 Před 2 lety

    What APP you use in this video bro

  • @SpiritmanProductions
    @SpiritmanProductions Před rokem +1

    Wenger's phenomenal influence completely missing. 💀

  • @nert-13
    @nert-13 Před rokem

    The future of tactics is the use of asymmetrical formations, better opposition scouting, and inverted fullbacks

    • @jaend6924
      @jaend6924 Před rokem

      welp. Pep ditched inverted fullbacks for aggressive defenders out wide while using a CB to help possession in midfield instead

    • @nert-13
      @nert-13 Před rokem

      @@jaend6924 fair play. He stacks the midfield with his W/M box, the bottom of W and top of M, leaving 4 players in decent space to play

  • @jasperlawrence5361
    @jasperlawrence5361 Před rokem

    thanks

  • @maxwest6595
    @maxwest6595 Před 2 lety

    The 2-3-2-3 (defensive)/2-1-4-3.(attacking)

  • @ibrahimkalmati9379
    @ibrahimkalmati9379 Před rokem

    How you can miss current meta 4-2-3-1 with high line and proper number 9 and play maker with vision

  • @lorenzobiffi8541
    @lorenzobiffi8541 Před rokem

    I think that we will come back to see in the next meta the reintroduction of catenaccio but a bit more modern

    • @FootballMeta
      @FootballMeta  Před rokem

      How do you think It will be modernised?

    • @lorenzobiffi1198
      @lorenzobiffi1198 Před rokem

      @@FootballMeta catenaccio or high intensity football, I think that ther will be if we will see catenaccio again, with zonal defending and something that reminds sacchi

    • @o_s_byron2319
      @o_s_byron2319 Před rokem

      @@FootballMeta did you see morocco at the world cup?

  • @Rekovnii
    @Rekovnii Před 2 lety

    What's the song called that starts at 9:10

  • @andrewundershaft1162
    @andrewundershaft1162 Před rokem

    Is it just me or is the visualization hard to follow? There seem to be unnecessary side switches, for example.

  • @zoefezius6615
    @zoefezius6615 Před rokem

    Stil like kick and rush.. 😊

  • @GuinessOriginal
    @GuinessOriginal Před 2 lety +1

    W M looks like 343 to me, probably morphs into a 532 without the ball

  • @jessicacolegrove4152
    @jessicacolegrove4152 Před rokem

    I think we will see that 1-1-8 come back when someone is down 3 in the 88th minute and is absolutely desperate to score

  • @YevOnegin
    @YevOnegin Před 9 měsíci

    The coming meta has already arrived, wingers and target men. Play a high line like everyone else? Wingers will spring it constantly. Sit deep in your own box and try to grind out a counter? Good luck beating the next Jan Koller in the air. The next step is apparently the 1970s. You've already seen the start of this with every major team looking for a bigger and more physical forward (going from Aguero and Jesus to Haaland is the most blatant change you'll ever see) and it took people long enough, considering Bielsa was doing it with Bilbao back in 2011, then again with Marseille shortly after. Saw the same at Roma with Dzeko. Erreala went all out on this idea the last two years with Sorloth and Sadiq, and there's a reason Giroud has moved around big clubs ever since winning Ligue 1. An unselfish, consistent, link-up forward who also happens to be 6'4 is in very high demand.

  • @mahdisaberi3057
    @mahdisaberi3057 Před měsícem

    Today also teams play W M formation with the "Box Midfield" its not new

  • @Gabnott
    @Gabnott Před 2 lety

    This video is quality

  • @demonmonsterdave
    @demonmonsterdave Před rokem

    You didn't mention the single biggest change. This is fitness. Of many new tactics, high pressing for example was impossible with the players who had day jobs, smoked, drank five pints before a game, were addicted to cocaine and otherwise were simply incapable of such things.