Surely he's showed them both up then in that case. His football is better than either of them were serving up under worse conditions. From that Chelsea game through the rest of Ange's tenure and through Frank's the football has been brick.
At some point it becomes what each person prefers, attacking 'intent' but not scoring and concedeing goals, or defensive 'intent' but not scoring and conceding goals. For me there is no difference between them, personally I give Frank a bit more leway as I would much prefer to have to plug holes at the back as opposed to having my whole attacking line up out.
But to bring this back to Vinai in the Vinai thread…do we think that Frank in his interview process explained that he would play football that would be pleasing to the Tottenham fans, but first he would start from a solid base before ‘adding layers’, in the way that his Brentford team also evolved?
Were the decision makers bought into that plan? If so that’s quite concerning. As again, RDZ showed it was possible to play a style of football that would get Spurs fans applauding, within 2 games.
But Ange’s ‘football’ was actually very good, very pleasing on the eye and very solid for most of the time he had actual centre backs available to play centre back. The worst performances came at the worst of the injury crisis.
I’m very open to the idea that RDZ’s football better integrates defensive solidity and attacking intent than Ange’s does. And I do think what RDZ was able to do with a decimated squad completely low on confidence is incredible.
But Ange’s ‘football’ was actually very good, very pleasing on the eye and very solid for most of the time he had actual centre backs available to play centre back. The worst performances came at the worst of the injury crisis.
Frank’s football was utterly dreadful, even when we had a fairly fit squad and could rotate most weeks. And that was his intent. We also conceded plenty of goals under him because football is about getting buy in from the squad and understanding what they need to be successful. A defensive manager can concede more goals than an attacking one if they aren’t connecting with the squad.
I know you detest Frank but this is such a disingenuous take. You actually think Frank wanted to play brick football?Nah. To compare Ange and Frank in this way is massively off for me. Not withstanding that Ange never lost the squad and didn’t systematically destroy their confidence, Ange’s football was never as GHod awful as Frank’s. For the simple reason that what we saw from Frank was what Frank actually wanted.
There were periods under Ange, especially away in his first season and in the second half of the second season when the injuries had really piled up, that we didn’t look good. But it was more not being able to impose our game on the opposition and being overrun. But there’s a difference between ‘Ange’s football’ and just playing badly, which will happen to all managers sometimes and will happen more when you have a crazy number of injuries concentrated in a short period of time.
Frank’s low block for 60 minutes, hoof from Porro to Kudus, no forward passes from Bentinha system…that was intentional. And De Zerbi showed very quickly that it didn’t need to be that way, with a worse set of available players.
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