Melbourne City want for nothing in attack, but at the other end...

By Tim Palmer / Expert

Since the City Football Group takeover, Melbourne City have been on a steadily upwards trajectory. The progress has sometimes been slow, but it has always been constant. The playing squad has been gradually overhauled, with an influx of genuine top-class talent combined with far greater strength in depth.

There have been off-field changes, too, with the construction of the highly impressive City Football Academy, investment in backroom staff and clear improvements in the many other components of a football club, such as social media and marketing.

The other constant besides change amidst all this upheaval has been the first team coach, John van’t Schip. This is his second stint at the club, having been the original coach in their first incarnation as Melbourne Heart. Returning in December 2013 – just a month before the City takeover – following the sacking of John Aloisi, he was handed a new contract by the contemporary ownership who were keen to maintain stability on the training pitch.

In his time in the A-League, Van’t Schip has been one of the A-League’s most fascinating managers. In his first tenure, he regularly switched between back three and back four systems, often adapting in accordance to how many attackers the opposition fielded.

He was part of the exciting period where modern tactics began to take a foothold in the league, thanks to the likes of Ange Postecoglou at Brisbane Roar and Vítězslav Lavička at Sydney FC. There became a greater emphasis on clear tactical structures and flexibility. Van’t Schip embodies the latter. He frequently changes systems to get the best out of his players.

For example, when he returned to Melbourne Heart after Aloisi’s departure, he immediately instigated a shift from a boxy, rigid 4-2-3-1 formation to a very fluid 4-4-2 diamond, where Mate Dugandzic was asked to play as a right winger without the ball, and as a forward with it, in order to accommodate Harry Kewell in a free role.

That is just the tip of Van’t Schip’s flexible iceberg. In the past two years alone, he has used a 5-2-2-1, 3-5-2, 3-4-1-2, 4-4-2 diamond and his favourite, 4-3-3. This was the formation City started last season with, using Aaron Mooy and Robert Koren ahead of Erik Paartalu.

As Bruno Fornaroli and Harry Novillo quickly became the stars of the show, however, Van’t Schip saw fit to adjust in order to maximise their attacking potential. With Aaron Mooy comfortable in a roaming midfield role, City ended the season in a 3-5-2, with Novillo and Fornaroli paired together up front.

This gave both the freedom to work across the width and depth of the attacking third, with the added bonus of a partner to occupy opposition centre-backs, creating more space for the other.

Additionally, by being positioned higher up the pitch when possession was won, they were able to combine quickly on the counter-attack. Together, the dynamic duo dominated in the final third, finishing the season with a combined 35 goals.

However, while Van’t Schip’s tinkering undoubtedly got the best out of his star trio (including Mooy), there were question marks defensively. City never seemed comfortable defending in wide areas in the 3-5-2, as it asked the wing-backs to cover a significant amount of ground.

Additionally, the likes of Patrick Kisnorbo and Aaron Hughes did not seem to have the mobility required as centre-backs in a back three, causing problems when opposition teams matched up man-for-man in attack.

The overall feeling was that City were succeeding because they could overwhelm teams in attack, rather than because of a balanced tactical strategy. With talent like Novillo, Fornaroli and Mooy upfront, that approach could be justified.

Yet recent A-League history suggests the successful teams are those with a solid, stable gameplan. Postecoglou’s Roar were built on a clear philosophy of dominating possession; Graham Arnold’s Central Coast Mariners were the epitome of defensive organisation; Tony Popovic’s Wanderers and Kevin Muscat’s Melbourne Victory were masters of collective pressing.

These teams all had their stars, but the organisation of the side ensured success both when these players were excelling – and when they were not. Importantly, the tactics also ensured defensive balance was maintained. It is telling that the last seven premierships have been won by the team that has conceded the least goals in the regular season.

So, if City have been a steady upwards trajectory, the next step after last season’s semi-final appearance is success in the form of a premiership and/or Championship.

For that to occur, history suggests they need to find that magic formula of defensive solidity, collaborative attacking and star power. They do not lack for the latter, but the former two have been tricky to find despite Van’t Schip’s latest tactical tinkering.

This season’s experiments have been particularly fascinating. With the ball, City play something akin to an asymmetrical 3-1-2-4. With the left-back slightly higher than the right-back, and Michael Jakobsen playing a left-of-centre-back role, space is created for the goalkeeper to move forward in the build up, sometimes playing almost as a right centre-back.

This allows for Neil Kilkenny or Osama Malik to play higher, between the lines, in a #6 role. Ahead of him are two midfielders, typically Luke Brattan and one of Tim Cahill, Anthony Caceres or Paolo Retre. Then, there is a front four stretched across the pitch. The two wingers stay very wide, dragging out opposition full-backs and creating space for the likes of Fornaroli, Cahill and Fernando Brandan in the middle.

The intent is to dominate possession and territory and without a doubt, City have been one of the most imposing sides tactically this season, always pushing opposition teams very deep with their control of the ball and desire to play in the opposition half.


Dotted lines indicate movements without the ball

Without the ball, City shape shift. The #6 drops back into the defence, creating a back four, with the wingers tucking in alongside the two central midfielders. This creates an orthodox 4-4-2 shape. It is complex stuff. It is designed to get the best out of Kilkenny, while also suiting the dribbling ability of Bruce Kamau, Brandan and Nicolas Colazo in wide areas. Importantly, it frees up Fornaroli and Cahill to play together upfront in their preferred positions.

The bigger question amidst all this tactical hijinkery, though, is whether it gets the best out of Melbourne City as a team. Going forward, questions are beginning to rise about whether they can play to the strengths of Fornaroli (who thrives off balls to feet, where he can roll off defenders with his back to goal or simply whip in fantastic curled shots if they stand off him) and Cahill when the two play together.

Cahill, of course, is a prolific header of the ball, and thrives best on early deliveries into the box towards the back post. City are finding it difficult to mesh the two approaches in attack, even with the 3-1-2-4.

Then, without the ball, there are even bigger problems. They have been attempting to play with a high line, but this combined with the complex positional adjustments required when the ball is lost means they are vulnerable to counter-attacks. Additionally, the high defensive line has not always been cohesive, with Kerem Bulut’s wrongly disallowed goal from the draw with the Wanderers a telling example of this.

City conceded late in that game because they tried to kill the tempo with long periods of steady possession – they kept the ball for the sake of it rather than trying to penetrate. It worked initially, but when they turned it over, they then sat very deep, inviting waves of pressure that eventually resulted in Kilkenny’s own goal.

That, in itself, hinted at another issue, that for all of Kilkenny’s strengths, he is not a natural defender. It is hard to imagine Matt Jurman or Alex Wilkinson, central to the league’s best defence at Sydney FC, being positioned as awkwardly for the cross where it was only possible for Kilkenny to clear it in one direction, towards goal.

Overall, while City have been tactically fascinating and entertaining in attack, there is the nagging feeling that they are not the sum of their parts, but rather, the sum of the parts of the stars. While that alone can take you far, A-League history shows that the greatest teams are exactly that – teams.

Melbourne City may succeed in spite of Van’t Schip, but it does not feel like they will succeed because of him.

The Crowd Says:

2016-11-23T11:40:29+00:00

Bela Gutman

Guest


I don't think that City 'let' Wiolkinson go, when he returned to Australia his family settled in Sydney, City were lucky that they managed to get him for half a season, he was never going to stay. I agree that it would have helped if he had stayed though

2016-11-23T11:04:45+00:00

Bob

Guest


I based my analysis on the defensive stats: Goals Conceded: Brisbane 8 Sydney 3 Shots faced on target: Brisbane 16 Sydney 18 Shots faced off target: Brisbane 32 Sydney 29 Clean sheets: Brisbane 2 Sydney 4 Not only do these two teams occupy the best two positions stat-wise, in most cases they are also well ahead of all the other clubs, hence the daylight comment. There's plenty of analysis backing this up if you know where to look or Nemesis could just stick with inaccurate opinion?

2016-11-23T10:39:30+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


When I was living in Eastern Europe for the last ten years I studied Eastern European defensive tactics in great detail. I was recognised as a bit of a guru by many of the poor locals who couldn't even speak English let alone defend a football. So I think I know what I'm talking about. Trust me. I lived in Eastern Europe.

2016-11-23T09:49:14+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


Sydney FC's defence is excellent. So is their midfield and attack. Brisbane conceded 4 against the Jets. Concede 4 goals in any game & your defence is not good. Concede 4 goals against the Jets and your defence are clowns in disguise. 1st half against Sydney, Brisbane put on a wonderful display of clownish defending. They're not alone, all 9 teams other than SFC have put on superb displays of clownish this season.

2016-11-23T09:26:16+00:00

Bfc

Guest


Who writes the headlines....? "Want for nothing in attack..."...? Really...how many shots on target did MCity have against the Roar? Zero...? Sans Mooy, City are too reliant on Brattan to create chances going forward. Kilkenny gives them little except in defence, and playing a back three leaves them vulnerable to a side that can counter at speed. Holy to see Timmy Cahill playing in the HAL, but not sure having him in the same side as Fornaroli is a great idea...neither is great dropping deep, but both cannot occupy the same space close to goal...

2016-11-23T08:44:32+00:00

KSK_47

Guest


As a foundation member of heart who has had the displeasure of watching every game he has been in charge of and having to hear a seemingly endless amount of excuses made for jvs by his football "academic" fanboysfor his terrible track record the last line of this article is a perfect summary for me. If we are going to import coaches they should be able to bring something significantly better than thise available locally. I am glad people are finally starting to wisen up and see JVS for the over priced hack he really is.

2016-11-23T07:50:45+00:00

Stevo

Roar Rookie


You have to delve into the mind of Nemesis to extract all the hidden facts.

2016-11-23T07:49:04+00:00

Stevo

Roar Rookie


Nail.Head Bela. In particular, we have been sh#$house on corners and crossing generally giving Timmy very little to work with. Defensively we're brittle, maybe not as susceptible as at this stage last season but not inspiring. JVS has the ability to turn a good team on paper into under performers. This will not change and he needs to be relieved of his duties ASAP.

2016-11-23T07:40:31+00:00

Bob

Guest


my take on the best: ATTACK: 1. City 2. MVFV 3. SYD 4. Glory DEFENSE: 1. SYD 2. Brisbane 3. Daylight 4. The rest what wins titles again?

2016-11-23T07:38:39+00:00

Bob

Guest


no more flawed than your "football analysis" comparing goal scoring this season for teams who have not played the same fixtures.

2016-11-23T06:14:22+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


So, by your logic, Perth's & Brisbane's attacks are better than City. That's really high quality football analysis. Keep up the good work.

2016-11-23T06:08:21+00:00

Paul

Guest


Victory 1, City 4. City have the best attack based on that match which is a fair comparison unlike comparing games against different teams as they have not yet played the same teams home and away. End of argument. Why are you Victory supporters so tetchy? I didn't mention trophies, who mentioned trophies, you said Victory's attack was better than City's I thought we were talking about that not trophies, who mentioned trophies???????????

2016-11-23T05:43:19+00:00

Bela Gutman

Guest


City's attack relies more on Fornaroli this season whereas the threat was spread across the front half of the team last season. This makes it easier to stifle City's scoring options. City helps opponents in this respect by making such poor use of corners and set pieces, it's as if Cahill is not in the team at all. As others have identified, football is a 'weakest link' game and JVS is now far and away City's weakest link. They'll never win anything with him there.

2016-11-23T05:30:44+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Where in the article does it claim that City has the best attack? It's a long article so I might have missed it.

2016-11-23T05:04:39+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


If trophies were allocated after each match that would, indeed, be the end of the argument between any 2 teams. But, in the A-League the trophies are awarded after 27 matches and anther trophy after an additional 2-3 knock-out matches. All 3 Derbies this year will be important for City and Victory, but no more important than City vs Nix or Victory vs Jets this week end.

2016-11-23T04:55:19+00:00

Boban Fett

Guest


Ditto Michael Zullo!

2016-11-23T01:21:43+00:00

Fadida

Guest


City still have one of their new recruits to come back from injury. He looked brilliant prior to the injury.

2016-11-22T23:21:13+00:00

Paul

Guest


Victory 1, City 4. End of argument between those two teams

2016-11-22T23:11:52+00:00

Nemesis

Guest


It's interesting that City allegedly have the best attack, yet the facts indicate Sydney, Perth and Victory have scored more goals (Victory has even played one less match but scored more goals than City).

2016-11-22T23:05:27+00:00

Caltex & SBS support Australian Football

Guest


City's biggest mistake was; letting Wilkinson go to SFC.. SFC's best deal for the season was; acquiring Wilkinson's services.. I look forward to seeing these two teams playout the grand final in Sydney!

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