Walter Oldenburg
| Name: | Walter Oldenburg |
|---|---|
| City: | Brisbane |
| Country: | Australia |
| Membership: | Adult Member |
| Sport: | Football/Soccer |
Defending in the final Third (out of possession)(BPO)

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Problem 1
What if Fullback gets beaten (RM beats LB)?
LB; endeavour to recover the ball, if nothing else try to delay - if not look to recover/track a runner into the box.
LCB; prepare for early cross, get to the front post ensure you are in position to head/clear away a cross or are positioned to close down opponent and make a defensive action
RCB; position yourself in line with the penalty spot taking up and angle whereby you may win the ball if whipped in or affect it if cut back - same height as LCB taking up an angle where you may both see the incoming ball and oncoming runners.
RB; tuck in to the back post, body angle more open so you may see and communicate blindspot at the far post, be prepared to cover centrally or apply pressure on the right if the cross is overshot or ball is switched.
GK; make your desicion based on the shape up of the the player on the ball - can you claim the cross? - at the highest safe point - make sure to cover your front post but ensure quick footwork so that you dont get stranded at the near post.
CMs; track your respective runners to prevent any cutbacks; if you are deeper than oncoming runners when the ball is cutback, put yourself between them and the goal - stay compact with your CM partner and stop split passes/shots through to goal.

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Problem 2
What if they try to bypass the MF (play direct)? Dealing with the Aerial
CB steps in to win aerial, don't attack the ball from a standing jump, as opponent will have advantage - technical get underneath the ball and follow through at a diagonal approach for maxmimum distance and height when clearing with a defensive header.
nearside FB, must tuck in both laterally and vertically to ensure compactness and cover behind CB looking to attack the ball.
Opposite FB, should also narrow off but should maintain a more 'neutral/open' body position to ensure attacking runners and patterns are observable and communicated to the other defenders who will be focused on the ball (On-Around-Away)
CM's should track runners if opposition win aerial, but also be able to challenge for second balls - with the priority being 'Staying Compact and Protecting the middle'.

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Problem 3
What if the opposing striker drops as #10?
If the CB who zone #10 goes into has to step up and put pressure on #10 remainig CB and FB's narrow off (similar to Aerial Ball Solution) nearest CM should look to lock in 10 forcing play to ballside, remaining CM looks to double with FB in wide area.
If the #10 is closer to the CM - they should close down opponent, back four should look for the right opportunity to be assertive and look to double up and win the ball. Back four should try to Step up when possible to deny space in Zone 14.

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Problem 4
What if the opposing RM drops to recieve the ball?
Do you have pressure on the ball?
If yes - Defensive must step higher and MF's must get pressure on the ball.
nearside CM looks to show wide into path of covering FB (2v1), other CM covers behind able to double up FB if CM gets beat, in a position whereby dropping opposition winger decides to drive inside - pressing whilst preventing the passing lane to the opposite winger (stop the switch), also able to step higher and close CMs below the ball.
When ballside FB engages high up the pitch, remainder of defensive unit (back four) shuffles over offering covering angles being (compactness is key)

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Conditions: Area tapered off to between width of 18yrd box and touchline, length of defensive and midfield third (approx. 70x55yrds) - encourage Step and Shuffle to ensure realism of defensive line's starting point.
Challenges: Blues challenged to score within 4 passes (based on AVG passes to score in Champions League 4.03 (2017/18) 3.72 (2016/17). Reds challenge is to maintain balance when in possession as well remain compact and organised without the ball.
Targets: Blues are trying to score in goal (managed by coach to cause problems 1-4)
Reds must stay compact both laterally (narrow back 4, equal distances between CB's and FB's) and vertically (Deny space between units, GK-DF-MF lines equal distances apart).
Protect the middle to prevent split passes through players, stay narrow, force wide, maintain equal distances between players and units.
Adaptation from 11v11 game
[Red] GK-4-4-2 (wingers removed for 9v9)
[Blue] GK-4-4-2 (fullbacks removed for 9v9)
Player ownership:
Drop off into low block - try to deny space in behind OR Press high - try to prevent the 'killer pass'
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Drill (Set Up)
Conditions: Area tapered off to between width of 18yrd box and touchline, length of defensive and midfield third (approx. 70x55yrds) - encourage Step and Shuffle to ensure realism of defensive line's starting point.
Challenges: Blues challenged to score within 4 passes (based on AVG passes to score in Champions League 4.03 (2017/18) 3.72 (2016/17). Reds challenge is to maintain balance when in possession as well remain compact and organised without the ball.
Targets: Blues are trying to score in goal (managed by coach to cause problems 1-4)
Reds must stay compact both laterally (narrow back 4, equal distances between CB's and FB's) and vertically (Deny space between units, GK-DF-MF lines equal distances apart).