Camdenite wrote:
I’ve wondered about the “over-training” for some time now. Glad it’s been bought up.
There was a very revealing comment from Shrewsbury’s manager a couple of weeks back about training the team very lightly. He said he had to do that in order to play the high press and high tempo they’d employed this season. They simply couldn’t expect to play the way they did if they were working too hard in training.
There’s always more than one way to skin a cat, but the energy levels are nowhere near where they should be for this team. Something fundamental isn’t right, and the training regime seems as good a place to start as any.
On the actual coaching side (with the ball) there also seems to be far less effective combinations on the pitch than we are used to seeing. No matter how much some moaned about some of the “Robbo-ball” football being predictable, it was those rehearsed and well-drilled routines that gave us a tactical platform in games. i.e. Potter drops deep and collects from Martin, then every player in our side knew where they should be at that precise moment. You then worked around individual moments of quick thinking opportunism to to put the opposition on the back foot. That someone doesn’t happen any more. No-one knowswhere teammmates are going to be and that’s led to many (but not all) of the “individual mistakes” that Robbie is putting the blame on. They’re not individual mistakes, they’re as a result of players not having the security of knowing teammates could be relied upon to be in set positions.
Is the over training a reaction to the allegedly light work load when Robbie arrived or has he failed to realise with more games comes a need to a need to temper the number of training sessions?
OTD's comment about Robbies style surprised me, mainly as IMO we don't have one, the football this season has been akin to watching my boys U10's side playing. But with less tactical awareness. And as for Brittain being in the shop window, NEWSFLASH 'all players are in the shop window!'.