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Shrewnaldo

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Shrewnaldo last won the day on January 27

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    http://footballmanagerveteran.wordpress.com/ - A blog dedicated to my ramblings on Football Manager - tactics, guides and tips

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  1. Not really in this save. I don't think I'm really Gijón'd out, more just FM'd out. Not unusual for this time of year. My only real thought is that I'd quite like to pick up the Feralpi / Hellas journeyman again. But I can't say it's a huge burning desire yet.
  2. Something of an anti-climactic end to the season. Our league form really suffered for the prioritisation of the cups, but we were 7th since the start of December and ended 13 points from 6th, 15 points from 8th. That feels a little weird, have to be honest. Atlético were just too good for us in the Copa del Rey semi, beating us 5-2 on aggregate and I can't really complain. Chelsea... well that was an opportunity missed. I should have played more conservatively in the away leg but an horrendous mistake from Carlos Rojas gave them a tap-in for the first and they secured a second with a high turnover before I learned to start by-passing the high press. We came into the game a little late on but were lucky to save a penalty in injury time. In the return leg we were by far the better team and took a deserved lead shortly after half-time. But Chelsea shut the game down expertly and we fluffed the two good chances we had late on to take it to extra time. Chelsea went on to comfortably beat AZ in the final. Two semis isn't bad but another trophyless season. And now I have some decisions to make, the first of which is - another season?
  3. The ninth intake A Sporting Heritage - The Guajes of Gijón A few days after the disappointment of a Copa del Rey semi-final exit at the hands of Atlético, we have the best day of the year. Taking this... And seeing how it turns into this... Early signs are promising but, as always, I'm posting this 'live'. My first thought is: no Mexicans again, but another Moroccan, an Argentine, an Ecuadorian and a Maltese... because why not?! Elite Talents Juan Sanchis - 9 Personality: Fairly Professional A solid start. Helpful personality with some decent mentals - although his Bravery will stifle his aerial ability irrevocably. The physicals are fine and will develop naturally over time but he's another where there's just one or two gaps for every proposed output. Finishing of 8 isn't ideal for a goalscorer, Vision of 8 isn't ideal for a playmaker, Crossing of 7 isn't ideal for a winger... My experience so far is that the most I can expect these to increase by is 6, possibly 7. So definitely potential of one of them getting to a reasonable first-team level, particularly with his Professionalism, but I'm not blown away. Boubacar Diatré - Right wing Personality: Fairly Loyal The physicals are great but the rest of him gets a bit of a yikes. The defensive technicals immediately rule out any shift backwards, and his Strength rules out any more inside. Staying high and wide makes sense so I'd really like to see higher Flair and Off the Ball particularly. First Touch and Passing also have a long way to go. I'd say Diatré's a little off it. Top Talents Félix - not a cat Personality: Balanced Hmmm... that Determination clearly needs to be increased but other than that, his mentals as a defensive player are probably perfectly fine. The physicals have a decent enough starting point. The technicals are once again the weakest point with Heading the clear worry at centre back, combined with Passing for anything further forward. If I can mentor him into a better personality, I certainly think Félix has potential as a ball-winner though. Marcos - Centre back Personality - Unambitious I really need centre backs but Determination of 1 and an unambitious personality? Is there even any point? And that's a real shame because he definitely has potential - albeit the Strength is a big red flag. For the moment, I'm not sure I'll even sign him. Amine Amlal - Right wing Personality: Light-hearted Decent. His physicals are great for a winger and a lot of his mentals are great. But Anticipation 6, Composure 4 and Vision 6 - those are quite restrictive influences for any advanced player. Technically, I can't see him ever being a winger - his natural starting point is more as a finisher or creator (notwithstanding those mentals). Another with potential but big gaps. Juan Carlos Brítez - left-back Personality: Light-hearted I don't mind the physicals starting point at all - the acceleration and strength should tick over into double figures quick enough and, at 6'2", he's going to do just fine aerially. I'm also happy with his starting mentals and technicals - the obvious ones that are a little short (Anticipation, Concentration, Positioning, Teamwork) will all increase naturally even without targeted training. I think Brítez is the best of the intake so far and can definitely see him getting into the first team (if the save lasts that long) Jesús Romero - the right flank, all of it Personality: Balanced Defensively he's a non-starter (see Marking, Tackling, Strength, being short). Going in the other direction the physicals are more than acceptable but his movement is lacking and his technicals don't inspire. Doesn't help him that Amlal plays the same position and is clearly better so every chance Romero falls by the wayside. Good Talents An unambitious centre back, an unambitious left-winger and these three. Ramón has a couple of standout technical attributes which would already make him better than Carlos Gil, my current attempt at a guaje goalie. But there's also a couple of big gaps. Aguilar has that thing where double figures looks good until you realise they're all 10s and actually he's got a long way to go. Núñez, however, looks pretty good in my opinion - I'm thinking he'd make a decent midfield runner rather than the ball-winner he's listed as. But I wouldn't be confident. And four decent talents that really aren't worth noting. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ I can't say I'm overly enamoured with that intake. The personality pull-through from Caers looks sadly lacking, and there simply isn't a massive standout talent. Juan Sanchís will likely be considered the star graduate and I think that's probably fair. With the hindsight of having looked through the later dross, he does look quite handy and gaps in his attributes aren't that far off double-figures - a decent starting point. Other than that, Brítez has the makings of a decent inverted leftback and Félix could do well if mentored correctly. Better than last year, for sure, but not exactly awe inspiring. EDIT: Sergio Lozano (the golden boy of the 6th intake) wins the NxGn award as the world's best wonderkid. Jonathan Mouriño (5th intake) is 6th and Mexican centre back Ricardo Santana of Deportivo Guadalejara is 22nd... and will join us in the summer. A second Mexican centre back from teh same club, Diego Nava, is 33rd and I may have to bring him in too.
  4. Loving the fact that Sindelar is both awesome and a creative 10, potentially false 9, to reflect his famous namesake - albeit a much more physically imposing version. Beljo was great for me in a Toulouse save on FM18, maybe 19? I struggle to recall but he was great and then seemed to get a bit of a bump in the next iteration so certainly has potential to do a job.
  5. Home and Away A Sporting Heritage - The Guajes of Gijón Another odd start to the season and for the second campaign in a row we're a bit off it in the league. Where results have stuttered, performances haven't and it feels like we've been really unlucky - with something of a trend developing. Our priorities at the start of the season were clear and that's been reflected in the European results in particular. We've had a couple of soft games but a 2-0 win in a Sporting derby in Lisbon and 4-0 thumpings of AEK and Celtic have helped propel us to Europa League knockout qualification. Our remaining game is against Chelsea but it's unlikely to give us much of an idea of our true quality against the bigger sides as I plan to rotate in the second string. We just don't have the squad depth to give it a good go and we have a big league game against Sevilla followed by the Zaragoza cup game up next. Lose the former and we're probably out of the running for continental qualification through the league, whilst the latter continues to offer us a real chance at silverware. Although, in truth, the Europa League might be the easier competition for us to win - only Chelsea and Napoli would really worry me from the teams left in the competition. Domestically, the real concern has come down to one factor and one factor alone - our away form. 9-2-0 at home is phenomenal. 1-1-8 on the road is abysmal. Obviously the 4-2-3-1 was great at El Molinón but I needed to adapt for away games. Right? Wrong. Excluding the completely understandable beatings at Atléti and Barca, are our away league matches: Yikes. Yes our xGA isn't great, averaging just over 1.1 per game, but we've been creating sufficient chance - and chances of quality - to win almost all of those away matches. Averaging 1.7xG per 90 is completely acceptable as far I'm concerned. Converting at 0.75 goals per 90... not so much. So why the disparity from the home form where we're averaging just over 2 goals a game and have conceded only 5? How can we outperform our xG at home but perform away from home in everything except, you know, the important bits? I have no idea. I would have guessed it was an age thing and younger players perform poorer away from home - but it's the same players from last season and, this may come as something of a surprise, they're one year older than last season when they did just fine. So I'm, once again, at a loss. All ideas welcome. --------------------------------------------------------------------- In other news, we've had a takeover. I'm choosing to interpret this as a corporate rebranding rather than a takeoever as we maintain the affiliate links to Club América, Santos Laguna and Atlas Guadalejara. I will certainly be maintaining the Mexican recruitment focus. Indeed, we've continued that approach this January with back-up 'keeper José Juan Ruiz joining from Leones Negros for £250k. He was required due to my latest attempt to get a tune from the eminently frustrating Carlos Gil. His potential remains, whilst his attributes creep us across the board - but without really hitting the numbers I'd have expected at 22. His performances still cost us goals - twice specifically when the ball went straight through him at the near post. Eventually I got so frustrated that I nearly sold him but figured I'd give him one last chance. But somewhere else. A loan deal to Midtjylland feels perfect. They're second in the Danish league and had two Champions League games left... and in the first of those, Gil shipped 4 to register a 5.3 rating on debut. Sub-optimal. With luck, his performances will improve in the second half of the season - whilst Midtjylland have excellent training facilities that will help his continued growth. If not, a long-term goalkeeper will be on the shopping list for the summer. The other likely recruitment priority will be centre back as José Gragera has advised us that he'll pursue other options when his contract expires in 18 months. The perennially injured Guille Rosas will be doing similarly this summer and so gaps are appearing at the back. I brought José Carlos Ferrer back from a loan spell at fellow LaLiga side Elche, performing well enough to convince me that he's a decent squad option even if his lack of height will be exploited by back-post crosses. I also signed Josiah Musa - a player I like a lot more than the game does - on an accelerated Bosman from Villarreal; £250k representing a risk free bit of cover for this season at worst. Meanwhile, guaje Carlos continues to develop really well in the B-team - so much so that I've turned down bids from Liverpool and Inter so far. And the January recruitment didn't end there with Pablo Aguilar joining for £5.5m - another accelerated Bosman deal. Whilst he's not a Mareo graduate, I did outline the following recruitment priorities right at the start of the save: I thus have a saved search which looks for players born in every Asturian location contained within the database. Aguilar came through at Rennes but has been on my radar for years, having been born in Blimea 40-odd kilometres south of Gijón. He offers cover at all four attacking positions and has let me send Vicente Cuadrado out on loan to re-start his development. It is possible that we'll see one more deal in each direction, with Mexican centre back spitting the dummy after I rejected a bid from Dortmund. Eventually, player power has forced my hand and I've agreed to offload him. Should that go through before the end of the window, he'll be replaced by the next Mexican on the line, Héctor Martínez of Orlegi affiliate Santos Laguna. Lastly, I should also mention that Carlos Cordero (fourth intake), of undoubted potential but a personality that will guarantee it is left unfulfilled, left for Juventus for £6.5m. I know, I was as surprised as you. That nicely covers another year of the youth system with a player that was never going to break into the first-team. And talking of that youth system, it looks like we're back on track. With luck, this points at last year being a one-off. If Thomas Caers' personality can pull through like it did in last year's disappointing intake then I'm hopeful we'll get some real prospects back into the funnel. It's feeling a little light at the moment, with very few under the age of 18 that I'm really paying any attention to. For now, it's the cups that remain our absolute priority. A cup double would be fantastic - so good that it might precipitate the end of the save. Certainly if it goes hand-in-hand with our squad being picked apart. Giants of the game are now showing concrete interest in Carlos Rojas, Iván Elvira, Hugo Quiñones, Javi and Ander Aguirre - all my favourite players in other words. Lose some or all of them and I think I'd genuinely lose quite a bit of interest in continuing. But that's tomorrow Shrew's problem. For now, let's just try to win some silverware.
  6. Wow, that's some going - particularly Atlético. Did they play a weakened side against you? I'm sure I'd catch them eventually but I'm not sure I'll do it within my patience for the save. It's already exceeded my usual span for a save. I guess the youth development side lends itself to that additional longevity. If my squad gets picked apart by the big teams this summer then it might be a different story.
  7. I would 100% take a team consisting of only Model Professionals or Model Citizens. I don't mind boring Schulz is a funny one. Looks like he's going to be great but the output technicals look just a little short to have him really produce - crossing, finishing and passing all being just below what you'd want for an elite player. I know passing is in your DNA and if you're looking for him to be the DLF will that be your training priority? The work rate would concern me for a DLF
  8. Thanks, always appreciate the feedback. It's not taken the 4-4-1-1 long to evolve into a 4-2-3-1. The way I was using the wide midfielder on the right just made us way too one dimensional playing through the middle third so I've jettisoned that idea for now. I'd certainly that, Barca aside, I'd associate 4-2-3-1 with Spanish sides. The variable wage cap in the league really helps the big sides too (not that I'm using anything approaching our cap limit). Real's salary per annum is currently £318m, Barca's £282m and Atléti £186m. The next is Villarreal on £70m and we're on £35.5m. That's just a crazy disparity. Yeah I was sad to see Polo leave but I think I've got to that point where I have to look past the nostalgia. He was probably good enough as a squad player but I have so many Mareo options coming through that could use that game time and then end up far better than Polo that I just had to let him go. When I played Real in the final they had a full strength side - David Raya, Buongiorno, Bellingham, Valverde, Vini Jnr, Rodrygo, Osimhen... it's tough. But there's definitely scope to get lucky and hit them at the right time. When Real got knocked out by Villarreal last season, they'd played Levante in the previous round just 3 days previously. That fixture congestion meant they played a (relatively) weakened team and, crucially, a B-team goalkeeper which ended up costing them. Having said that, the big three tend to take the Copa del Rey seriously - evidenced by the three of them winning it in every season so far. Albeit with just one final, in 2025, where two of them played each other. Us, Betis, Villarreal, Girona and Getafe have all been losing finalists... surely one of us has to buck the trend soon.
  9. Pushing On A Sporting Heritage - The Guajes of Gijón At some point we will have to turn potential into delivery. All of this development of the Mareo graduates has to have some sort of end goal. Sporting are famous for being 'nearly men' in Spain, never having a single senior trophy. We came close in 2029, losing to Real 3-0 in a final blighted by Chiquete's early red card. We've reached the semi the following year and a Europa League quarter-final in 2028. This season, I really want to push for silverware. That absolutely will not come in the league - Real, Barca and Atléti are just far, far too strong to catch. Fourth is still a realistic goal for us but I'm absolutely going to prioritise the Copa del Rey and the Europa League - competitions at which I feel we should have a realistic chance of winning. To get there, I'll be relying on what we've developed so far, with very little in the way of transfer activity this summer. Christian Hernández becomes the latest arrival from Mexico - walking a fine line between ability to supplement the B-team and wages that won't bust the £75kpw salary cap for LaLiga2. In the opposite direction goes the first of the Mareo newgens for decent money - Francesc Polo being one of the first to break into the first-team and performing admirably as a wide playmaker or a deep-lying forward. He scored 26 goals across 2028-30 but was just too streaky to become the consistent 20+ goalscorer that we need - whilst he was never quite as creative as I'd hoped he'd become with those attributes and traits. £13.25m and 20% of any profit if he's sold back to Europe represents a healthy intake and covers two seasons' worth of the Youth Setup costs. One of the factors in letting Polo leave was the desire to move to a new system that would see us get the best out of Ander Aguirre. My previous post highlighted the concern about the big boys circling to pick off my best players but we managed to get Aguirre, Javi and Carlos Rojas - the subject of the most elite club interest - all to sign new deals that should keep them here for at least one more season. All three are key components that I would like to build the team and the system around - something which I spent most of the close season thinking about. So I started building some basic blocks around which to premise a tactic. I will bow to the inevitable and prioritise the 9 as the goalscorer, using an AF that primarily looks to stay high and threaten in behind the defensive line I really like double 10s on the ball. This doesn't mean that I need to have two AMCs on the tactics screen - only that two players should get into these positions with their in-possession movement Javi necessitates the use of a winger and isn't suited to being a wingback. That means two wide players in the defensive shape I rarely play with a two-man midfield in the defensive shape as I feel it leaves us too exposed. A three-man midfield and two players in the wide areas makes it clear it's a 4-man defence and 5-man midfield. I don't like how slowly attacking wingbacks move up into advanced positions when playing through the thirds. This leads nicely into my general preference for minimising transition distances. When I first came up with my idea of using inverted wingbacks (before they were even in FM), this was the primary driver - pulling fullbacks into the middle means they are much closer to their natural positions to recover into a solid defensive shape. This is equally true for the players that I want to perform the high and wide roles. This is easy on the left with Javi being a natural winger but will be something I look to do on the right too. Keeping the wide midfielders wide, means the fullbacks can come inside in possession to form the holding shape (I truly despite the term 'rest defence') In the past I'd had a preference for a 2-3 build-up shape but I've really liked the way the wide players in the 3 play in a 3-1 or 3-2 shape. In the 4-3-3 we were playing for the last few seasons, I've been using a 3-1 in build-up but I've found that the 1 often has to recycle the ball backwards which gives the opposition time to shift across and fill gaps. Add another into the second line to make a 3-2 shape allows a quick shift of angle without retreating with possession and, in conjunction with the double 10s, allows for simpler 'progressive passes' through the lines to bypass a pressing midfield - something that would have been classed as 'packing' in German statistics, I guess To get there, I started off with this idea. Nothing complicated but two banks of four in defence and into the 3-2-5 shape on the ball. The AM moves to the right to allow for the segundo to come in as the second 10 on the ball. The wide midfielder on the right is asked to 'hold position' and play more risky passes - the intention being that he will draw the press from the opposition left-back and allow the AM or AF to exploit this space, something which I used very effectively at Hellas Verona. This hasn't worked very well and so I've decided to switch the positions of the holding pair - moving the segundo to the right, allowing him to provide the mobility and run from deep to exploit the space created by the WM. The AM then moves to the left and provides a much better link to the winger, allowing for one-twos into space. The fullbacks then also switch with the covering centre-back moving to the left. So far it's been.... frustrating. We've probably deserved to win both these games but have failed to consistently create quality chances. Defensively, we've been great and only conceded in Seville from a combination of a defensive mistake and poor goalkeeping. From that base, I *should* be able to work out the attacking prowess and how to create better quality chances. To do this, I'd like to create some key metrics for the output I would like to see from each of the players on the ball - minimum shots and xG/shot from the 9; minimum number of passes I'd like to see from the 10 and a percentage of those passes which create chances / shots. For now, I'm relatively pleased that this should get us into the shape that I want on the ball and allow our best players to play in their best positions. Aguirre as an AF makes sense, Saúl and Rojas as a DM pairing is outstanding, Javi out wide. I've also set up a much more conservative system using the same shape which will keep the defensive 6 back and then allow the front four to be the counter-team - for use against Real etc. The only concern for me is at 10 and Mario Martínez. Undoubted potential, he showed some flashes of genuine output two seasons ago when playing in centre-mid. I feel like he should be an excellent 10 but has struggled to make much of an impact in pre-season. A switch of role might help and I'm keen to just give him the game time in order to help him develop his clear potential. That, though, might run contrary to the desire for some silverware and a need for output now. On wider club matters, I let my 72 year-old assistant Paco Ayesterán leave the club this summer - imagining that this was a good time for him to retire. To replace him, I went through the staff at our Orlegi affiliates and appointed former Man Utd midfielder Quinton Fortune. In a nice bit of game narrative, Fortune has 'graduated' through the system - first being Assistant at Atlas Guadalajara, then Santos Laguna and now Sporting. In a rather lovely touch, Santos have replaced him with the other option I considered - Atlas' Rubén Guerreo. Conscious that I've written a lot I should probably just stop there! Tl;dr - I've switched up tactic for the next 10 matches before I switch back to 4-3-3 and generally lose the will to live.
  10. The other issue I have with this bit is the 3 non-EU limit in Spain. So it's hard to take a player straight into the first team. Mexicans, like other Hispanic countries, only take two years to be given Spanish passports (think it's 5 years for others) so I try to have an overlap going. One year in the B-team to prove themself then second year in the first team and then they've got a passport and the next one can come in. Someone like Saul obviously goes straight into the first team. Spoiler - I've kept all the priority players. Totally not a spoiler - I'm still not happy tactically
  11. He's got Determination 15 though? I'm assuming you got that from one of the fan sites? Some of them are, shall we say, less than reliable
  12. I forget what exactly Fickle implies but isn't it just low Loyalty? Does it also imply low Professionalism? Because apart from that Sulley looks like a banger. Looking at his starting attributes and your strategy for forsaking role training and focusing on the additional foci, will you still go with the rotation for Sulley? Like you say, his physicals will naturally increase but that Pace is the only thing which would appear to be holding him back for your DNA. With the others already amongst his highest attributes, it will be interesting to see how fast they would grow and whether or not that 'costs' more CA than improving something like his Dribbling. I really like the calculation for annual increase for the DNA score - but I wonder if it would help to have the non-DNA score annual increase too, perhaps excluding Set Piece attributes and stuff which doesn't increase with training such as Bravery and Aggression? This would give you a comparator to prove that the improvement to DNA-score is caused by the training strategy and not just random variation or overall improved growth
  13. I did know that but I thought that it was just a generated thing for homegrown status? i.e. the players aren't identified 3-4 seasons out My understanding from the Evidence Based FM videos is that the 'draft' for the newgen allocation takes place at the preview event - and that the parameters which affect this 'draft' can change up to the day before that 'draft' and still affect the quality of your intake. i.e. I can upgrade the Youth Recruitment level up to the day before the preview. The CA/PA is only set at the actual youth intake day (or the day before it starts for the highest rep club I think) and the factors affecting that can be changed up to the day before that event. So I could change my HoYD the day before and he would impact the personality of the players that come through. Although the EBFM indicate that the HoYD does not impact CA/PA, I don't recall him doing any experiments about the influence of the HoYD's scouting knowledge. And this is where I'm wondering if I've screwed up. One formation, two styles at the moment. Basically a 4-2-3-1 shape but with the wingers pulled back to the midfield line so I can use the WM(S) role that I've been enjoying recently. Maybe more on this and the counter-version in the next post. There's a lot of good newgens kicking around for sure but I've got a few constraints - one of which is, like you say, the age limit and Mexicans being unable to move abroad until they're 18. The other main problem is the wage cap for the B-team. As they're in LaLiga2, there's quite a tight cap - currently £75kpw for the squad. Mexico is definitely a hotbed of talent but it's also a high-paying league compared to a lot of the places I'd traditionally steal newgens from. Take this guy, for example - only 18 and on £33.5kpw. I could bring him into the first-team but I'd ideally like him to have a year at least in the B-team. But there's no way I can do it when he'd bust half the budget. Regardless, this is where I'm doing all my shopping. We're short of defensive prospects more than anything - although I am a little concerned about the lack of prospects currently in the under-19s. I'd say there's only two players who I expect to make it. The B-team definitely has some good options but there's a bit of a dearth coming up behind. Hopefully the intake this year gets us back on track, if not it'll be back to Mexico.
  14. Re Fabbian's key headers - is he on near post zonal duties for corners? Key headers are just those inside the 6 yard box iirc so this and his aerial prowess could account for the seeming anomaly
  15. I really like this shape that you've shown - particularly the way the two wide players are stretching the play high but with acceleration space for the through ball without going offside. What roles are you using for these guys? I really like the look of Ammer. What are you thinking in terms of training priorities? Physicals?
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