Jump to content

 

 

Dundee Left Chasing Shadows


Recommended Posts

IBROX -- Premiership side Dundee were Rangers' opponents in the Scottish Cup sixth-round tie, as both sides went into the game in confident mood. Rangers had opened up a 14-point gap at the top of the Championship, and Dundee had held Celtic to a 0-0 mid-week draw, despite fielding a weakened team. Dundee promised to be a step-up in class for Rangers, but a tactically naive performance ceded space for Rangers in all the right areas; the only thing left was for Rangers to take advantage of it.

 

Rangers-05-03-16-Away-team-formation-tactics.png

 

Dundee lined-up in a 4-2-3-1, with former Ranger Kane Hemmings leading the line. The potent attacking-three of Loy, Stewart and Harkins played in behind, with McGowan and Ross providing a solid midfield base. McGinn, O'Dea, Konrad and Holt made up the back-four, with Bain playing in goal.

 

Ostensibly, Rangers played their usual 4-3-3, but with certain player-roles creating a 4-2-1-3. A back-four of Tavernier, Wilson, Kiernan and Wallace played in front of 'keeper Foderingham. Ball came into the Defensive-Midfield role with Halliday playing alongside; Holt made up the midfield three. McKay, Miller and Forrester led the line.

 

Rangers started aggressively, with a four-man press yielding early rewards. Wide-men Forrester and McKay pressed high, with Holt joining Miller in a central area to force Dundee into a mistake. Sloppy control from the full-back allowed Forrester to steal the ball within 10 seconds, before taking on his defender and unleashing a powerful near-post strike past the helpless 'keeper.

 

What was clear from the off, was that Dundee were more interested in attacking than defending. Loy, Hemmings, Stewart and the central Harkins were fairly aggressive, creating a 4-2-1-3 in attack. Loy was always worried about Tavernier and was forced to sit a little deeper, but Stewart on the right-wing played very high and narrow, looking to link-up with Hemmings.

 

This positive approach from Dundee could have caused problems, but Halliday and Ball created a solid defensive-midfield block, cutting out forward passes; Wilson and Kiernan were quick to sweep-up if any balls did get through. The proactive defensive tactic was very successful, resulting in the ball being won back early.

 

Dundee couldn't get the ball for the first 30 minutes. The aggressive front-three were never quick enough to track back. Both Forrester and McKay held wide positions, stretching the back-four. This created space in the channels for both Tavernier and Wallace; which both exploited with clever, penetrative under-laps.

 

Rangers dominated possession by overloading the midfield. With the Dundee front-three (and Harkins) slow to track back, the defensive duty fell to the two Defensive-Midfielders. However, they were never sure who they were marking. Halliday and Ball played deeper, making the Dundee midfielders come to them. When they didn't, Halliday and Ball had free reign to pass forward, with Halliday in particular playing several perfectly-weighted through balls for McKay. When the Dundee midfield did press, they left space for Miller and Holt.

 

Miller and Holt were always elusive, drifting into any free space. Miller looked to be playing a false-9 role, as he never played up-top as a focal point, but instead drifted about in the hole and both channels. With both playing in the half-spaces, Rangers were able to move the ball smoothly through the midfield.

 

Rangers easily had a 4v2/3 overload in central areas (with Halliday, Ball, Holt and Miller created a makeshift square), but through clever movement were also able to overload both flanks -- wherever the ball was. Especially on the left flank, Miller and Holt drifted wide to team up with Wallace and McKay; Halliday supported, creating a 5v3 at times, which allowed easy possession and plenty of opportunities to penetrate the Dundee back-four.

 

Stewart's clever positioning as an inside-forward caused a few problems. Wallace was alert to Stewart's threat, and covered pre-emptively, almost becoming a Left-Central-Midfielder at times. As much as Stewart's shooting ability was a threat, it was covered easily enough. The real danger was the space left on the left-flank for the right-back Konrad to exploit. A few times Konrad had a free run, delivering a few decent crosses.

 

Dundee eventually managed to play around the Rangers press, which allowed them to come into the game towards the end of the first-half. The wide-men (Forrester and McKay) dropped deeper, which meant Miller and Holt's press was easy to play around -- all four, with Halliday and Ball in behind, needed to press together to make it successful as it was at the start of the game. It was at this stage that Dundee managed to get a foothold in the game, but good defending from Kiernan and Wilson meant they were never able to take advantage.

 

Rangers were imperious during the first 20 minutes of the second-half, adding another 2 goals. Nothing really changed tactically, but the Rangers players were more confident that the space was there. The link-up and interchange between Miller, Holt and McKay was sublime at times.

 

One small change was that both wingers swapped sides, so they become inverted wingers. Instead of taking their full-backs on the outside, both looked to cut inside. This helped McKay in particular as he was constantly thwarted on the outside during the first-half, but was a real threat in the second-half when he could be a little more unpredictable. Forrester was perhaps less effective as an inverted winger on his own, but his positioning allowed space for Wallace on the outside which worked for the team as a whole; their link-up was almost telepathic, with back-heels and flicked through-balls generally finding each other.

 

Three changes were made in quick succession by Warburton, with Shiels, Law and Clark coming on for McKay, Forrester and Holt. The game was won, but the Rangers performance suffered from the changes through a lack of width. The game reverted to a end-to-end game, with player taking on player. The earlier success had come through clever inter-play, rather than one-on-one's. (Despite this, Wallace scored a nice fourth goal by taking on his man.) A good defensive display at this state -- Kiernan in particular made a few blocks -- allowed Rangers to see the game out 4-0.

 

Dundee were supposed to be a real step up in class, but a tactically naive approach ceded the centre of the pitch. Despite having a tactical advantage, Rangers still had to go out and do the job, which they did in sublime form. A tactical overload in central areas, allowed Rangers to dominate possession, and the movement and interplay from the forwards left Dundee chasing shadows. A strong performance from every player on the pitch has done much to erase those lingering doubts as to Rangers' ability to perform against top-flight opposition. If we play like this, there's really not much to fear.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Maybe a bit quick to post, but I couldn't help myself! Brilliant performance, and a brilliant result.

 

Warburton's-lack-of-plan-B criticism still seems to linger, but it does him a disservice because today we saw interesting tactical changes, with Miller's false-9 role and the central overload. The link-up play was just terrific at times.

Edited by Rousseau
Link to post
Share on other sites

I think we've seen several plans this season - it's just that the main formation/system remains generally the same.

 

The various changes we do make can be quite subtle but they're evident enough from game to game.

 

PS: I'll publish this tomorrow or Monday mate.

Link to post
Share on other sites

I think we've seen several plans this season - it's just that the main formation/system remains generally the same.

 

The various changes we do make can be quite subtle but they're evident enough from game to game.

 

I think you're spot on. The formation (and the way we move the ball) stays the same, but the personnel and tactics change giving us a different approach game-to-game.

Link to post
Share on other sites

We won because Dundee were confident enough not to park the bus like they did at Parkhead.

The consequence of this will be most SPL 1 teams will park the bus and we'll be faced with 2 banks of 4 defenders next season

Link to post
Share on other sites

Loved the game with top performances from Tav, Wallace, Ball, Holt, McKay & Forrester, and the rest weren't too bad either!

 

To not go too overboard you would have to concede that our opponents played tactically right into our hands with an attacking formation. Their arrogance to believe they could play us at our own game and win was their undoing. No matter our SF opponents, nobody will repeat those tactics against us.

 

Have to laugh at the OP claiming Miller was playing as a false number 9. That is exactly what I have said about him his whole career!! I concede we may not mean the same thing though!

 

Over 100 goals for the season in the first week in March is mightily impressive, especially when at leat half our games have been against 10 man defences. If everyone used the same tactics as Dundee , 200 could have been achieved by May.

 

Morton in the SF and Hibs in the final will do me please!

Link to post
Share on other sites

Loved the game with top performances from Tav, Wallace, Ball, Holt, McKay & Forrester, and the rest weren't too bad either!

 

To not go too overboard you would have to concede that our opponents played tactically right into our hands with an attacking formation. Their arrogance to believe they could play us at our own game and win was their undoing. No matter our SF opponents, nobody will repeat those tactics against us.

 

Have to laugh at the OP claiming Miller was playing as a false number 9. That is exactly what I have said about him his whole career!! I concede we may not mean the same thing though!

 

Over 100 goals for the season in the first week in March is mightily impressive, especially when at leat half our games have been against 10 man defences. If everyone used the same tactics as Dundee , 200 could have been achieved by May.

 

Morton in the SF and Hibs in the final will do me please!

 

Miller had an excellent game today!:)

Link to post
Share on other sites

Loved the game with top performances from Tav, Wallace, Ball, Holt, McKay & Forrester, and the rest weren't too bad either!

 

To not go too overboard you would have to concede that our opponents played tactically right into our hands with an attacking formation. Their arrogance to believe they could play us at our own game and win was their undoing. No matter our SF opponents, nobody will repeat those tactics against us.

 

Have to laugh at the OP claiming Miller was playing as a false number 9. That is exactly what I have said about him his whole career!! I concede we may not mean the same thing though!

 

Over 100 goals for the season in the first week in March is mightily impressive, especially when at leat half our games have been against 10 man defences. If everyone used the same tactics as Dundee , 200 could have been achieved by May.

 

Morton in the SF and Hibs in the final will do me please!

 

I agree with that. Tactically, it played into our hands, but we still had to go out and do it; which we did superbly.

 

I thought Miller was fantastic yesterday. He never played up-top, but was playing in behind, creating space and movement, buzzing all over the place; but it goes to show we don't actually need a 'target-man' if the movement and runners are good from the attacking players -- I think Holt and Miller buzzing about out-witted the Dundee defence, as they didn't know who to mark or close down.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Miller was exceptional yesterday , his movement , desire , willingness to take the ball in ugly positions and play the pass was up there with any great individual performance in recent years .in every great win there is always one player who goes above and beyond your expectations , yesterday was Kennys turn , chapeau ,Kenny , chapeau

Link to post
Share on other sites

Watched the highlights again last night on sportscene - first time in a looooooong time

 

and the second goal - its just a thing of beauty - i know it was only dundee and at home but i reckon that goal must be up there with some of best we've ever scored it started with big kiernan at CH

 

the strides we've taken this year are just incredible

Edited by jhunter
Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.