Our Shots on Goal (1 Viewer)

Nick

Administrator
Have said for a while, why can't we shoot? Watching other teams at how clinical they are, they have a couple of shots and score.

All we have is shots blocked or wide, not even shots that look to be going in and make you stand up and then go just wide.

Are they doing any sort of shooting practise? When you watch us warmup before the game doing shots the players fuck about, they have a laugh and try tricks.

I watched MK Dons last week, all they were focused on was putting the ball in the net. Most shots were flying in.
 

Alan Dugdales Moustache

Well-Known Member
we're just crap.
 

Alan Dugdales Moustache

Well-Known Member
Doesn't matter if their players are better of worse as individuals. Collectively they are better. That is down to management.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Have said for a while, why can't we shoot? Watching other teams at how clinical they are, they have a couple of shots and score.

All we have is shots blocked or wide, not even shots that look to be going in and make you stand up and then go just wide.

Are they doing any sort of shooting practise? When you watch us warmup before the game doing shots the players fuck about, they have a laugh and try tricks.

I watched MK Dons last week, all they were focused on was putting the ball in the net. Most shots were flying in.
We're extremely negative. Shooting will never be accurate when it's more often than not from outside the box. I'm sick of managers and their obsession with 1 up front.
 

stupot07

Well-Known Member
We're extremely negative. Shooting will never be accurate when it's more often than not from outside the box. I'm sick of managers and their obsession with 1 up front.
Competely agree. We rarely create clear cut opportunities or get in behind defences for 1-1's, etc. A good 70-80% of our shots are from 18 yard plus.

Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk
 

Sky Blue Harry H

Well-Known Member
They say confidence is a huge thing and today has clearly been a tipping point for most in their support or not for MV as a manager of any sort. That has to have spread to the players. The lack of basic organisation / grit and desire has to come down to the manager. The quality of what he has to work with is down to the cost cutting and poor decision making with the purchases (but mainly the cost cutting). You pay peanuts.........
 

Nick

Administrator
They say confidence is a huge thing and today has clearly been a tipping point for most in their support or not for MV as a manager of any sort. That has to have spread to the players. The lack of basic organisation / grit and desire has to come down to the manager. The quality of what he has to work with is down to the cost cutting and poor decision making with the purchases (but mainly the cost cutting). You pay peanuts.........

Yes but the pay peanuts stuff doesn't stack up in a league where most don't even pay that.
 

oucho

Well-Known Member
I doubt Cambridge have a bigger budget than us. We have got Sordell and it seems to me he is crying out to playing with a second striker, yet he's used as a wide player or as part of a front three that becomes a front one when we lose possession. MV was right that nobody knows what the best team is....I suggest that "our best team" doesn't include 11 players from the current squad.
 

davebart

Active Member
Yes I think you can tell a lot from how players approach the warm-up. They are effectively at work and so should be taking it just as seriously as any other training session and doing a professional job. It doesn't have to be un-enjoyable but it does have to be focused.
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
Instead of changing the formation and tactics every game in an attempt to counter the opposition, we need to settle on a formation and tactics to play consistently every game so everyone knows their role and everyone else's role. If anyone is injured/suspended, we need to draft in a replacement for the missing player in the vacated position and not reshuffle the entire team around. We shouldn't have to rethink our formation or tactics just because our opponents have a big striker or a fast winger.
 

steve82

Well-Known Member
It needs a new man to come in, a complete outsider to look at this current crop on the payroll and use it the best he can in a fresh perspective.
For me it's 442, if things ain't working revert to what were all taught a basic 442 and everyone is comfortable with.
Use mcbean until his loan spell is up as a target man to feed sordell, use sordell simply as a fox in and around the box. Agyei as a sub and Reid as a traditional winger.
 

stevefloyd

Well-Known Member
To be honest I don't think Sordell is a fox in the box for that you need someone clinical and although he works hard his career stats suggest he is not clinical
 

Gazolba

Well-Known Member
To be honest I don't think Sordell is a fox in the box for that you need someone clinical and although he works hard his career stats suggest he is not clinical
We can't afford anyone 'clinical'. They don't grow on trees (to use TM's expression), they cost money, and they don't want to play for a struggling L1 club. When we recruited Armstrong, Kent, Murphy and Cole, we were flying high promotion candidates.
 

Terry Gibson's perm

Well-Known Member
We need to go back to a basic 442 with bloody wingers who can cross the ball to the two strikers and can kick the ball with the correct foot rather than always cutting inside. Yes when we played it we got over run in midfield but let's change it and get the ball to the wingers and tell them to attack which will keep the ball off the opposition.

As things are going we will go down with a whimper I would prefer to go down with a bang by having a go.
 

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