Season ticket holder for over 25 years. Iāve been in London for the past five, still making the trips back (and lining the pockets of EMRās CEO every other week).
Today was grim. The side looks more disjointed than I can remember. For me, the core issue isnāt just individuals being off form, itās the structureāespecially in midfieldāand how that cascades across the entire team.
1. The midfield problem
At our best last season, we had a functional pivot:
- Souza: the destroyer. Broke up play, did the dirty work, and released the ball quickly.
- Peck: the playmaker. Received it, dictated tempo, fed the attackers.
That sequence mattered because the transition window between ball recovery and ball progression is tinyāmaybe two seconds. When Souza won it and released quickly, the forwards used that micro-transition to get into shape. Peck then had angles and options to push us forward.
Now, Peck is being asked to do both jobs. Heās tackling, recovering, and immediately trying to progress. The problem: by the time he looks up, the forward line hasnāt shifted. He plays it anyway, but 80ā90% of the time itās into a static front line. The move dies before it starts.
2. Knock-on effects
This midfield imbalance has consequences everywhere else:
- Forwards: OāHare and Hamer arenāt turning possession over high up the pitch, because theyāre already advanced, waiting for service that never comes. It leaves them spectators until the ball is lost.
- Centre-backs: with the midfield screen missing, the two CBs are exposed. Theyāre being asked to defend wider spaces with less protection.
- Wing-backs: Burrows and Seriki are neutralised. A wing-back system relies on them breaking forward to give width and overlaps. Instead, theyāre pinned back, constantly firefighting, which means we never stretch teams horizontally.
3. Attacking predictability
Because the wing-backs arenāt advancing, both wingers are left isolated. And since both are inverted, their only real option is to cut insideāevery single time. Opposition defences know it, set themselves, and suddenly our strikers are outnumbered two or three to one in the box. We end up recycling sideways or losing it altogether.
4. Why it matters
This isnāt about a few players being off colourāitās systemic. A chain reaction that starts with imbalance in midfield and ripples across defence and attack. Without a destroyer-creator balance, everything else collapses:
- Defence is stretched.
- Wing-backs canāt provide width.
- Wingers are predictable.
- Strikers are isolated.
And the real concern: this isnāt hard to spot. I noticed it in the opening couple of games. Weāre now four in, and nothing has been addressed. That suggests itās not just formāitās either a tactical blind spot or a refusal to adapt.
TLDR
- Peck is being asked to do both destroyer and playmaker roles.
- That kills the transition window and nullifies half our attacks.
- OāHare/Hamer too high, CBs exposed, wing-backs pinned back.
- Attack is predictable: inverted wingers cutting in every time, strikers isolated.
- Until balance is restored in midfield, the whole structure unravels.
Iām not claiming to be an expert or a coachāIāve got no badges, just years of watching football home and away. But when youāve seen enough games, you start to notice patterns, and this one has been obvious from the first whistle of the season. That said, footballās all about perspective, and Iād genuinely welcome other views. Maybe Iām over-simplifying it, maybe Iāve missed something. Either way, it would be good to hear how others are reading the same problems.