Tuesday 31 October 2017

Thinking tactics

I've decided not to play the FM18 Beta, but rather I intend to wait for the full game. It's not that long away now. (I, of course, retain the right to change my mind!) I was going to install the Beta and take a little time examining the Blyth squad I will be inheriting, but then I figured that the final stats in the full game might be different so it might prove a waste of time. So intead, my mind has turned to tactics.

In my (simplistic) mind, there are two ways to view tactics and your team. You either shape your tactics around your squad. Or, alternatively, you shape your squad around your tactics. Historically I've always tended towards the latter. There may be tweaking as I go, but pretty much I tend to decide on a formation for my team at the start of a season and then bring in players to fill the slots. It might not be ideal, and it does tend to lead to large player turn-over each summer, especially at the beginning of a save, but it is the way I play.

With FM, of course, we then have roles within positions and FM18 adds four new ones to the ever-expanding list. I might tweak those as I go, or play with player duties, but for the mostpart, I stick with a formation for a season. I like to have a happy squad (don't we all?) and the idea, for example, of bringing in a DM to cover that slot when we only play with a formation containing a DM one in every five or six games seems a recipe for disharmony to me. Better to have one 'general' formation that I tweak, than two or three very different ones that require different players.

As a Grimsby Town fan I have inherited a love of 4-4-2. Our most successful years were achieved with this most basic of formations. Two up top, two flying wingers, a battler alongside a creator in the middle and a flat back four keeping it tight. No messing. In FM, however, I struggle with the idea of playing AML/R players in the ML/R slots. Philosophically it seems wrong to me. I just can't do it. Therefore I can't bring myself to play 4-4-2.

Having said that, I did play it for a few seasons in my Cleethorpes save on FM16. Ish. It was sort of a doctored 4-4-2. It was my starting formation, in fact. Looking at formation 1 below (which looks like a number 2, I just realised!), you can see what I did. I dropped one of the CMs back to a DM to provide a bit of assymetrical cover for the top-heavy formation. The formation worked for me as I had superior players. I don't know if it would have worked otherwise.

As if to prove that point, as I moved up the leagues it became less effective. There seemed to be a disconnect between my forwards and my midfield. To try to deal with that I pulled one of my strikers back to become an AMC, while playing with two CMs as in formation 2 above. Again, decent scouting meant players playing well below their actual level and I muscled through my promotions. So many goals were scored by one winger crossing to the other to tap in at the far post. My two wingers often outscored my targetman.

A few years later I stumbled across the Strikerless website. As the name suggests it is predominantly focussed on formations that play without a striker. And yet they seemed to work, for Guido at least. I was intrigued and decided to give it a go. I binned all my strikers and wingers one summer, invested funds in AMCs and held my breath. Formation 3 was the formation I purloined. I have to say, it was successful and some of the football my team played was beautiful. I won promotions and cups. But something was missing. Philosophy hit hard. I missed my wingers and playing without a striker was a struggle for me. I was a striker when I played. I couldn't condone abandoning my fellow goal-getters!

By now, Cleethorpes Town were in the Premiership and I could pick up some real quality players. I reverted to widemen and one up top, as in formation 4. Instead of the AMC we'd had in formation 2 I dropped him back to the DMC slot. I decide to branch out a little though, the AML/R became Raumdeuters while the DMC was a Regista. Something a little different. A little continental. And it brought some success, Champions League football and a loss in the 2026/27 CL final (3-2 to Benfica, the buggers!). The football was nice too. But after three seasons, and getting ready for FM18, I fancy a change.

Now I've always been intrigued by the Libero role. The idea of some Beckenbauer type mopping up at the back before striding forward with the ball, releasing someone wide on the wing and then arriving late into the box to slot home. What's not to love? I really want to get a formation like that working. As mentioned before, my indoctrination with 4-4-2 means I am predisposed to two up top. Not wanting to leave the middle empty means a three-man midfield, each with different duties to give me some depth and then the width will come from my fullbacks. Formation 6 is what I have dreamed up. This is what I need to get to work. I toyed with WBs rather than FBs, but I hate the idea of opposition wingers getting down the sides and behind my team so I maintain the flat back four with the libero behind.

"But wait!" I can hear you cry. "You're going to be playing with Blyth in the National League North, right? You might struggle a little to find the definitive Beckenbauer". Don't worry, my friends. I am hearing you. I am going to have to abandon the Libero-experiment until later in my save, I think. I understand I might have been asking too much of players at level 6.

And that's where formation 5 above comes in. It takes my successful formation 4, keeps it 4-3-3-ish, but then removes the complications of Raumdeuters and Registas. Simplification is the name of the game with an Anchorman, two CMs, IFs cutting in to hit the channels and fullbacks overlapping outside. And that's where I intend to start in FM18.

However, having said all of that however, perhaps a Mezzala - Carrilero partnership might dominate the middle of Croft Park. Something to dwell on, I think. 10th November isn't too long away...

Thursday 26 October 2017

#howayblyth

The decision of where to manage in a new iteration of Football Manager is always a tricky decision. Previously I have tended to default to my home-town team, Grimsby Town, but as mentioned previously I do like a good LLM challenge. Sure the Mariners are in League Two, but is that really LLM? Not for me. Three promotions would see me in the Premiership. Where's the challenge in that? 😉

No, true LLM, for me, begins in non-league. The lower the better. I talked last time about my time in FM16 at Cleethorpes Town. Level 9 through to level 1 and a Champions League final (yet to be played, so still potential winners!). That's the LLM I am talking about. As far as I know, the standard FM18 database will follow the usual trend and go down to level 6 in England - the National League North & South. So I had two leagues to choose from.

I've always had a soft spot for Dulwich Halmet. I lived in Camberwell in south London for a few years in the late 90s and their Champion Hill ground was only a mile and half down the road. I never actually managed to make a game, mind, but the option was always there, y'know. They were my 'local' team. Imagine how disappointed I was when I realised they're in the Isthmian League Premier Division, or level 7 of the pyramid. Ooh, so close! #pinkandbluearmy.

After that little misfire I decided it would be prudent to actually look at the contents of the National League North & South rather than just pluck teams out of a hat and then check what league they play in. That little bit of research followed and I narrowed my potential selection down to six teams - five in the North and one in the South:
- FC United
- Salford City
- Gainsborough Trinity
- North Ferriby United
- Blyth Spartans
- Truro City

The first two I can blame on my dad. He's from Manchester, the red side not the blue, and the connections to those first two clubs are obvious. The next two are due to my love of Grimsby Town. Being relatively local, quite often released Mariners or young Town players seeking football on loan would end up at either of those two clubs. I figured if I wasn't going to manage Grimsby directly I could at least manage players with a Grimsby connection. My final two choices are a bit more random. Blyth I chose because a friend of a friend supports them, follows them around the country and has a lot of fun. Truro was more random still. I have no connection to Truro. I have no connection to Cornwall. I've never even been further south in England than the Isle of Wight. I just fancied making all those opposition teams endure endless coach trips down the A30.

I decided that the two north-west teams were too 'trendy' so ruled them out, and the two 'local' teams seemed too similar to my Cleethorpes team to make it interesting. I had spent six or seven of my 12 seasons in that save playing at The Circle in Hull while my ground was upgraded. I really didn't want to have history repeat itself in that way. So that left two. Blyth and Truro. The Spartans and the White Tigers. I couldn't have picked two more geographically opposed teams if I'd tried.


In the end it came down to connections. Having a remote, distant emotional connection to Blyth won the day. I will be homed up in the far north-east for FM18. And anyway, who wouldn't want to manage a club called the Spartans?

Allow me introduce myself

I've been playing about with Football Manager and, before that, Championship Manager since the mid-90s. I think Championship Manager 2 was probably the first version I played. I installed it on my PC at work and spent every lunchtime on it, day after day, week after week. I remember managing my beloved Grimsby Town (of course), Sheffield United and exploring the lower reaches of the Italian leagues. I recently spent far too long scouring the Serie C1 league tables from that time to try to remember who I managed but I think that nugget of information might be lost now to the mists of time. All the names seem familiar, but that's to be expected when you spend hours examining the weaknesses of your opponents, I guess.

The early 2000s were dominated by Championship Manager. Most iterations of the game saw two saves. I'd start with Grimsby Town. It was hard not to. But then the second half of the year would see me finding a team in the lower reaches of the English division to raise to glory. For me there really is nothing like promotion through the divisions. I branched out one year and toyed with Belgium for a little while. Or maybe it was the Netherlands. There might have been a Scottish adventure in there too along the way. Who can remember?

One save that particularly sticks with me (CM4 perhaps) was taking Leyton Orient to the Premier League and Europe. I don't think I ever won the league but I got close. I vividly remember being sacked with the team in 4th or 5th. I'd had taken them from the fourth division to the heights of the English game. The board's expectations had outgrown their finances though and I was blamed. I don't think I've ever forgiven Orient for that. It's strange how our virtual experiences can tar our real life opinions, eh?

I made the move with Sports Interactive from CM to FM but after a couple of seasons life got in the way. I still bought the game each year (me? addicted? never!) but time in the game was significantly reduced. After some 'time off' I experimented with FM09, FM12, FM13, FM14 but only logged a combined three hours playing time in this period. According to my Steam log I bought and installed FM15 too but never even played it!

FM16 was where the bug re-bit me however. I wanted a change. Something different. I discovered custom databases and this was the hook that snagged me. As I have already mentioned I love a bit of LLM (kinda necessary when you're a Grimsby Town fan!) and the idea of loading leagues down to the 10th or 11th level was intriguing. Added to that was the attraction that I could take another of my local teams from my home-town and pilot them through the stormy waters of lower league anonymity to European predominance. I tossed up between Grimsby Borough and Cleethorpes Town and coin fell on the side of the Owls over the Wilderness Boys. I can't remember why, but anyhow Cleethorpes Town. Northern Counties East League Premier Division. Level 9 of the English football pyramid.

12 seasons later, Cleethorpes Town are in the Premiership. I finished in mid-table in 2024/25, cracked the top four in 2025/26 and am currently nearing the end of 2026/27. With one league game left I am locked in for fifth but I have two games left. My final game of the season, and probably my final game of FM17 I suppose, is the Champions League final. I can't remember where I am playing. I can't even remember who I am playing. It doesn't really matter. Win or lose I can resign from Cleethorpes Town with my head held high.

And then, on to FM18!