After
calling out all Milan fans on social media following the Genoa match, I was
bombarded on Twitter with all kinds of replies. Some just offered hate, but
that is not anything new to me. Others offered hate in the very way I described,
aimed at only two targets. Some argued with me just to realize that they didn’t
actually disagree. Still others argued points I hadn’t even made, but that is
Twitter for you. However the most curious ones for me were the ones who claim
that we were playing great tactical football ahead of this match. However none of
them could explain exactly what those tactics were or why this squad rotation
was so devastating to them (other than going back to square one and
scapegoating Poli and Honda, of course.) So I thought I would open up the
discussion here, where there are more than 140 characters.
Having players pose as assistant referees does not constitute tactics |
Twitter
is a funny place. But I know that, I’ve been active on Twitter daily for five
and a half years, and I’ve seen enough to make me regret every single day of
that time plus most of my life choices that led me here. So when I call out
fans on Twitter or social media, I do know what I am asking for as well as the
audience that will be receiving me. I didn’t do any of this to be popular, just
to share my opinions. I am stubborn enough to keep putting my opinions out
there, and I feel that growing up in such a large family as well as working
with students with disabilities has equipped me to effectively deal with the children.
And
when I speak of children, I think right away of the person with the account who
gained all of his followers by spreading hate and misinformation and retweeting
others’ comical brilliance. Don’t worry, I know all of you follow him, and yes,
I do think less of you for it. I don’t fear retribution for saying this,
because not only did he insult all of you reading this blog, but he lacks the
attention span/ability to read this far. Plus, everything everyone says or does
on Twitter is public. Well, except for the poor Tweep with the tiny ego who
DMed me after our conversation while I was caring for my sick child, paranoid that I
was tweeting about him. Awww… it reminds me of middle school. (Don’t worry,
he’s since unfollowed me.) But as I said, everything is public, you only have
to look at my timeline and notifications to try to guess how old these people
are.
(Pauses
while people rush to delete their tweets, unlike likes, etc.)
Probably flattering, but the pics of the mothers' basements are just too depressing |
Back to
the subject, though. The overall response on Twitter after the Genoa match was
predictable. Many disagreed with me, claiming that Honda and Poli were the only
reasons that we lost. And then disappearing when I asked if either of those two
had actually committed the red card tackle or the own goal, let in the third
goal, or taken the 13 shots, of which none went in. Although, in all fairness,
some still argued that they were actually at fault for all of those things – you’ve got
to give them credit for sticking to their guns. Even if their guns are just
their fingers and their voices saying “pew pew.”
Some
acknowledged that those two were not exclusively at fault, and certainly not
for the red card or the own goal, but then went on to argue that their poor
play contributed to/caused the loss and that the rotation of players was all
wrong. When I asked people about the rotation, citing match fitness or
potential injury as a possibility, given the close proximity of matches, most
said that fitness didn’t matter or that Suso and Abate (can’t believe people
were arguing for him, a week ago they wanted him gone) should have been rotated
vs. Pescara instead. Which is laughable, that not only defeats the purpose of
rotation based on the schedule, but Pescara at home is a much more winnable
match, better to have a full strength squad. One fan acknowledged that Montella
would know best about the fitness, but then went on to cite other players that
should have been rotated, despite being completely unproven. Points for
creativity there, especially if hindsight is 20/20.
Do please enlighten me the "masterclass tactics" this man has employed, I'm waiting... |
But the
ones that baffled me most are those who bought into the results by believing
that we were playing great tactical football. None of them could tell me what
those tactics were that won us all of those games, or even one reason we were
playing great football. I gave them my opinions about why we weren’t, and have
documented it here after every game this season. But since I have yet to see
this “great tactical football,” I am hoping that some of you can explain to me
what exactly that was. Especially the part that changed so drastically to cause
a defeat like we saw vs. Genoa. Please, if you can, please explain what drastic
alternate tactics Honda and Poli provided that skewed the original tactics so
much. Do me a favor and use the comment section and explain it to me.
A very
wise friend of mine who plays football told me after the Juve game that Milan
were running on “adrenaline and history,”
that we had “no business being in second”
(as a compliment,) and then said “This
isn't ownership or management at this point... it's a club running on
adrenaline.” I honestly couldn’t agree more. Between the youth revolution
(largely due to injuries,) a lot of grinta,
a ton of luck (especially with ref calls,) and some individual brilliance, we
got to where we are. But all of those things ran out on Tuesday as we faced a
team desperate to win, in a stadium that is really tough. Certainly our
previous successes were not from some earth-shattering tactics. Definitely not
from Montella’s glorious possession-based tactics that he described so verbosely
pre-season. But please, I’m curious. Please explain to me these “masterclass”
tactics we’d been playing up until Tuesday, because I honestly haven’t seen
them. And please don’t take the easy route and post others’ ideas or articles,
I’ve probably already seen them.
This
post inspired by the music of NIN’s “Pretty Hate Machine”
Our next match is
Milan
vs. Pescara
Sunday, October 30
• 15:00 CET (10am EDT)*
*note the difference in time as European Daylight Savings Time ends, but the U.S. does not
*note the difference in time as European Daylight Savings Time ends, but the U.S. does not
Invisible Tactics
Reviewed by Elaine
on
12:00 AM
Rating: