rocheyb
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I have made this point before in other threads, but now I have a groovy graphic to go with it!
If you play with two up-front, one of whom is an Advanced Forward, then the AF should always play on his preferred side; left-footers on the left and right-footers on the right.
"Why?" you ask. Well, I'll tell you why. It has to do with the relative positions of the ball, the AF and the opposition's closest central defender - as this helpful graphic depicting the plight of the left-footed AF demonstrates (especially if you click to enlarge it):
View attachment 363282
When attacking in the inside-left channel, the Advanced Forward is between the ball and the defender and has the whole of the goal to aim at - including the option to shoot into the far corner?
But when in the inside-right channel there is nothing between the defender and the ball, making the last-ditch sliding tackle that much less prone to conceding a penalty, and your forward's range of motion is restricted to shots into the near side of the goal unless he's happy to try a shot into the far corner with his weaker, less accurate shooting foot - either way, making it a potentially easier save for the Goalkeeper or more likely to miss the target.
And vice-versa for the right-footed Advanced Forward.
"Range of motion, rocheyb?" I can smell your ridicule from here! But, I have watched enough matches on the Comprehensive View during my mammoth (domestic and European silverware-laden) Southampton save to assert that I reckon SI have actually factored this into the game:
Advanced Forwards are more effective when attacking whichever inside channel corresponds to their stronger foot.
If you play with two up-front, one of whom is an Advanced Forward, then the AF should always play on his preferred side; left-footers on the left and right-footers on the right.
"Why?" you ask. Well, I'll tell you why. It has to do with the relative positions of the ball, the AF and the opposition's closest central defender - as this helpful graphic depicting the plight of the left-footed AF demonstrates (especially if you click to enlarge it):
View attachment 363282
When attacking in the inside-left channel, the Advanced Forward is between the ball and the defender and has the whole of the goal to aim at - including the option to shoot into the far corner?
But when in the inside-right channel there is nothing between the defender and the ball, making the last-ditch sliding tackle that much less prone to conceding a penalty, and your forward's range of motion is restricted to shots into the near side of the goal unless he's happy to try a shot into the far corner with his weaker, less accurate shooting foot - either way, making it a potentially easier save for the Goalkeeper or more likely to miss the target.
And vice-versa for the right-footed Advanced Forward.
"Range of motion, rocheyb?" I can smell your ridicule from here! But, I have watched enough matches on the Comprehensive View during my mammoth (domestic and European silverware-laden) Southampton save to assert that I reckon SI have actually factored this into the game:
Advanced Forwards are more effective when attacking whichever inside channel corresponds to their stronger foot.
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