..... But yes we badly need a DM, but it's looking unlikely, could be our downfall if we don't.
Reminds me, this was a brilliant piece on the Mourinho DM by Delaney last week I meant to post:
Why Jose Mourinho is so desperate for the right defensive midfielder to be the base for Manchester United to play from | The Independent
Which leads into why I find this coming season SO fascinating. The different tactical approaches/ philosophies of the top managers.
The DM position is just one example. Forgetting the rest of the league who invariably sit in and defend against the top 6 regardless, there's really only Mourinho and Conte to a lesser extent left (And Rafa but as Newcastle aren't a top 6 side we'll ignore them), who are still 'old school' and rolling with that traditional approach that has worked in the main for him. Totally the polar opposite to the newer, more progressive bread like Guardiola and Klopp who just want to get as many footballers on the pitch and let them interchange and work it out for themselves. Keita being the perfect topical example. We (Liverpool) now look for all-round midfielder that are more, I guess you'd say, box-to-box. Guys that are effective both ends of the park and will be comfortable anywhere on the pitch. It's a throwback to the pre-PL years with all round midfielders like Robson and Reid and McMahon who were effective all over. Before the 'DM' term and a specific position became vogue. Real Madrid have won back-to-back Champions League by having more players in there that can beat a man as well as defend (Modrics a great example) to open things up. Rather than just winning it and then laying it off. Pep has that bizarre sounding dream to have eleven midfielders on the pitch at any one time that can play total football in any position. (Although to be fair I think he's already secretly testing this theory by having City play without a goalkeeper ......). Where as Mourinho goes the other way and sticks to his tried and trusted formula from when he won the European Cup with Porto and every stop in between.
The contrast between managers that just allow players to go out and play, and the few still going down the rigid set route who are quite prepared to make a game as ugly as it needs to get the result is a fascinating flux at the very top end. With those key games against each other invariably separating where the top clubs finish.
I don't think the PL has ever had such a diverse dichotomy of tactical approaches that have to be solved. You're having to find one way against 13 other clubs. Then a whole other against your immediate competitors. Why transfers are becoming more complex, taking longer, and costing more as you're needing the absolute cream of the crop to stay ahead and meet all these different challenges.
Gonna' be a fascinating season watching it play out.
And if my rambling was too long there, just enjoy Delaney's excellent breakdown of what's served Utd's manager so well in the key DM roles in his teams.