A few areas ive looked at from the tactical camera on MOTD.
Here you can see we’ve got the ball relatively unpressured in a good position. Now Neto is out on the wing and Semedo is deep. Ideally Neto should be in the centre offering a pass in the middle of the pitch where they can either give and go, turn and drive at the defence or commit people, pass it out wide to Semedo who can either get a shot in or cross across the face with Neto, Podence, Raul, Donck and possibly the LWB all getting in the box.
Instead it’s all to easy to play against pushing us round the outside where it either needs to go backwards or a cross to no one in the box.
another situation here where Traore has it out wide. He doesn’t get a cross in in this instance but 90% of the time he will. But we only commit two men to the box with the other 4 just hanging outside. Liverpool scored two goals this weekend without even having to move. Simply by having men in the box the defenders made mistakes leaving guys free. Mane missed but then they had 2 queuing up for the rebound. Jota didn’t even have to jump for his. About as free a header as you can get from a standing start in the 6 yard box.
Finally, Podence receiving the ball in a decent position with the opportunity to attack. Again we’ve got 6 men behind the ball. Semedo is actually taking up a good position here and a ball out here would have been a good opportunity for him to work a chance but even still we’d probably only have Neto and Raul in the box. We’re being a possession based team but still in this instance we are trying to be very direct. With 3 at the back, Saiss not very far ahead of Kilman and Donck and Neves dropping deep there no chance of getting men in the box with so many players behind the ball and playing so directly with Podence/Neto/Raul just getting the ball and running rather than working opportunities.
It’s all very safe. By not taking risks you are purely relying on moments of magic to win you games (Raul scoring on his own, Adama picking out the one man in the box, set pieces) rather than creating chances by overloads and forcing mistakes.