Top Eleven Being A Successful Manager Guide by justdome
This will answer most of your questions if not all about improving your managerial skills.
Please also bear in mind that the game engine has been tweaked since this invaluable information was given.
This is an attempt at compiling a semi-complete guide that’ll help
new players better understand this awesomely addictive game. I hope it
answers many of the common questions about formations, tactics, players,
improvement and so forth.
Before starting I’d like to thank you all for playing, as each and
every one of you are the bricks to this game. Always remember to have
fun and that the only true way to succeed is to experiment, as no guide
can be as complete as to serve as a walkthrough to the complexity of
countless options Top Eleven offers.
As the game is constantly being updated, I’ll try to keep up with the
changes, but if you notice something wrong please let me know so I can
correct it faster.
Thank you.
Contents.
1. Teams. How to build one.
2. Players.
2.1 Age.
2.2 Special abilities.
2.3 Purchasing players.
3. Training & Improvement.
3.1 Purchasing roles & special abilities.
3.2 Skill point assigning: Defense, Attack and P&M.
3.3 Skill advancement table.
4. Tactics: How they work.
4.1 Mentality.
4.2 Pitch pressure.
4.3 Flank, mixed and central passing.
4.4 Some like it short others love them long (passes).
4.5 Tackling.
4.6 Marking style
4.7 Free kick, corner kick and penalty takers.
4.8 Force counter and offside trap.
5. Basic formations and their counters.
5.1 Choosing the right formation & advanced formations.
5.1.1 Illegal formations.
1. Team
If you plan on playing more than 1 competition, and specially if you
plan on playing all 3 competitions (League, Champions and Cup). You’ll
need a complete roster with 22 players that play as 2 separate but very
similar teams of 11. For that you’ll need:
– 5 to 6 DC’s
– 2 DMC’s
– 2DL/DML and 2DR/DMR
– 2ML/AML and 2MR/AMR
– 4 to 5 MC’s
– 2 AMC’s
– 3 to 4 ST’s
– 2 GK’s
It should look something like this:
This was my squad at the end of last season, notice that I’m an
ML/AML and an AMR short. But even with 4 injured players, I can still
field a very decent team.
Versatility is highly recommended. Players that have more than one
position come in very handy when you have injured or penalised players. I
try to always buy players that have at least 2 positions.
Using a player outside ther natural position should be avoided
whenever possible, but isn’t the end of the world as long as it’s not
too far away from that position vertically or horizontally (but not in
diagonal, except for strikers).
So a DMC will make a decent DC, DML, DMR and MC and a ST will make a
decent AMC, AML and AMR. Just don’t do this too often or the player’s
form will drop (Yes, in some instances your goalkeeper can have better
finishing skill than your main striker, but if you use him as a striker
he won’t perform according to his stats and his form will drop like a
bomb).
2. Players.
2.1 Age:
Young players develop quickly if your facilities are upgraded and you
play them every day. Careful though, a young player means that he’ll be
around the same number of stars for longer, not that he’ll become a
great player with time (Unless you fail to qualify for the next tier,
has an huge training factor or you spend a big ammount of tokens in
training). A 2 star player from your youth facilities will –at best-
remain with 2 stars for the next season.
Older players are sometimes preferable, as you’ll receive more stars
for the same amount of money. Yes, they won’t develop as quickly, but
you’ll get at least a good season from them. It comes down to the amount
of money and tokens you are planning to spend. If you have a lot of
resources, then buy 4 star young players, if you have limited resources,
it’s better to buy a 4 star 28 year old than a 3 star 22 year old.
The only difference will be how many seasons they’ll stay in your team.
I don’t recommend buying players older than 27 or 28 as they develop
around 8 times slower than young players. That means that next season
they won’t be of much use.
2.2 Special ability:
If you have to choose between a good player without a special ability
and a mediocre player with one, go for the good player. Special
abilities are only really useful on players with good quality. A 5 star
plain goalkeeper will be many times better than a 4 star One-on-one
specialist. Of course, a 5 star one-on-one specialist is amazing (but
I’d still prefer a 6 star plain goalkeeper). The above is specially true
for CS and FS specialities. A plain player with 30 crossing skill will
be much better at corner kicks than a Corner specialist with 20 crossing
skill.
SS-Shadow striker. This players have improved shots from the attacking midfield area. This is desirable for AML,AMR and AMC.
DR-Dribbling specialist. This players have an easier time avoiding
markers and getting to the attaking portion of the field to shoot or
short pass. This is desirable on ML,MR, MC, AML, AMR, AMC and ST.
PM-Playmaker. This players have improved passing skills and are useful both on midfield and attacking midfield.
OS-One-on-one scorer. This players have improved scoring chances when
facing the goalkeeper from a short distance. Highly desirable for ST
and somewhat desirable for attacking midfielders.
FS-Free kick specialist. Probably the most noticeable specilty if
used on a good player. A 5 star FS player will rarely miss a free kick.
As more and more people use hard tackling, investing on a great FS
player is a must. A good free kick taker has high shooting and high
crossing skills.
CS-Corner specialist. Another noticeable specialty if used on a player with good crossing skills.
OS-One-on-one stopper. The exact opposite of one-on-one scorer.
PS-Penalty specialist. Generally a waste. Any decent player will
score a penalty and there aren’t many penalties to be scored anyway.
PS-Penalty kick stopper. Generally a waste. It’s hard to stop
penalties, even for 5 star GK’s with this specialty. It’s only useful in
Champions and Cup matches that are defined in a penalty shoot out.
DW-Defensive wall. This players have improved chances of stopping mid range shots on goal. Highly desirable for Defenders.
AD-Aerial defender. This players have improved chances of blocking crosses. Highly desirable for Defenders.
2.3 Purchasing
Buying players requires a lot of thought, skill and luck, or a bunch
of tokens. Sometimes a combination of both. The higher your level, the
steeper the curve. The first few seasons you can buy 4 star players with
very few tokens, but as you advance, you’ll find that an 18 year old 4
star player with a specialty can easily be sold for up to 3 times it’s
value after 50+ rounds.
Luckily, the difference between players is also reduced with each
season. In season 1 the skill difference between a 2 star player (10
skill) and a 4 star player (20 skill) is 100%. By season 4 the skill
difference is only 25%. In higher seasons where it’s very hard to
purchase 4 star players, the difference is barely noticeable.
So if you are struggling to keep a good team because you can’t afford
to buy tokens, focus on advancing to the next tiers. It’ll be easier to
have a competitive team then. Of course, in those tiers most players
will have a lot of skill.
General Strategy:
Most advanced and wealthy managers will target the youngest, most
expensive best available players. If your target is a 4-5 star 18 year
old with a specialty, be ready to compete against people that not only
know what they are doing, but also have the resources for it.
That young player can easily be great for 4 seasons, good for another
2 and decent for his final 2. You can play him beyond that, but he’ll
just won’t make the difference he did when you first bought him. On the
other hand, you can purchase 2 older players of comparable skill for
less resources and hassle. The downside is that they won’t last as long.
When to buy
Plan ahead and buy at the start of a season. If you buy a 4 star
player the last day of a season, he’ll have become a 3 star player next
season with a much decreased value. This is very important for young
players you want to develop, as you want them to grow along with your
team while they are useful at the same time.
For example: If you buy an expensive 21 year old 4-star player at the
end of the season, he’ll become a 22 year old 3-star player within a
couple of days and he’ll remain with 3 stars much of the season, then
reach 4 stars by the end of the season and repeat the cycle until age
catches up with him. This player will be mediocre for as long as you
keep him. You would be much better off waiting for next season and
buying an older 4 star player.
The exception to this is to look for bargains at the end of the
season. As the season end draws near, I “unload” the players that I feel
won’t be able to keep up with the rest of the squad. This commonly
means 4 star players, sometimes with a specialty, that I sell for their
lowest sale value just to make room for players next season. Die-hard
fanatics (like me) do this every season. If your team is below par, many
of this players will be above average even after the new season starts.
Comparative value between players.
You’ll often see 2 players with the same age and number of stars with different value.
This is because of a combination of 2 reasons:
-Training speed and specialty
A player with a specialty will be worth somewhat more than a plain
player, but the main difference comes from training speed. To spot this
difference is vital if you wish to buy a young player.
A young player with slow training speed won’t develop fast enough to
make a difference or keep up with the team. In time he’ll age without
ever having grown to fulfill your expectations. On the other hand, a
young player with fast training speed will probably outgrow your older
players and be with the team a long time. The difference can be huge,
with some players gaining skills 2-3 times faster than others of the
same age.
Notice the hefty difference in improvement between this players after a normal stretching session.
So how can I spot the comparative value? Simple. Just look for 2
players with the same age & skill level. The most expensive one will
train faster. (The difference can be up to 3 times the value between
each player).
For older players this isn’t nearly as important, and if anything,
it’s important in the opposite way. You don’t want to overpay for a 28
year old with a high training factor since he won’t develop much anyway.
You’d be better off with a cheaper player with more stars.
Edit: To clear some confusion. The value of a player depends on his skill, age and training speed, not the other way around.
3 Training & Improvement.
Training your players is one of the key factors to this game. How fast a player improves depends on 6 factors:
– Average skill
Undeveloped players will gain skill points faster than players that
are already very good. For instance, a 2 star player will train roughly
twice as fast as one with 4 stars (Considering the remaining 5 factor
are the same for both).
– Intensity & Type of training
There really isn’t a reason apart from time to use anything but
normal intensity. Hard intensity increases your gains by the same
ammount it increases the condition loss but with a higher chance of
injury.
Remember, always train after you played all your matches for the day.
First add how much condition you’ll recover until your next match the
next day and train accordingly. Players recover 5% every 3 hours, so if
it’s 10:00AM and my next match is at 9:00AM the next morning I’ll
recover 35% condition. That means I should train until my players are
around 64% condition, that way they’ll be back to 99% condition by the
time I need them to play.
Note: Be careful not to overtrain your players as this will lead to
poor performance in your games if they start out already tired.
– Age.
I’ve already covered much of this above. Players from 18 to 21 train
very fast. 22 to 25 train fast. 26 to 29 still improve (although slowly)
and players older than that improve only a small portion of what a
young player does.
To exemplify, this is the result after 1 normal stretching session (which should yield 10% increase):
As you can see, the age multiplier is around x8, x4, x2 and x1 for
the youngest bracket to the oldest. This means that under equal
circumstances, the youngest players will gain 8 times as many points as
the oldest.
Note: Please consider that all the other factors affect the result so
it’s possible for an old player with a high training factor that played
a match to actually train faster than a young player with a low
training factor that didn’t get any time on the pitch.
– Level of your training facilities.
It’s imperative that your training facilities are improved to the
maximum available level. Not only will you get green medkits more often
(to restore player’s condition) but your player’s improvement is
enhanced by them.
– Training factor.
Also discussed above in the players & purchasing post (comparative value).
– Playing regularly.
In order to improve at it’s fullest, a player must play every day.
Not only do you get valuable skill point after the match, but those who
played will get extra benefit from their training that day. Players in
the bench also gain some improvement, but much less than those on the
starting 11. Lastly, players that don’t play will gain very little
improvement. Be warned however, players also need rest from time to
time. If you always use the same players their form will drop (this is
discussed below).
This is where having 2 complete teams of 11 players becomes
important. It gives you the opportunity to improve everyone without
over-exerting your key players. Successful and lucky managers, will be
playing 2 games per day (League and CL or Cup). In case you only have 1
game, play a friendly match so everyone gets some pitch action.
3.1 Purchasing roles & special abilities.
As I mentioned before, in earlier levels, better quality players are
more desirable than players with a specialty. But there’s no reason you
can’t have both if your player has a high training factor and he’s young
and undeveloped enough to make it worth it. I don’t recommend buying
specilties for older players for the reasons I described in 2.2, mainly
that most specialties requiere that your player is very good to make any
difference and that it’s very hard to earn skill points with those
developed players.
If your player already has 3-4 stars and is 18 or 19 years old (maybe
even 20) and you plan to keep him for a long time, then go ahead and
purchase a specialty or a new role. Just keep in mind that it takes
40-50 training points to do so, enough to earn 3 skill levels. So the
choice between a normal striker with 40 skill or a one-on-one striker
with 37 skill is yours.
On the other hand, older players will probably take over a season to
gain 50 skill points, and by the time your 4 star 26 year old striker
manages to become a one-on-one striker he won’t be very good anymore.
Even if you use tokens, they are better spent in younger players, as you
get a much better return in training/tokens used.
As you level up, this changes a little every season. Since the
difference between skill levels becomes less dramatic (as described in
point 2.3), the cost of opportunity to gain a specialty becomes less
steep. For instance, a plain DC with 90 skill VS an aerial defender DC
with 87 skill.
3.2 Skill point assigning: Defense, Attack and P&M.
A common question is whether to spend any skill points in defense in a
striker, or attack in a defender, and there is no undeniably right
answer to that. It’s a matter of personal choice.
All skills are of some value to each kind of player. For instance, a
striker that you never spend skill points in defense will have very low
heading skill, receive a lot of crosses and miss them. He’ll score most
of his goals through his shooting and finishing skills. A defender that
you never spend any attack skill points will have a very low passing
score, so even after a successful tackle, he’ll send a pass that’ll get
intercepted.
For the above reason, I try to keep my players somewhat balanced. My
defenders have no more than 6 points in their primary skills (defensive)
than in attack, and my strikers have no more than 6 points in their
primary skills (attack) than in defensive. My midfielders are perfectly
balanced while defensive midfielders are a little tilted towards
defensive and attacking midfielders towards attack.
Physical & mental skills are valuable to everyone so I keep this
skills at the same level as the primary skills for a player. If you
spend all your striker’s skill points in attack, he’ll not only miss all
his headers, but will also be very slow, will lack stamina and will
lose the ball frequently when contested.
A matter of great controversy are the skills needed by a Goalkeeper.
Sadly, I don’t have an answer. I like to think that instead of needing
the actual skills, a goalkeeper’s success is measured in raw level,
something like a 40 skill level GK is better than a 39 skill level GK no
matter where the points are spent. Of course, at the moment, I’m just
guessing like everybody else.
3.3 Skill to advancement table.
1 star = 5 skill levels.
1 skill level = 3 skill grades.
1 skill grade = 5 skill points.
So it’s 75 skill points to earn a star.
4 Tactics: How they work.
To understand the tactical choices in Top Eleven, you must see them
as tiny parts of a machine, formations included. They can’t be taken
apart as they are part of a whole. You must understand what you are
doing like if it were real players in a real match. After all, you don’t
see Pep Guardiola managing Barcelona using 3 strikers and 3 attacking
midfielders and ordering them to play defensively while chasing the ball
all over the pitch trying man-on-man marking, do you?.
4.1 Mentality.
This is the measurement of how much your players will attempt to go
forward and attack. Defensive mentality means they’ll play cautiously,
and attacking mentality means that even your defenders will move forward
to support your attacks. It also affects how much your players will
shoot, cross and pass, which could lead to goals (good), losing
possession (bad) and even counter-attacks (awful).
4.2 Pitch pressure.
This is the measurement of how far into the pitch your players will “chase” the ball.
Own half means that once the ball is in your opponent’s possesion and
within your half of the field, available players within their marking
reach will attempt to take the ball away from the attacking player.
Whole pitch means that all your players will attempt to take away the
ball from all opponents within their marking reach no matter where they
are. This tires the players more, but as you gain control of the ball
further into the opposing side of the pitch, it also improves your
chances at goal. Of course, it also means that all your players will be
further up the pitch, leaving you vulnerable to counter-attacks.
4.3 Flank, mixed and central passing.
This is where you choose where most of your passes will be, or where
your players will try to move the ball from and to. Among the most
important tactics, as this is the “steering wheel” of your formation.
This can make or break a formation if chosen right or wrong.
Obviously, in order to use flank passing, you need a formation with
wingers and in order to use center passing effectively, you need players
in the middle.
4.4 Some like it short others love them long (passes).
Short passing: High ball possesion, a lot of time between plays. Needs a solid midfield that can feed passes to the forwards.
Long passing: Low ball possesion, little time between plays. This
passes may fly past opposing midfielders and land succesfully near a
striker. Ideal for counter-attacking football.
4.5 Tackling.
This is the intensity with which your players will try to disposses the opponent.
-Easy tackling. Use this if your opponent has a high skill free kick
specialist or if you don’t want to risk getting penalised, specially if
your players have low form.
-Normal tackling. This is what you’ll use most of the time, a decent
tackling rate without having to deal with too many free kicks and cards.
-Hard tackling. Use this when playing against better teams, specially
those without Free kick specialists. Using hard tackling and having
defensive wall defenders and a good goalkeeper is a good strategy. Be
aware that players with low form will get penalised very often with this
kind of tackling.
4.6 Marking style
By far, the most difficult tactical aspect to understand, adapt and
use. There are too many factors that affect and are affected by marking
type to write a simple walkthrough: Lenght of passes, crosses and shots,
difference in defender VS striker quality, formations, condition… The
best I can do is point the guidelines to help understand when to use
each kind of marking.
-Man-on-man marking:
This kind of marking means that every player is assigned an opposing
player. They’ll chase that player wherever he goes when defending and
only leave his side when attacking. Defenders are assigned to block
strikers, defensive midfielders and wingbacks are assigned to block
attacking midfielders, midfielders are assigned to block the opponent’s
and lastly, strikers are assigned to mark the ocasional attacking
defenders.
For the above reasons, man-on-man marking is only useful if your
formation has enough defenders to stop the strikers, enough defensive
midfielders to stop the attacking midfielders and so on.
There is a definite advantage of man-on-man marking over zonal when
it comes to intercepting long passes, through balls and specially
blocking long shot attempts. The downside is that since only one player
is marking, if the opponent manages to dribble or nutmeg past his
marker, he’ll be in the clear unless the defender is much faster and
catches up.
Notes: If the opposing strikers are better than your defenders, don’t
ever use man-on-man marking. it also works the other way around, if
your defenders are better you should probably use it.
One of the best ways to lower your opponent’s possesion is to use
man-on-man marking, as his players will be forced to try to dribble,
nutmeg, shoot, cross or pass earlier instead of holding the ball around
the zone.
-Zonal marking
A much more modern approach to marking. Players are entrusted with an
specific part of the field (zone) and then marks any attacker that
enters his zone. This also means than more than 1 player will mark an
attacker that enter their zone. In Top Eleven, this zone is defined as 1
“square” away from the player in every direction.
Zonal marking is like “minesweeper”, in the picture below you can see
a 4-4-2 formation (left) and how many players are guarding a square
zone (right).
Zonal marking allows a greater number of formations; not having to
limit your defense to fit your opponent’s exact attack. The downside of
zonal marking is that it leaves open spaces that can be exploited by
long shots and that it allows your opponent to take his time when in
possession of the ball, which isn’t a good idea if you are behind in the
score.
4.7 Free kick, corner kick and penalty takers.
Free kicks come in 2 kinds: Shots on goal and crosses. For those
reasons, your free kick takers should have high shooting and crossing
skills.
Corner kicks: They are crosses from either side of the opponent’s
goal. Your corner kick takers should be right footed for right corner
kicks and left footed for left corner kicks and in both cases have high
crossing skill. Using the correct footed player is very important, as a
plain right footed player will be better crossing a right corner kick
than a left footed corner specialist (unless he also has a much higher
crossing skill).
Penalties: Hard to stop even for the best goalkeepers. Your designated penalty kick taker should have high shooting skill.
4.8 Force counter and offside trap.
-Force counter: With this tactic you allow the opposing players to
come forth into your half of the pitch before you attempt to deposes
them and send a long pass or through ball in a fast counter-attack that
catches the defenders off-guard. If successful, the defenders will be
too far up to catch the counter attacker, if unsuccessful, you let the
opponent run uncontested into your half.
Since you are letting the opponent run free until they are in an
attacking position, using force counter leads to an obvious and
voluntary loss of possession.
Force counter can only work while pressing your own half. Defensive
mentality is highly recommended as you don’t want to let the opponent
into your half and have all your players on his own at the same time.
-Offside trap: This style of play means that your defenders will try
to stay ahead of the opponent’s attackers so they can’t receive passes
of any kind. If successful, the opponent won’t be able to get close
enough to the goal, if unsuccessful, the attacker will be able to
out-run the defender. For that reason, offside trap requires very fast
defenders.
Offside trap can only work while pressing the whole pitch, as you
need your defenders to try and stay as far up as they can. This also
means that offside trap is much better suited for attacking mentality.
5. Formations.
5.1 Choosing the right formation & advanced formations.
Undoubtedly the most important part of winning a match, a carefully
chosen and deployed formation is what separates the wheat from the
chaff. While people spending tokens will have a much easier time
winning, people who understand how formations work have a very good
chance of competing.
Recently I was asked if I had (bought or found) a guide with all the
formations and tactics. The answer was a categorical NO. As some
experienced managers (myself included) have pointed out, there aren’t
magical formations that allow you to win every time. In fact, it’s
actually the opposite, the most important skill in Top 11 is the ability
to adapt to different situations. Relying on ANY given formation only
leads to disaster. So instead of trying to post a guide saying what
formation to use VS another, I’ll post tips that aim to teach how to
choose your formation for each game. As the saying goes, “Give a man a
fish and you’ll feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you’ll feed
him for a lifetime”.
While much better than the average player, I’m far from unbeatable,
and with a little practice anyone can become better than me. It’s all a
matter of learning to use what I call “Counter and deploy”. This
concept, in it’s purest form, means that you counter the opponent’s
attack and then deploy an attack that exploits his weak spots.
To understand what counter & deploy means, first we need to divide formations into 2 categories:
– Generalistic
– Specific attack
Generalistic formations: The Jacks of all trades but masters of none.
They allow you to use them more often against a varied number of
formations. The downside is that while they don’t have major weaknesses,
they don’t target specific parts of the opponent’s defense. When used
in conjunction with zonal marking they become auto-pilot formations,
ideal for those times when you won’t be able to play for a few days or
when you sincerely don’t have the slightest idea how to beat an
opponent.
4-4-2 , 4-4-1-1, 4-1-4-1, 4-1-3-2 wide, 4-1-3-2 narrow, 4-2-3-1,
5-3-2 motivated flat, 5-4-1 flat and 3-2-3-2 are some examples (but
there are plenty more, specially if using total football philosophy).
……….4-4-2……………………………. 4-4-1-1………………………… 4-1-4-1………………………..4-1-3-2 wide………..
………… 4-2-3-1………………………. 5-3-2…………………………..5-4-1 flat…………………………3-2-3-2…………..
As you may notice, they are somewhat tilted towards defense, they are
solid both in their flanks and in the middle, and any combination of
attackers will have a relatively hard time scoring unless your opponent
focuses on an all-attack formation, in which case he’ll leave his
formation open to a small but somewhat effective attack from your team.
On the other hand, you won’t target an specific weakness and this
kind of formation’s attack is sub-par. You are also a little exposed to
specific attacks. It’s important to mention that in the long run, a
well-managed team with specific attack formations will beat generalistic
formations most of the time.
So, how do I set a Generalistic formation?
While it’s possible to use man-on-man marking with Generalistic
formations (GF), most of the time you’ll be using zonal marking. The
reason is simple: in order for a GF to work, your players need to be
deployed in such a way that there are the least ammount of “uncovered”
squares in your half of the pitch. Zonal marking allows your players to
move 1 space around them to block an opposing player (A more detailed
explanation about marking is explained in above in 4.6).
Use no less than 7 players between midfield and your half. Your
midfield should be strong, (with and a special emphasis on flank
defense) as you want to have as much possesion as possible . Most of the
time this means deploying a ML and MR, but an exception can be made if
you are using DML/DMR such as in 3-2-3-2. Short passing is highly
recommended, also to increase possesion.
Your passing focus will generally be mixed, so attacking winger (AML/AMR) use is discouraged.
Pressing the whole pitch is the antithesis of general formations, as I
said previously, this are cautious formations that grind and wear out
your opponent and shouldn’t be used for offensive tactics or mentality. I
don’t recommend using force counter, as this will lead to a loss of
ball possesion, which I can’t strain to say how vital this is for a GF
to work.
Specific attack formations.
Somewhat easier to understand than General attack formations, this
kind thrives in a focused defense and attack. Instead of using 7-9
players to fend-off any posible attack, it uses the least ammount of
defenders and marked midfielders and uses the remaining players in the
attack.
This is where “counter & deploy” comes into play.
Let’s start off by saying that in order to consider an opposing
player “covered” he needs to be marked by at least 2 players. Sometimes
this isn’t possible, but your goal is to have the number opposing
players that aren’t double+ marked to a minimum.
Here’s an example using zonal marking.
-Let’s say you want to counter 4-5-1 V (Left image). The first thing
to consider is the number of strikers (RED). Since he’s only using 1,
you can use the minimum of 3 defenders (RED on the right image).
-Next come attack midfielders. He’s using AML and AMR (ORANGE) so you
know his attack will come from the flanks so you need to place a DL and
DR to block them. The DL and DR will also provide coverage to the lone
ST if needed.
– So far you’ve double marked the ST and single marked the AML/AMR,
you need to double mark them. Since you are using zonal marking, you can
place 2 DMC’s (ORANGE on the right image) that will move left or right
if needed.
– The MC’s follow (Yellow). You already have 2 DMC’s providing single
cover, so you need to use 2 MC’s of your own to double mark. And you
are done! all the attackers and midfielders are double marked.
– Now comes the fun part, deploy your own attack: You only have 3
players left for attack and since 4-5-1 V doesn’t have wing blockers or
mid wingers the best thing to do is deploying attacking wingers (CYAN on
the right image). This also means that you should use flank passing.
– Last, deploy your lone ST. If you notice, he’s only marked by 2 of
the 4 defenders, because your opponent’s defense will split by double
marking your AML/AMR -or- your ST, but not both.
Now an example using man-to-man marking.
The opponent is using “floating pyramid” formation and your defenders
are fast and good markers so you decide to use man-on-man marking.
The process is very similar to that of zonal marking, but actually
easier to deploy. All you have to do is “mirror” your opponent’s
attackers and midfielders and then deploy your opwn attackers in a way
they are the least covered possible.
– So you are against a ST (RED), use 3 defenders (RED). 2
AMC’s(ORANGE), use 2 DMC’s (ORANGE), 2 wingers and a MC (YELLOW) use 2
wingers and a MC (YELLOW). Spread your defenders into DL,DC,DR so they
can provide extra coverage against the opposing wingers.
– You only have 2 players left so let’s exploit the fact that the
opponent isn’t using a DMC (CYAN) and use an AMC (CYAN). This means that
your attack should come from the middle, or possibly mixed if you
motivate your wingers.
– Lastly, deploy your ST, which will only be marked by 2 of the 4 defenders.
5.1.1 Illegal formations.
While there are many possible formations in Top 11, not all of them
are valid. This is what it’s commonly refered as “illegal formations”.
The exact rules and consequences aren’t publicly known, but it’s
generally accepted that if your formation is illegal, you’ll be
penalised with a heavy loss of ball possession. And while it’s possible
to win with one of said formations, it’s not a common occurance.
In order for a formation to be legal it must have:
-At least 3 defenders.
-At least 1 striker.
-At least a player in each flank.
-A goalkeeper.
Here’s 3 examples of common illegal formations:
No strikers……………………..No wingers…………………Only 2 defenders.
7:13 PM
TDasany
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