Tactical analysis: England look exciting but how can they tighten up?

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Football tactics correspondent

England’s 4-2 win against Croatia was full of exciting attacking football but the defensive part of the game raised some eyebrows with them looking open on a number of occasions.

In football, what a team does in attack impacts how they defend and vice versa so it is important to assess both the on-the-ball and off-the-ball tactics together.

In this piece, we analyse the reasons why England looked less defensively secure in their World Cup opener compared with previous games under Thomas Tuchel.

Kane stuck in midfield when England lost the ball

In the first half, England launched numerous dangerous direct attacks.

They did this by first looking to pass the ball back hoping to entice the opposition to press high.

Declan Rice pulled into a wide position, vacating his central midfield position, leaving space into which Harry Kane would drop deep.

With Croatia pressing high in numbers, Kane then looked to launch long passes into England’s runners – Anthony Gordon, Jude Bellingham and Noni Madueke – who found themselves three against three at times.

This resulted in England creating big chances but it also meant that if they were to lose the ball in earlier parts of their build-up play, Kane rather than Rice would be in central defensive areas.

This partly explains some of their defensive instability and can be seen in the example below.

Screengrab from England vs Croatia with an arrow showing a misplaced pass from the left-back into the centre of midfield, where Harry Kane, the striker, has positioned himself.

Frequent turnovers when playing too direct

In looking to pass the ball backwards to entice pressure from Croatia, before looking to play long into the space, England at times got the balance wrong.

Anthony Barry, England’s assistant coach, spoke at half-time about this issue.

“I think a lot of nervous energy early on,” he said. “Then we made some decisions, playing long when we should play short, playing short when we should play long, not playing through the gaps to accelerate our game the way we wanted to.”

By playing too direct early and often, England turned the ball over perhaps more than they would have liked. This created a first half that was more end-to-end, leaving spaces for the opponents to attack.

Screengrab from England vs Croatia with a crosshatched circle area to indicate the space in midfield after an England turnover following an unsuccessful long ball.

Another factor that contributed to England turning the ball over was Croatia’s deliberate effort to press Jordan Pickford when he got on the ball.

Using him as a pressing trigger forced the Everton goalkeeper to punt it long on occasion, giving control back to Croatia.

Screengrab from England vs Croatia with an arrow to show the running movement of a Croatian attacker as he presses the England keeper Jordan Pickford.

Pressing over large distances left England open

Having explored reasons why England’s on-the-ball tactics contributed to defensive frailties, it makes sense to look at how they set up off the ball.

In the first half, Gordon, Kane and Madueke looked to press Croatia’s back three.

When the ball went out to Croatia’s right wing-back, Nico O’Reilly had to cover large distances to get up the pitch and apply pressure. This gave their wing-backs time and space to progress the ball up the pitch.

Screengrab from England vs Croatia with annotations connecting the England front three to the three defenders they marked respectively. Also drawn is an arrow showing the distance left back Nico O'Reilly has to press.

Man-marking habits costly when defending deep

England’s willingness to press led to a few issues when they defended closer to their own goal.

When pressing high, players tend to lock on to a specific opposition player in a man-to-man fashion. When dropping into a lower defensive shape, the England players were caught in two minds, often choosing to track their man rather than defending in a more traditional zonal manner.

In the build-up to Croatia’s second goal, Kane tracks a run from Modric, finding himself in what looks like a holding midfield position.

Madueke goes into central midfield and Bellingham compensates by defending out wide. These roles don’t suit any of those players.

Screengrab from England vs Croatia showing the striker, winger and central midfielder of England in their non-natural postions. Arrows drawn show the positions they would normally be in.

Throughout the game, we saw England move from a back four into a back five when defending, with Elliot Anderson or Rice dropping in.

In theory, this would have been to match up numerically with Croatia’s front five. The extra defender minimised the space between England’s back line.

For Croatia’s second goal, however, this situational back five was disrupted, likely because England’s players were too reactive to the movement of individual opposition players.

Both Anderson and Bellingham were dragged towards Martin Baturina who dropped deep, which opened up space in the back line between Reece James and Ezri Konsa.

With no pressure on the ball, a dinked pass was able to find Ivan Perisic running into that space between England’s defenders. His flick-on assisted Petar Musa’s goal.

Screengrab from England vs Croatia with arrows drawn to show the movement of Perisic in behind the defence, and to show the pass trajectory in behind. Also drawn are circles linking England's midfielders and Baturina who drags them away from defence.

In the second half, instead of looking to press the entire back line of Croatia, England appeared to angle their press, forcing them towards one side.

This allowed England to step up in a more aggressive manner.

Screengrab from England vs Croatia with arrows showing England's attackers pressing movements. Also drawn is a shadow behind striker Harry Kane to show the passing lane he is blocking via his body angle.

Room for improvement but positive signs

High pressing teams have generally struggled in the World Cup so far but it is encouraging that Tuchel was able to tweak his defensive approach mid-game.

When defending in a block, closer to their own goal, England still require work, to ensure they don’t get pulled apart by off-the-ball movement. Rice or Anderson dropping in to form a back five also left space in the heart of midfield that, on another day, could have been punished.

The biggest positive was their improvement on the ball. Ultimately, if England are able to control the tempo of the game, dominating the ball for large parts, they will be hoping that the time they spend close to their own goal will be lessened.

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