With just over two minutes of injury time remaining in this hugely important Championship game at Ashton Gate, Wout Faes, standing on the halfway line, slowly rolled the ball five yards to his left to Jannik Vestergaard.

It was completely inconsequential in the grand scheme of things and had no influence on the result of this game or even the action that followed. It’s something that happens thousands of times a season, and yet it summed up the current failure of The Idea, the tactical system implemented by Enzo Maresca which had taken us to the top of the league and which has also now resulted in one win in six league games and the obliteration of a yawning gap.

When The Idea works well, it looks great. When it doesn’t, there is nothing else. And so, in the dying moments of a vital game we’re losing 1-0, we get one defender slowly rolling the ball to another.

Slow off the Marx

Wout Faes had been the talking point of the starting XI after a run of poor displays. It was his error that led to Hull’s opener on Leicester’s previous Championship outing three long weeks ago, and he was in the thick of the action at both ends of the pitch throughout this miserable start to the Easter weekend.

Faes had probably Leicester’s best chance of the first half, a looping header wide from a Harry Winks free kick. He also spent much of the game marauding forward in the inside right channel, making the kind of runs that were so profitable for Wilfred Ndidi in the first half of the season. Defensively, it was a throwback to the FA Cup defeat at Stamford Bridge before the break as Vestergaard and Faes were repeatedly exposed, sometimes by other players but mostly by each other.

It was a game that demanded a quick start and a frantic finish from Leicester, but tellingly got neither. There was a lot of talk in the days leading up to the game about Enzo Maresca dying his beard. This actually looked more like the dying of his sense of superiority. To heavily paraphrase Groucho Marx, this is our idea, and if you don’t like this one… well, we don’t have anything else.

Because a lot of Leicester fans have put up with a lot of nonsense about these tactics. There’s been a snootiness from one or two in the media towards anyone questioning the wisdom of this approach. Personally, I’ve struggled with it at times for various reasons, and have been proven wrong at various points too. But as we approach the important part of the season, it’s all falling apart and you have to wonder whether we’re getting the best out of this squad at the moment.

Earlier in the season, when Maresca was asked how far along the squad was in picking up The Idea, he plucked a figure of 20% out of the air. At the time it was exciting, as we imagined how good we’d be once that percentage rose. We talked about someone getting a 5-0 hammering eventually. That team was Stoke at the start of February, and we’ve only won three games since.

Body language

Anger will grow as long as we continue to fail to win football games, but some people will point to the off-field controversy as a mitigating factor for Maresca. That talk has already begun. Yet let’s not pretend this is anything new to him. Part of the reason for Leicester fans’ resentment of the current financial saga is the 115 charges hanging over Manchester City. 

It’s Maresca’s job to ensure what’s happening in the boardroom doesn’t affect the players. It’s a difficult task, but that’s why he’s paid hundreds of thousands of pounds a year. It’s a big job with a big responsibility. But fans are beginning to question the attitude and body language of the players.

There were early signs of those issues at Ashton Gate when both Stephy Mavididi and Abdul Fatawu flung themselves to the ground in the first fifteen minutes. Our old friend Wout then got caught by a ball over the top, tugged at Tommy Conway’s shorts and was fortunate not to concede a penalty. 

The first half ended with both sides stuck on repeat. Vardy put a couple of shots marginally wide from the angle. Faes again got caught the wrong side and was this time rescued by a kind bounce of the ball.

Early in the season, we weren’t giving up chances. Bristol City were just one of the teams we passed into submission, and it all appeared too easy. The worrying thing now is that we look like we could lose to anyone. This isn’t just a mental block against the division’s other top sides any more. Bristol City are a lively young team assembled on a low budget and captained by Matty James. They are mid-table because that’s where they belong, where they’ve been for years, and in the context of a Championship promotion race, they’re just another of the teams Leeds and Ipswich have been seeing off for weeks.

Leeds beat them 1-0 at Ashton Gate at the start of February, while Ipswich came back from 2-1 down with ten minutes to go to beat them 3-2 at the start of March. These are the results our team don’t look capable of getting at the moment – we’ve only kept 3 clean sheets in 13 league games since the turn of the year, and we haven’t come from behind to win since December.

Daka deja vu from Vardy

Admittedly, this narrative would have been entirely different had Jamie Vardy not wasted two golden chances. Both were on a par with the infamous opportunity missed by Patson Daka at Elland Road and in both cases, you could reasonably attribute the three points dropped to misses like these. 

Halfway through the second half, Bristol City decided they’d had enough of watching us miss chances and put together a bit of sustained pressure for the first time since the interval. Within five minutes, they led. We even managed to miss another one before they scored, Fatawu curling wide of the far post. It was a good finish when the home side eventually took the lead, Anis Mehmeti striking into the corner from the edge of the box after given the freedom of the west by Hamza Choudhury.

Rather than supplementing Vardy with another striker, Maresca stuck to his guns and replaced him with Kelechi Iheanacho. It nearly had the desired effect, Iheanacho straying marginally offside when receiving a through-ball from Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall before lobbing the ball expertly into the net. Of course that was the one that went in.

Ricardo came on for Choudhury but didn’t look sharp, returning from injury and possibly still pondering some of the razor-sharp questions from the Foxes Trust AGM on Monday evening.

Even elite teams sometimes find themselves in situations like Leicester did in the final twenty minutes of this game. That’s where they need to increase the tempo. We had Wout Faes slowly rolling the ball to Jannik Vestergaard.

We also had Abdul Fatawu standing on the halfway line firing the ball straight out of play from one touchline to the other, another symptom of a steadfast refusal to look to a plan B, with the two wingers remaining on their respective flanks throughout the game despite being largely nullified.

Maresca talked before the game of finding different solutions during the international break. It’s time for him to prove he is capable of something else, because this team isn’t getting promoted if it carries on like this – and, regardless of what’s happening off the pitch, with these players and given the position we were in, that isn’t good enough.

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6 responses to “Bristol City 1 Leicester City 0: When are we allowed to try something else?”

  1. We have been found out and any team we come up against have the same plan, defend well, refresh front 5 in second half and drive at us using width to stretch us. The early wearing down of teams and punishing them later in the last quarter no longer works. We are no longer pulling players out of position to make the spaces to exploit. Why play into Leicester’s hand, sit off and keep your shape, it is all you have to do. Honestly, the players look bored with what they are being asked to do. All their instincts have been drilled out of them and we have become institutionalised in respect of the passing game, no one takes the responsibility when an opportunity arises, they lay it off to others. Vardy not scoring today was inexplicable, surely he had to score one of those chances, but he didn’t and as usual we are punished for it. Maresca has had a lot of time to think about where we were going for these last nine games, but came up with the same plan, did the same thing again and will do the same again on Monday. I believe he is in a bubble, where everyone around him believe this is the right way to play, and the quality that he inherited is holding back any success. We were lucky at the start of the season, perhaps if all this (poor performances) had happened at the start of the season, we might have had an answer by now. Without being over dramatic, Maresca’s tenure should be questioned at this moment, his Plan A, has been scrutinised and picked to pieces, we all know the answer to playing us, how does Maresca fail to see this.

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  2. Why is it, every time we turn the other team over, we pass it backwards and wait for them to get set? This is just bad coaching. You have at least 3-4 players of the other team out of position, but instead of attacking LC just back off. It changed a little at the beginning of the second half, but then went away again. Start like that.

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  3. We are so attracted to the left side, and with Fatawu it is as if we are playing with a player down! Apart from holding the attention of the oppositions Fullback, he adds nothing more to us going forward. Balls played to him are immeadiately returned backwards, I suspect he has been instructed to keep posession, but it kills his developement and any momentum being generated. He has to bring in something of himself whilst ignoring Maresca’s need to control everything. Come to the ball and spin the Fullback, flick the ball over the Fullback and have a foot race. More importantly insist on the ball being played into the half spaces, with him on the move, he is never going to grow until he has some idea of what to do in his position. Insist on the ball more, make yourself heard and demand the ball more.

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  4. Andrew Keith Bolton Avatar
    Andrew Keith Bolton

    Without the bizarre own goal at Chelsea we have failed to score more than one goal from open play in the last 7 games.Yes we missed some chances yesterday but our problem has been that we havent been creating enough for a team in the top 2 and unlike the beginning of the season teams are now taking their chances.We face Norwich who are third in the form table over 6 and 10 games with a home crowd likely to be restless and multiple players badly out of form.Most of us bought into the idea because it was a new team,there would be teething problems but by now we should expect to see progress.Instead we see teams having worked out how to nullify us and create more chances than us,especially through the middle of the park where we generally create little.If the system is so rigid that it doesnt work without a fully fit Ricardo then surely the system isnt right.Our strikers have generally been starved of service,yesterday was unusual with Vardy having 4 chances.Enzo ball looks very much like Brendan ball with players played out of position,players ignored who could do a job ie Souttar who is our most dangerous weapon from setpieces where we are still poor,Iheanacho a natural number 10 who worked well with Daka at 9 in Europe but has rarely been tried since.We sent Kristiansen off to Bologna because he wants to be a left back or left wing back when we have so few natural left footed players.I am fed up with other managers sending on 3 subs before we freshen things up.A side that lacks physicality brings in Yunus who is patently not what we needed.Leeds and Ipswich bring on stocky 6 footers in the last twenty minutes to force the issue in games.Leeds sub scored as soon as he came on yesterday.Rant over!

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  5. The problem with Enzo’s style of football is that teams know what they are up against every game.The Bristol manager said he knew the way we play so he changed his formation to stifle us.So what do we do? Keep playing the same way, Pearson said on Sky yesterday "this is probably the hardest League in the world to get out of due to the amount of games and ability of players to raise their game for certain teams.its about doing whatever it takes to get a result"And there lies are current problem the players may be capable of playing a different way but they aren’t allowed to deviate from Enzo’s philosophy!A good manager in any walk of life/industry is one that holds their hands up admits its not working and looks to change things,in this instance stop the emphasis of overplaying the ball looking for the perfect pass,get the ball forward quicker,change formation what ever it takes to get a result!Over to you Enzo this is a very crucial week in our future,you along with many of the players may not be here when the dust settles but we the fans will be !Up the City !

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  6. Two comments after the Leeds game yesterday caught my ear.The first was that Leeds noticeably improved after introducing their subs due to greater resouces than Watford, and ‘Leicester are one dimensional’.The latter was not a problem when the club, and our manager, were new to most faces in this league. After all ManC are similarly described.But, as has been said here by many, altering circumstances have to be countered.Here Enzo has to show the sort of flexibility he has so far seemed reluctant about.Churchill’s response to setbacks in north Africa might be instructive.The method originally explained to justify Enzoball was that we played wide wingers to stretch opposing defences and as they beat their markers they created chances for the other winger, the nine and both eights, This is failing as the wide men have, for differing reasons, been increasingly held by savvy full backs as well as showing signs of a season a bit too long for them.

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