Maradona37
Well-known member
Yes. It is more about creating a feel good atmosphere and there's more chances for individual quality to shine. I think 'no tactics' is an overstatement, but it's less tactical by a long way than club football.
In some ways though I like that - it connects back in to what I said about international football being somewhat more like past football - there's less chance to create super teams as you cannot just buy players (though obviously the traditional superpowers like France, Germany etc with most money and best academies will still dominate) and there's more room for individual expression. We sometimes see that at tournaments.
I guess an international analogue of a Brighton or a Brentford might be Ecuador or Japan - traditionally smaller entities who have emerged in this century via good scouting/development and intelligent investment and a real hunger to improve to a good level and improve its football culture. Albeit not to the elite level like Argentina, France, Spain, Liverpool, Man City or Barcelona.
Thoughts @Porque?
In some ways though I like that - it connects back in to what I said about international football being somewhat more like past football - there's less chance to create super teams as you cannot just buy players (though obviously the traditional superpowers like France, Germany etc with most money and best academies will still dominate) and there's more room for individual expression. We sometimes see that at tournaments.
I guess an international analogue of a Brighton or a Brentford might be Ecuador or Japan - traditionally smaller entities who have emerged in this century via good scouting/development and intelligent investment and a real hunger to improve to a good level and improve its football culture. Albeit not to the elite level like Argentina, France, Spain, Liverpool, Man City or Barcelona.
Thoughts @Porque?

