Good point. But then if GG was anything he was a true master tactician. His team talk to the players at Anfield 89 was along the lines of "don't panic. Just don't let them score in the first half and we will score 2 in the second half."Offside wrote:And when Arsenal were horribly exposed by Benfica in the European Cup ("naive", you might saySean wrote:There's no question that George was just as much of a dictator as TOF, but he wouldn't have tolerated any of the shit that TOF does. He always tried to win the league and when he didn't, he'd usually win us a trophy, despite the poor football in his later seasons. He also built and coached the back five from scratch (and did TOF a massive fucking favour in the process).
The only Arsenal manager to win the Cup Winners Cup and the League Cup), George realised that he needed a new tactical blueprint to win in Europe (strong defence, packed midfield, lone striker, counter-attacks and setpieces), not unlike the method used by Chelsea in 2012. So basically it took George one failed season to work out what was needed to win a European trophy. Wenger hasn't learned what it takes in EIGHTEEN seasons.
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From an interview with "Number 1 is" Perry Groves;
“It was a cup final where we were the unbelievable underdogs. There are not many cup finals where you go in two goals down basically. But having to win by two clear goals took the pressure off completely because nobody gave us a chance. And to be honest, not many of the players believed we could go and win by two clear goals. The only one who really 100 per cent believed we could was George Graham.
“He gave us our team-talk when we went in on the Wednesday, and said: ‘I really fancy our chances’. The players looked at each other and thought ‘Is he going mad?’ He said, ‘I’ve thought about the game, and we’re going to play a sweeper’, and a lot of people forget, we always played 4-4-2, that was our system, that was the way we trained. David O’Leary was brought in to play as the spare man at the back, and we all thought: ‘He has gone mad, because we’ve got to go and win by two clear goals, but he’s playing an extra defender.'
"At the time it didn’t make sense, but it was tactical genius because his plan was to get in at half-time 0-0. ‘If we concede the first goal we’re finished,’ he said. ‘You ain’t going to score three. It just doesn’t happen [at Anfield]. But if we get in at half-time 0-0 we’ve won half the battle, and then we’ll have a chat at half-time and I fancy us to nick a goal in the second half, and if we do then it’s all about momentum, pressure gets to people. If we can score, the momentum will change and all the pressure then goes on Liverpool.’
“When we got into half-time 0-0, he was ecstatic, he said: ‘Brilliant, keep nice and steady at the back, stay nice and calm, see if we can get [Paul] Merson and Smudger [Alan Smith] into the game, I fancy us strongly to get a goal. If we nick a goal it’s game on. Trust me, they will start to panic and the nerves will set in.’
“George had said: ‘If we go one goal up I can make some changes, take a defender off and we’ll go 4-4-2 and put Martin Hayes on and then we’ll put Perry Groves on and then we’ll really go for it, the gloves are off then, we’ve got a great chance and I’ll think we’ll win it.’

