I see what you're saying. From what I've seen (which is about 70% of the game in random moments), when we were in build up, there was a wall of Wolves players between Casemiro and forwards. Neither of Bruno/Mount really dropped deeper to progress the ball, and Wolves packed the midfield with bodies so there was no vertical passing angles (we play mostly vertical). That Wolves setup exposed the wings so both Garnacho&Antony had a lot of space and saw plenty of the ball, just couldn't do anything with it. I also thought Mount was more involved in those winger/fullback/AM triangles so not sure what Bruno was doing* - hence my question.
In defensive transition I thought Bruno was dropping deeper than Mount, who stayed high almost like a second striker. Occasionally Mount dropped deeper and I thought that was when he was most effective. I only remember Brune being dribbled past a few times, and then he produced the magnificent pass to Wan Bissaka.
*before Eriksen replaced Mount, because then we just switched to last season setup and looked more comfortable in build up, but still very vulnerable defensively - as expected.
This is quite interesting point.
That's correct, and thank God there are still a few people on this forum who are willing to think and not just react to whatever post they read on Twitter. Take the tweet that's doing the rounds since Monday night, the with Casemiro alone in the midfield, surrounded by Wolves players. It's supposed to describe a positional issue, but it's being disingenuous because that was the shape when the ball was wide. And it's not very different from what the other high pressing teams usually do. We suffer off the ball mainly because, when we press, not all players are in sync (which is a problem for the manager to solve) and because certain players go out of position to make a 30/70 or 40/60, at best, challenge which often results in them leaving huge gaps behind them (which i suspect is more of player issue).
It's true that Wolves identified AWB as the weak link in our build-up. The same thing happened in the friendlies against Lens and Bilbao, and i argued in the Maguire thread that this is the most worrying part, not Harry, who will spend most of the time either on the bench or in the stands. It was interesting how we used Onana's skills now that we have a keeper who can play an active role in the build-up. It didn't work like we hoped it would, but, at least, there were signs that we are well aware of the issue's existence. I'm saying this because the most "natural" choice for someone to come more centrally in support of Casemiro, if we are not going to sacrifice Mount/Bruno's advanced positions, is Shaw. He can pass the ball, he can carry it through the lines and he can also keep it under control. The problem is that your left-winger of choice (Garnacho in this one, but Rashford is of the same ilk as him) isn't particularly good in the first 2/3 of the pitch. And since he is your main attacking outlet, you need to provide him with support (that will be Shaw). AWB is out of the question, so we came up with a variation that had Martinez and AWB splitting the pitch (Onana the central link-player) and Varane moving up on the pitch to support Casemiro as a central midfielder and allow AWB to play on the overlap/underlap. In that context, Bruno (even with Eriksen on the pitch) was coming deeper occasionally because he can find the defence-splitting pass more often than everybody else. Don't forget, we are a team that lives and dies with balls played in-behind and into space.
It looked dysfunctional or, at the very best, undercooked, and the players looked rather uncomfortable too. You know what's the most hilarious thing about it? When all 10 outfield players managed to pull it off together, it
led to the goal. I know it's a corner that starts the whole sequence, but the main principles are the same. When Sancho's cross is blocked, we are well-positioned but paper-thin, with both Bruno and Eriksen waiting to put the ball in the box with acres of space behind them. The defensive-minded Varane and Casemiro (often midfielders in our attacking shape) are in (or around the box) and they are instructed to remain there. For a reason... This goal would not have happened without these two applying (the right kind of) pressure on the first attacker. Eriksen wins the second ball (because winning second balls is about positioning, not physicality), Casemiro can't secure it, so he presses hard and Varane cuts off the easy option for the Wolves player. Notice that when we regain possession, Varane looks behind him, sees Eriksen and Bruno holding the high-line... and he charges in the box. By then, the positional rotations are done and they all attacking-minded. AWB has joined the fray on the right, Bruno has also switched sides, and Eriksen is at the base of a rhomboid shape while Antony is providing the width. It's the perfect 4v3, with everybody being where they should be and making the right choices.