I sometimes wonder if there isn’t a conspiracy saying ‘let’s not do well ordered marking of opponents because that will reduce the number of goals being scored and we don’t want that’. Maybe, it is my background in basketball whereby every player has to be accounted for when it comes to marking. Anyway, let’s concentrate on the football.
How Guardiola conquered the Premier League
Finding space between the lines has been an area of very fertile exploitation for some considerable time. These lines are usually horizontal lines where players are able to receive the ball in space, often between the defensive backline and midfield. Pep Guardiola’s interest has been more specifically with vertical lines or channels notably between centre-back and full-back. These are similar tactics he used at Barcelona and Bayern Munich utilising the same basic idea of exploiting space.
Guardiola has players train on a pitch marked into 20 different zones. Positional play is worked on through the principle that “no more than three zones in the same horizontal line and no more than two zones in the same vertical line should ever be occupied”. Jonathan Wilson – Guardian.

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Within this attacking format, players are expected to adjust their movement according to the position of the ball and thereby giving the player on the ball two options for passing. This type of positional play is aimed specifically at teams who defend deep and well. It demands not only high quality preparation but also a touch of individual creativity.
One of Guardiola’s other fundamental concepts is the 15-pass build-up. Possession, he believes, is only a means to an end. Fifteen passes is crucial to what the team plan to do higher up the pitch. The fifteen consecutive passes in the middle of the field is to allow players to set up in their offensive structure.
This whole philosophy is based on and pre-supposes that opposition teams will defend zonally. This is a fair assumption as most teams, if not all teams, do defend zonally. Teams will set up in various formations that have become so diverse to be almost meaningless. These might be anything from 4-2-3-1 to any combination of numbers that add up to ten. Coaches, generally, are becoming increasingly measured in their attempts to outwit defences that show little ambition for venturing forward.
One of the reasons that enabled this creativity is the predictability of the opposing formations. It doesn’t matter what the formation is or how the team intend to implement it, the commonality is that they are all zonal defences. Inevitably, this will involve a flat backline with the expressed intention of keeping this line straight.
A false sense of security
It’s high time for defences to respond and also become more creative. Get away from the zonal defence as being the only form of defence. If a team could set up defensively in a different format it would certainly put a spanner in the works for opposing teams’ game plans. There is an alternative to zonal defending.
The team man-to-man defence places far greater emphasis on the need to apply pressure on the ball-carrier. The whole point of team man-to-man is to ensure that there is at least one other team member available to support the player marking the player on the ball. It is this that distinguishes this type of defence from the more common, distant relative of man-marking. It is important to be clear on this. The two concepts are completely different. The popular myth is that it is a fool’s game. Man-marking may be. Not so with man-to-man defence where its expression is very much on the team element.
The problem with zonal marking is that most of the time there is no particular responsibility to be marking an opponent and then, boom a player needs marking! This is because there is often a blurring of the line between holding a space and marking. The defensive player is caught in two minds. Confusion arises. The centre-back and the full-back, for example, both think the other is covering and yet neither of them are covering. The forward is left unmarked.
All too often defenders are left marking time rather than specific opponents. It is true the idea of man-to-man goes against conventional wisdom but changing the way we think may be necessary to understand what have become accepted norms. The concept ought not be so terrifying as even with zonal defending, there comes a point when a defender has to make a decision to mark a particular individual. Often, this decision is either not made or it is made too late leaving the forward unmarked in front of goal. It may only be a split-second moment and that is why it makes sense to reduce any uncertainty by completing the allocation of marking responsibility early on in the phase of play.
Man-to-man management
It is not possible to abandon zonal defending in favour of man-to-man defending. This is not what is being suggested. On the contrary, zonal defending provides the basic structure from which to implement man-to-man. In the same way it might take the attacking team fifteen passes to set up their attacking shape, this is a useful amount of time to set up your defensive shape. The process involves switching from zonal to man-to-man.
The man-to-man system is probably not a viable option to use against those teams favouring a more direct type of attacking football. Marking allocation is best effected from a zonal format where initial coverage of the playing area is prioritised in the first instance. A process of matching up one for one can start to take place in the middle of the field that eliminates uneconomical running with some players chasing their opponents all over the park. The matching-up process would be based on respective opponents operating in similar areas of the pitch. This player then becomes the marking responsibility for the duration of that phase of play.
The Zonal Press in Basketball
Pressing has been a key element of basketball strategy for years. There are various types of press but the one I favoured was the 1-2-1-1 zone press.

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The initial set up is in a zonal shape and this can move very quickly in to man-to-man as the play unfolds. The 1-2-1-1 press has good coverage of the court as the ball is passed in following a score from the pressing team. Players will then move from these initial positions to mark opposition players according to their proximity on the court. The shaded areas represent an easy pass in for the opposition and the ‘2’ of the 1-2-1-1 each have a responsibility to pressurise the pass into these areas. An alternative pass is the long one down the court and this is even more risky than the long ball in football. The ‘1’ at the back can deal with this ball. The ‘1’ at the front is pressurising the ball being passed in which leaves just one other who is looking for the fourth man.
This is the fundamental principle of zonal defending that you move from your initial starting position to mark an opponent. In football, where there are double the numbers of people involved and the fact that the playing area is twenty times the size of a basketball court, it makes the task more difficult.
Whilst the sports of football and basketball may seem very different, the principles of zonal play are the same.
Team man-to-man provides support for the player on the ball
Even though you have been allocated one player to mark, there is still a requirement to provide cover for the teammate marking the player on the ball. The level of this support will be determined by the proximity of one’s marking player to the position of the ball. If this player is within ten metres of the ball, the level of support is going to be much greater than if they were fifty metres from the ball. The distance from the ball, and therefore the precise level of support one can provide, is determined by the amount of time it would take to be back in touch with your marker if the ball was switched to them. This same principle of adjusting one’s position according to the position of the ball is also at the heart of Pep Guardiola’s attacking play.
Johan Cruyff once asked, during Guardiola’s spell as coach at the Camp Nou, “Do you know how Barcelona win the ball back so quickly? It’s because they don’t have to run back more than ten metres as they never pass the ball more than ten metres”. If that still holds true then the level of support around the ball can be quite intense.
More tactically flexible
There are numerous benefits to playing man-to-man defence and in the context of this debate the beauty of this particular defensive strategy is the elimination of these pockets of space, at a stroke. The pockets that have eluded the zonal marking structure and are the catalyst for the fluency and drive of this Manchester City team no longer exist.
It is difficult to defend against City if you insist on playing with your zonal shape. Their movement and pre-set attacking patterns are all based on the opposition playing in a particular way. Teams, who are concentrating on this defensive shape in their keenness to get players behind the ball, often neglect to meet the most important principle of defending which is pressure on the ball. This particular quality is the cornerstone of team man-to-man marking.
The issue about when to go to the player and when to hold the space is a recurring theme. At least it is with zonal marking. It is not the case with man-to-man marking. The decision about who to mark has been sorted out long before. The fact that defensive responsibility has been individually assigned means that you also now have accountability. Man-to-man defence provides the fundamental base for all types of team defences. It permits the marking up of opponents, fixes responsibility and encourages player pride in the development of individual defensive abilities.