In his regular weekly column Inter fanatic Sam Olsen dives deep into the stories that matter to Inter’s fans looking to keep the spirit of discussion alive and well on the pages of Sempreinter.com.
On paper a draw against a highflying Napoli in their own stadium seems like a pretty good result for an Inter side stuck in mid table. The result however, papers over some serious concerns ahead of a crucial fixture against a Wolfsburg side that only a few weeks ago massacred European highflyers Bayern Munich 4-1.
When you have a backline more akin to a fresh block of Swiss cheese it is easy to ignore the catalogue of issues this team must fix before they can be considered among the elite of European football again. The match against Napoli provided a clear example of these problems and it was only a combination of luck, wayward shooting and last ditch heroics that ensured Napoli were not out of sight before Inter had the chance to respond.
For its part the defence again appeared as if they had learned how to play from the first edition of the Idiots Guide to being a professional defender. The communication was often non existent, players were not picked up, runs were not tracked and men were seen repeatedly shooting out of the defensive line in the most haphazard manner, leaving gaps an American gas guzzler would comfortably plough through. None of this is new of course; in fact you could make a pretty good Youtube clip after every game just pulling out all the ridiculous things that the defence does.
To be fair one must give credit where credit is due. It is easy to hurl abuse at players when they perform like drunken 50 year olds on a pub team, but good deeds should also be recognised. I personally believe that the only reason we had a chance to come back the way we did was down to Andrea Rannochia, as tough as that is to say. I would normally be the first to criticize the captain for his many repeated shockers but against Napoli he pulled off some miraculous last ditch tackles and clearances that denied clear goal scoring opportunities. Instead it was Juan Jesus who appeared completely flummoxed by the trickery and movement of Napoli’s forward. The first Napoli goal in particular was simply embarrassing.
Davide Santon, in the first half anyway, was not much better appearing completely baffled by young Mertens. The Belgian made the former Italian international look like a deer in the headlights of a M1 Abrams battle tank with his trickery and speed. Fortunately for young Davide his captain was on hand to save him on a number of occasions.
But I am not here to write once again about the frailty of the defence. The issue this week, and to be honest against Fiorentina last week, was the midfield. Mancini’s tactical preference is for a high backline, holding possession and controlling the ball. Often this tactic can result in static football, the ball moving from side to side without much penetration because the opposition have so many men in behind. We have seen this quite often with Inter, primarily due to a lack of dribblers, a real Sneijder like attacking midfielder and fullbacks who can put in a cross. It is clear to see that Santon’s impact has been more down to his ability to get to the byline, beat his man and get dangerous crosses into the box than anything he offers defensively.
The tactic leaves little space for forwards to operate in behind resulting in a paucity of touches for Icardi in the attacking areas, and requires the midfielders to make runs from the deep to try and disrupt the organised defensive patterns. The tactic also requires discipline as turnovers in the wrong part of the pitch can leave Inter wide open to counter attacks, something that Inter’s sloppy midfield have been guilty of far too often.
Against Napoli Fredy Guarin had his worst game since the row with fans following the defeat at Sassuolo. The midfielder was charged with providing the forward impetus from the midfield trio but managed a pass completion of only 60%, losing the ball a whopping 18 times during the course of the match. The bulk of these misplaced passes were not even in the final third but inside Inter’s half or just inside Napoli’s. Each one of these gifted Napoli an opportunity to break. Anyone who has played in defence knows how dangerous and difficult to manage this situation is. Do you steep out of the line to engage the ball and try to slow down the opponents attack, giving time for the team to reassemble deeper but also potentially allowing the attacker to bypass you leaving even more space in behind? Do you stay in formation while backpedalling, closing down the space behind but facing several players running at you while you are not completely in control or organised? It is a horror situation and too often Inter’s midfield has dropped the defence in it.
Guarin’s midfield companions were also not completely without blame. Gary Medel, the midfield shield whose roll will generally be to recycle the ball sideways managed a 92% pass rate but was also responsible for a couple of shoddy passes deep inside Inter’s half, while Marcelo Brozovic managed an 87% completion rate, again with a much more sideways outlook than Guarin but sent a couple of loose passes away that led to counter attacks.
But it was Guarin in particular who had a horror night with his pass accuracy. Is it any wonder that Santon struggled in the first half against Mertens when Guarin was guilty of turning the ball over so often allowing the tricky winger space to run at the Italian?
Against a Wolfsburg team high on confidence, speed, trickery and masters of the art of counter attack Inter simply cannot afford to be so sloppy with possession. In Kevin de Bryne they have one of the most explosive young players around. Add to that the direct threat of Andre Schurrle, the goal scoring form of Bas Dost, the threat out wide from Ricardo Rodriguez and the defensive steel of Luis Gustavo you have a team as capable as any of exposing Inter’s weakest areas.
With this in mind one wonders whether Mancini might be pondering trying a different game plan at Wolfsburg’s Volkswagen Arena. In their last match away against Augsburg, Wolfsburg suffered their first league defeat since the 22nd of November against Schalke. Augburgs’ tactic against them was clear. Play five men in the midfield to close down the space, sit the backline deep to halt Wolfburg’s dangerous counter attacking game, pack the central areas to force them wide and break when they send too many men forward and lose the ball in the wrong place.
Wolfsburg are not a possession side who will patiently pass the ball around to find an opening. They play aggressively and directly and will send balls forward. This gives them chances but also provides plenty of opportunity to counter.
Besides an obvious lack of real pace up front, Inter do have the players who can pull this strategy off. The midfield are capable of breaking forward with pace as well as sending probing balls in from the deep. Shaqiri is dangerous against backpedalling defences while everyone knows that if Icardi is given space around the box he will normally test the keeper.
It is up to Mancini to decide whether he wants to take the option of changing his tactical alignment and flooding the midfield or stick with the formation and tactics that he has put his faith in thus far. The one thing that is for certain is that should Wolfsburg be afforded the same opportunities as Napoli were Inter may find themselves out of the tie before they even arrive back in Italy.

Guys, I think we gonna replace Nagatomo with Zhang Linpeng.
http://forzaitalianfootball.com/2015/03/inter-monitoring-guangzhou-evergrande-star/
Good news or a bad news? For me its a good news. 🙂
Is he good?
I don’t know.. Maybe. 😐
Good for marketing..
Yes
Agree with you sam, it is inter weakness right now, and right now the solution for the problem is inter formation. Inter should use 4-2-3-1 with kuz and andreolli in the defensif midfield… Kuz as the smart guy and andreolli as breaker opponent plays… Ha3 fck limited options…
great article Sam!! I think one of our biggest weakness this season is mentality. they have mental like amateur player. Augsburg know Wolfsburg strength more most of our player, but they still making great effort with making 4 shots on target, and 5 off target. what I m trying to say, we need press them hard, not let them having too much time with ball.
I doubt very much he’ll change it up. I mean if luck is a game plan lets go for it…
When bad luck hit us (striking the woodwork 3 times a game) we couldn’t catch a break. Now we’re riding some luck because honestly we need it and it seems to be obliging.
3-3 in Germany and 1-1 at San Siro … Quarters here we come.. 🙂
Very good article Sam. Thank you!
i like to see Mancini try the old 4-4-1-1 formation from time to time. the 3men-diamond midfield scarcely that effective against team that holds back waiting for counter attacking game.
there will not be any change of tactics.Mancio said that if we sat back we will concede sooner or later so we would probably stick with the game plan as always press high win the ball quick as possible and yes we need more concentration than previous game that is clear but every game is game for itself so it is useless comparing Wolfsburg with napoli we cant predict anything now
I wouldn’t like to see palacio in the starting XI . I would love to see puskas or bonazzoli alongside icardi . I mean palacio scores. yes. but the oppoturnity that he converts … Even my dead grandma can finish .
Playing on the counter – like the article above suggest – would suite Palacio and his speed really well!
Counter attacking or constant attacking, he loses the ball 9 times out of ten.
Palacio ? Speed ? Everybody know that palacio has zero pace ! Remember the celtic match . Shaqiri gave him a brilliant back heel pass and there wasn’t anyone in front of him and only 30m ahead of him was the goalkeeper. He was so slow the celtic defense caught up with him
he was actually faster than ball
As much as guarin lost the ball, he is the only midfielder that creates chances from the back – even with this awful performance he played some very interesting passes and made some crucial dribbles
I agree but against such a strong counter attacking side as Wolfsburg can we afford to allow Guarin even half the poor passes that he made against Napoli? Wolfsburg will likely be more lethal than what Napoli were.
If we will play in a counter attack way, I think guarin and shaq will be our aces
On paper Napoli is a really strong counter attacking side too – but we took that away from them by playing 4-2-3-1 and attacked them constantly the last 20 mins!
Another great article Sam… The only it lacks, is the situation around “the deadman” Palacio.
He has been a non-factor through this whole season.
Thanks Amin! I agree the forward line looks dire as Podolski has also been anonymous. I would love to see Puskas given more of a shot or even Bonnazoli because at least if they play as badly as Palacio you know that they will improve in time. Against Wolfsburg I would like us to play with Icardi up top and Shaqiri as a second striker, sitting a little deeper but supporting Icardi. Guarin would be vital for the break with his power and drive while Kovacic can play deeper as I think his combination of dribbling and eye for a pass from the deep would fit will when countering.
more than agree bro
Spot on artical Sam! I’m not confident going into this match with the germans, my only hope at this stage is that it’s not an embarising defeat. So many holes to fill in this squad with so many restrictions to do it! Regardless…….Forza Inter!