AC Milan made it four wins in a row in the Champions League as they came out 2-1 winners against Red Star at San Siro on Wednesday night.
Paulo Fonseca made two changes to the team that lost against Atalanta on Friday, with Ruben Loftus-Cheek coming in for the injured Christian Pulisic and Davide Calabria taking the starting right-back role from Emerson Royal.
There were a couple of forced changes due to injuries early on with Loftus-Cheek and Alvaro Morata coming off, which led to further reshuffling on the fly. Things took a turn in a more positive direction for Milan when Rafael Leao scored the opener.
The former Torino man Radonjic came off the bench to score a rocket of an equaliser in the second half, and in truth the Serbian side looked like potentially the more likely to go on and grab a winner.
Just as it looked like the game was drifting towards a draw, Tammy Abraham was there in the right place at the right time to lash home a rebound as Francesco Camarda came close to scoring again, making it 2-1.
That’s how the score would stay and although it was an ugly victory, it continues the push towards the top eight spots. Below is a tactical analysis from the game, courtesy of our writer Rohit Rajeev.
Opposing structures
Milan’s on the ball structure was a 2-3-5/3-2-5 structure on the ball
Red Star sat back in a mid block using a transitional 4-4-2 using a man-oriented pressing system as we can see below.
Milan’s structure dictated by positional tried to break this down using two methods:
One of them was Theo Hernandez’s deeper position and Rafael Leao playing wide, creating space for Tijjani Reijnders to play it through the half spaces.
Another tactic was to use positional switches, such as below where you can see Leao occupying the left position of the double pivot.
Reijnders them moves up to fill the left inside forward role with Theo occupying the left winger role, effectively filling where Leao would be and causing confusion.
Weakness identified
A perceived weakness of Fonseca’s team is that with Leao stating forward as an outlet to start quick counters, it means that there is a man less to protect the left flank.
In the example below Theo pushes up, so Malick Thiaw goes to cover for him and Matteo Gabbia goes to cover for the German, leaving Davide Calabria is confused what to do. The gap was enough for Red Star to get a man through on goal but their striker missed.
The two goals
What eventually cracked with Red Star’s mid block was the fact that in their quest to be compact they pushed up the field. The high line then creates space behind the defence, with Leao running off the shoulder of the last man and finishing Fofana’s brilliant pass.
— Rohit Rajeev (follow @keralista) (@keralista_v2) December 12, 2024
Although it might have seemed a bit like chaos with Francesco Camarda’s header hitting the bar and bodies falling all over inside the box, the routine for Milan’s winner was actually well executed.
— Rohit Rajeev (follow @keralista) (@keralista_v2) December 12, 2024
Formation is not our problem at all because the 4-2-3-1 gives us security our issues is that we forgot the offensive style of football, and we press little and defend more leaving the opponent to control the game and that’s why we concede goal we need to implement the offensive and pressing style in our training before match another thing is that Fonseca should be evaluating the first eleven starting lineup and their capacity not any how player we just features no players with skills,talent that can deliver that can play the offensive style of football to adapt to the 4-2-3-1.