Just throwing this out there for the next draft idea, after discussions with
@Balu
Simple premise really, each team gets assigned a tactical set-up (catenaccio, Brazilian 4-2-4, total footballing 4-3-3 etc) and they have to assemble a side fitting the tactical brief of their respective set-ups. The player DOB cut off date would be players born after 1975 with Ronaldo and Messi blocked.
Ultimately the challenge is to recreate your set-up as best as possible with an 'alien' player pool and pay tribute to historically great and influential classic systems as best as you can. Having 'new' players in that set-up makes it more interesting and decreases the ease of recreating the set-up, and also opens up the scope of potential discussions etc. Goes without saying that
whilst a balance between tactical fit and personnel quality should be maintained, tactical chemistry takes precedence given the theme of the draft. So try your best not to use controversial players/features which isn't staying true to your set-up, unless you have a really great case for the said move. There will be a draft committee overseeing proceeding to minimise such occurrences.
Thought the drafts have been a bit dull with the same old 4-3-3 & 4-2-3-1s and with the same overblown emphasis on individual battles (something which I'm guilty of too), so maybe this could freshen it up a bit from a tactical perspective. And also be educational, hopefully.
So yeah, it's kind of like the manager draft, but just harder to execute in terms of personnel. The
fundamentals and the core ideology of the set-up should remain intact and only the personnel fits are left to the manager's interpretation. No tactical tweaks/variations allowed.
To reiterate, the tactical set-up and the player fits, chemistry etc have to be at the fore here. Needless to say, player quality does matter but lesser than the usual drafts.
List of tactical set-ups (not confirmed yet and subject to change)
1) Catenaccio - Inter Milan 1965/Helenio Herrera (1-3-4-2)
2) Dutch Total Football - Holland 1974/Rinus Michels (4-3-3)
3) Zona Mista - Juventus 1984/Giovanni Trapattoni (Lop-sided 4-4-2)
4) Ajax 1995 - LVG (3-3-1-3)
5) Dream Team - Barcelona 1992/Cruyff (3-4-3)
6) AC Milan 1989 - Sacchi (4-4-2)
7) Metodo - Italy 1934/Pozzo (2-3-2-3)
8) Brazil 1958 - Feola (4-2-4)
9) Germany 1972 - Helmut Schön (4-3-3)
10) Wingless wonders - England 1966/Sir Alf Ramsey (4-1-3-2)
11) Austrian Wunderteam - Austria 1932/Meisl (2-3-5)
12) Germany 1990 - Beckenbauer (3-5-2)
13) Mighty Magyars - Hungary 1954/Sebes (3-2-1-4)
14) Brazil 1982 - Tele Santana (4-2-2-2)
15) WM - Arsenal 1931/Chapman (3-2-2-3)
16) La Maquina River 1941 - Renato Cesarini (2-3-5)
Certain tactics are easier to execute (4-4-2) but perhaps harder to strike perfection with. So yeah, keep an open mind and also, whilst it might be harder to execute certain tactics, the pay-off would also be significantly higher.
Modern systems such as Simeone's 4-4-2, Guardiola's tiki-taka, Toppmöller's Dortmund tactics, Fergie's 4-4-2 have been left out due to clashing with the timeline of the player pool - thus increasing the recreation ability of said tactical set-up etc.
The write-up would preferably be really tactical and less player descriptive with the same template for each manager
Write-Up Template (pending modification)
Philosophy/Ideology of tactical set-up
...
Style - Possession/counter attacking/Wing-Play/Flank overload/etc
Defense
Defensive Line - Deep/Normal/High
Marking - Zonal/Man-marking/offside-trap/custom (man-marking CBs & a sweeper) etc
Off the ball - Aggressive closing down/standing off/tucking in defenders to form compact defense etc
On the ball - Build up Play/Rapid transitions through sweeper/Basic & risk-free passing to midfield etc
Midfield
...
Attack
...
Player Roles
...
Specific Tactical Manoeuvres
Diagrams, gifs or in depth explanations of certain moves - wing-men swapping/false 9 dropping deep to form triangles/wide midfielder tucking in etc