British
journalist Carl Worswick has it at the Guardian pages that Juan Carlos Osorio
used to prowl and spy Gerard Houllier's Liverpool during his stay at Britain
completing a university degree. Osorio had managed to rent a room in a flat neighboring
the club's training facilities and would wake up early to watch and take notes for
almost two years. His English days -the Man City spell in particular- would
make of him such a meticulous trainer concerned with keeping his players fresh
and healthy by rotating his lineups systematically. "I would die for the
opportunity to one day manage there."
Come the
chance to take the Mexico job, the name of Osorio says far too little for
several Mexican players and commentators who have been as quick to confess they knew
nothing on him as to openly attack his signing. In order to know tactically
speaking who is Osorio, his 'British'
upbringing tells just as much as his 'Colombian' stride, being runner-up to
Marcelo Gallardo's River Plate, both in Copa Sudamericana and Libertadores.
Is Osorio a
staunch pragmatist tailored in the fashion of the early Premier League in which
4-4-2 was the golden standard, speed and quality the only variables, and results all that
were to be sought for? or is he a progressive Latin American ideologist who
likes his squads to attack constantly through a possession style?
The actual
answer is that he rotates himself between the pragmatist and the ideologist.
The semifinal victory with his Atlético Nacional against Brazilian giants Sao
Paulo FC for Copa Sudamericana got locked into a midfield battle in both legs
and thus had to be decided in penalty kicks (which then was remarkable as the
Paulistas counted with better individuals). The two-legged final against River
Plate was a battle equally deaf and gridlocked in midfield only decided through
the Argentine ruthlessness in set pieces. In that respect, Juan Carlos Osorio
is a cold calculator who understands that direct elimination stages demand
organization and physicality: if you can't beat the opposition straight away,
then remain competitive and wear them out in the middle of the pitch, not in
your own box.
The group
stage of the last Copa Libertadores, however, enabled Osorio to deploy his side
in full capacity at playing enthralling, vibrant football. There was this match
in Medellín against Ecuadorean Barcelona de Guayaquil in which Osorio fielded a
three-man defensive line and -instead of flanking it with wing-backs who
theoretically have primary defensive duties- flanked it with attacking wingers
pushed so high up as to widen the pitch and jail rivals in their own box: a de
facto 3-3-4 hardly seen in any Premier League side. Atlético Nacional
aesthetically executed their high-speed combination game, but, truth be told, got
exposed by the Ecuadorean wingers who needed little to wreck havoc and the
score hence ended in a 2-3 defeat for Atlético Nacional. For the next match, in
La Plata against an Estudiantes side which also used a three-man defensive
line, Osorio went pragmatic with a conservative formation that scrapped and had
the vital three points from Argentina. That's Osorio: able to fathom all
possibilities.
There's also
a feature that might make Osorio a Latin American romantic: his reliance on enganches or old-school playmakers. From
Edwin Cardona, Sherman Cárdenas and Yulián Mejía at Atlético Nacional to Paulo
Henrique Ganso at Sao Paulo FC, Osorio likes that one kind of player not seen
at all in the Premier League who dismantles a packed defense (like the ones
Mexico will face for World Cup qualifiers) either with a through-ball or a
long-range shot. Will Osorio find a
Mexican able to play enganche in a
possession-oriented squad?
The tactics
of Osorio are so complex that they do escape the reach of traditional Mexican
football punditry insofar as this is a man who rotates between the European and
Latin American diverse schools of play. His rotations and experiments will certainly
cause unconformity, but, all in all, this seems a coach flexible enough as to understand
the difference between strategies needed for elimination stages, group stages,
and scenarios posed by a Concacaf hex: the very same hex where counterattacking
and conservative Mexican coaches have proven short of flexibility.
Osorio's signing is already testing how
flexible (or inflexible) Mexican football is.
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