"The Firefighting 4-4-2" - La Plata: Mexico #FM20

Estadio Banorte, Culiacán. Credit: sinaloa360.com


Intro

Firefighting - the practice of dealing with problems as they arise rather than planning strategically to avoid them. Can occur in all countries, including Ukraine.

Hugo Ojeda’s first 6 months in Culiacán were explosive. Not only did the drug war against Tijuana rage on, the Dorados Board’s ambitious of a Closing Stage Playoff finish was almost up in flames. Ojeda’s time in the Mexican Second Division could probably be described as ‘firefighting’, where we’ve moved on from one problem (Murciélagos FC) to the next (Dorados).

But always make [or learn] something from a good crisis, as we look at the conclusion of Season 2 in Mexico and how my 4-4-2 [work in progress] developed over the first 4 months of football…


Season 2024/25

I’m going to start with transfer deals briefly, as I feel we made a trio of top signings for the Closing Stage; at not much expense. Dorados were already in a negative bank balance when I joined, and although the Board are happy for me to go a further in the red (with a Transfer Budget of €600k); I wanted to be responsible. In comes Albano Ballari, on loan from Newell’s Old Boys, who I had hoped would also be willing to come permanently when his contract expires in July 2025. Sadly, he rejected the permanent contract…instead opting to join Club León in the Mexican top tier. Nevertheless, Albano is a Dorados player for 6 months and I really like the look of him. He’s strong, tall and defensively sound.

My second signing is Néicer Acosta, who is a young Ecuadorian who was unattached to a club. I narrowed my focus on a few attribute when finding him (as is the way with recruiting at this level). Acosta has good Acceleration, Pace, Off The Ball and Crossing…my decision to sign him was confirmed with two goals in a friendly during his trial.

Lastly, my favourite signing at Dorados has been Nazareno Yomaha…aka ‘El Loco’. He’s been brilliant for me, if not a bit crazy with the ball at times (but just look at his Passing & Vision). It’s what you get after all with a GK who has 16 score in Eccentricity. I’ve also liked the way he has come for crosses, with good Aerial and Jumping Reach. The best Goalkeepers for me in real-life have always been a bit crazy, Yomaha is no different. He also ticked the club vision around signing from Argentina (along with Ballari).

I will come on to results in a moment. But I wanted to show you the Closing Stage league table first. For a team the media predicted to finish 3rd, we were lucky to make the playoffs. Goals were hard to come by, as our GD of +3 shows.

However, the more interesting part of this update is how we ended up in the playoffs and the tactical evolution that my 4-4-2 underwent to get me there…


The Firefighting 4-4-2: A Tactical Evolution

Documenting the changes to this 4-4-2 is as much for my benefit as well as the reader’s. After all, I don’t want to make the same mistakes in midfield again when building a 4-4-2. But firstly, why did I initially choose a direct 4-4-2 with Dorados? To put it simply, my two best players were forwards (as mentioned last time out on the blog) with good Fitness, Off the Ball and Work Rate. My next two best players are probably my two wingers (left and right sided), who both have good crossing ability. In addition to this, my team showed Passing as a strength and were league leaders in this attribute via the Team Reports.

A common misconception here is that a good passing team means it’s more sensible to adopt a short tiki-taka style, and it’s a common mistake I am sometimes led towards too. When I think of good passers, I naturally think of the Barcelona team with Andrés Iniesta, Sergio Busquets and Xavi with their relentless carousel of short passes. But good passing is critical to the opposite style of football (more direct). I was painfully reminded about this at Murciélagos FC too, we passed shorter in my 4-3-3 and it worked ok…it was only until I started to transition more quickly from back-to-front that things went downhill for me. The team’s collective passing was awful and they just didn’t have the technical and mental grounding to adapt to this direct style. On the other hand, Dorados gives me a 2nd chance at this and 4-4-2 is the shell to do it in.

Over the course of this Closing Stage league format (17 league games), we used three different variations of the 4-4-2. It’s worth noting that they are all similar in styles: Direct & on the Counter. Below are the results with using these…v1 was the initial interpretation of “Ojeda Shithouse”. This ran for 10 games…the time I usually stop and reflect “is this working?”.

V1 - you can see below that Ojeda v1 was direct (and on the most part predictable with how we would attack). We had two No-Nonsense Centre-Backs that would pass it long…the Wingers would hit early and low crosses in the hope that we would provide our fast Poacher with a decent chance. But on the most part…the setup was largely passive. The Full-Backs and Central Midfield offered very little offensively and I was narrow minded in wanting to get the best out of the Poacher role (at the expense of everything else), meaning I ignored the attacking potential elsewhere in the team. After 4 wins, 1 draw and 5 defeats in the first 10 games (my usual reflection point)…it was time to make a change.

V2 - So, v2 was my attempt to be more aggressive…whilst keeping within the general remit of countering when we had the ball and regrouping when we did not. We were not a bad side, but we were not scoring enough. So, I tucked my left midfielder in as a Wide Midfielder with a Player Instruction to Sit Narrower (something I did successfully with Stewart Downing at Blackburn Rovers for a Byline piece), the space opened up & the security offered by this change allows my Full-Back to be set as Attack. On the other side of the WM, I switched to an Attacking Central Midfielder…with the aim to offer a central runner. The only Team Instruction changed was to remove a Narrow Attack, the reason was that both the Winger and Attacking Full-Back may be stifled with this on.

Success? Kind of, we had a record of 2 wins and 2 draws…but there was a lingering feeling that I was still not convincing in the matches. From watching the games, I could see we were fortunate in a lot of moments and I did not feel confident going into my last three games, against teams that were higher placed than me in the league. I had already played my Snake Card (switching teams within the state of Sinaloa to avoid the sack), so I really needed to fix the mess I was in. I therefore opted for the Phone A Friend Card, a discussion with my podcasting hero: Dan Gear [of Bolivia fame]. Could his tweaks result in a late playoff push?

V3 - If you have read all of the above…you’d know that two wins and a draw would see us through to 7th place on the final day. But what did Dan suggest? And do I think it helped?

The conversation went something like this:

To recap, if you don’t want to slide into our DMS, Dan made these points:

  • Change to DLP-S 💪🏻

  • Remove Hit Early Crosses ❌

  • Change Poacher to AF, and swap roles around 🔁

  • Winger on Attack now has AF, CM-A and WM to aim for when crossing…as opposed to before [just the Poacher at the near post] 🔥

So I took all of Dan’s tactical tweaks and would run with it for the remaining three games. At this point in my save, the playoff dream was slipping away from me. It could have been too little, too late…but fortunately results on the final day were to Dorados’ favour. Cue some minor celebrations in my FM Slack channel and a couple of people congratulating me.

The 1st goal under v3: DLP-S to AF #GIFGoals

I didn’t tell Dan at the time, I still haven’t actually, but the first goal we scored (1-0 Vs Cancún) was: the supportive Deep Lying Playmaker releasing the Advanced Forward (thanks homie). It’s a highlight I had yet to see from this team and it suggested the 4-4-2 was on the right path offensively from central areas. Despite the frustrating 1-1 draw away at Zacatepec, we were on top for long periods and created a number of chances to win and take all 4 points. But it was the 2-0 home win Vs Oaxaca that left me giddy with excitement. Ojeda’s Dorados were brilliant and yes, Dan’s tips certainly helped.

Could Hugo Ojeda’s 4-4-2 v3 therefore crack the playoffs at the first attempt? Well, I’m leaving that all for a follow up post: out soon [when I play the games].

As always, thanks for reading/sharing & caring,

FM Grasshopper

"The Snake of Sinaloa" - La Plata: Mexico #FM20

Previously on La Plata: Mexico, Hugo Ojeda’s Murciélagos survived relegation.


Intro

Timing is everything. Not just in real-life, but also in a Football Manager simulation. The second half of 2024 for Hugo Ojeda was a complete shitshow. Murciélagos FC led the table for the number of loses and were joint bottom of the Opening Stage table with two games to go. Facing a likely [deserved?] sacking, Hugo Ojeda made his controversial move. A move that would not only heighten local football rivalries, but also destabilise Sinaloa efforts in the ongoing Tijuana conflict…


Season 2024/25

Before we get on to Hugo’s big decision, I first want to bring readers up to speed with events in Los Mochis. Last time out on the blog I was full of hope and optimism about our chances of a promotion push. It’s perhaps the curse of how and when I decide to blog: as I never play ahead, and I therefore didn’t know how awful things would get with Murciélagos FC.

Murciélagos FC Results with Ojeda 2024/25

New marquee signing Fredy Vera was a waste of space, having never saw the pace and silky finishing that I expected. Drama too in the background, as a large proportion of the squad wanted new deals. Deals we neither couldn’t afford and ones I didn’t want to make. The band of renegades turned on Hugo. Their performances abysmal and my misery compounded when wonderboy loanee Miguel Ávila was ruled out for 12 months with a cruciate knee injury.

Life without Miguel Ávila in a GIF…

But, as previously mentioned, timing is everything. If you don’t control your destiny, it controls you. Having seen rivals Dorados de Sinaloa sack their manager, after an equally horrific campaign (lying in 15th position)…it was time for Hugo to make his play. A move wrapped up in betrayal, controversy and shadiness. Incredibly, Hugo Ojeda would be appointed Dorados Manager with a career win record of just 28%.

Hugo Ojeda’s 515 days in charge with Murciélagos FC: 15 games won, 17 draws and 21 defeats.


Dorados de Sinaloa

I certainly didn’t want a sacking on Hugo Ojeda’s CV, but I can appreciate what I have done is not everybody’s cup of tea. Moving across the Sinaloa state to a local rival is…erm…Judas-like to say the least. But here are my reasons anyway:

Club Infrastructure - Dorados are an all round bigger club than minnows Murciélagos FC. Bigger stadium, bigger wage budget…better facilities. I said during the interview that I didn’t need any staff and I promised to work with the Director of Football (saying all the right things obviously improved Hugo’s chances of being appointed).

Dorados are in the same league as Murciélagos FC, but have a better stature.

Reputation - One of the big barriers at Murciélagos FC was club reputation, I missed out on the vast majority of transfer targets. Even the guys who would come on trial would often use the club to train and get fit before sticking their middle fingers up at us and leave for rivals. Sickening.

This will not be as at Dorados. For sure, the top league is more attractive…but this club once attracted Pep Guardiola at the twilight of his career. After all, we’re the biggest club in Sinaloa!

Players - It is hard to imagine worse players than some of the ones I had at Murciélagos FC. At Dorados, we’ve got a couple of tasty young players and a few entering their peak years…who I’m looking forward to using. But the two I am most looking forward to using are the combination of Amaury Escoto and Carlo Limón upfront. The coaches rate these two guys the club’s best players…and I immediately think we can play a supportive DLF-Poacher combination here.

Club Culture - The culture of the club is to play attacking football, but this does not mean I need to play with an attacking mentality…rather I just need to score goals and have a good shots-to-game ratio. To get through the final two games of the season, we actually played a cautious Route One 4-4-2 and won both games (0-2 away at Alebrijes de Oaxaca FC & a 2-1 home win Vs Atlético Zacatepec). I am in two minds to keep this going, simply winning games will keep the Board & Fans quiet…right?

The other parameters to work within are actually really attractive to me. We’ll look to Argentina to sign some players, with an emphasis on the next generation of talent. In addition, there will be an expectation to bring through a few young players each season…and I have already seen one or two that can be integrated into the squad for the 2024/25 Closing Stage. Can’t wait!

Immediate Aim - The board want a top 7 finish in the Closing Stage, and thus a shot at the Promotion playoffs.


The Snake of Sinaloa

Lampropeltis triangulum sinaloae.

I am aware that [some] followers and readers of the blog may be frustrated that I didn’t face the challenge at Murciélagos FC; by turning it around and living out the fairy tale rise of champions. But this save doesn’t behave, and in Hugo Ojeda we have a guy looking to move up the ladder…fast. We’ll take being disloyal, ruthless…and branded the Snake of Sinaloa for a shot of glory. Embrace the Underworld, embrace Hugo Ojeda.

As always, thanks for reading/sharing and caring.

FM Grasshopper

"Home & Away" - La Plata: Mexico #FM20


La Plata Mexico Header.png

Intro

I am not sure which holds more significance: a 20-year-old Hugo Ojeda surviving a season in the Mexican 2nd Division OR Hugo Ojeda surviving a year in the middle of the Sinaloa-Tijuana Cartel War. Certainly both projects have come with loses & struggles, but Murciélagos FC and Sinaloa appear to be on the rise. The year is 2024 and here is an update…


Home & Away

Having Home & Away formations divides opinion, not just in FM circles…but also in real-world football. The great Arsène Wenger was once very dismissive about the difference between home & away in 2011:

“I never in my life could understand the difference between home and away, for me it’s a football match and no matter where you play you try to play well. I never could understand why in peoples’ heads there is a difference between away and home”.

But six years later, Wenger could not answer why Arsenal were unable to win against their top rivals away from home for so long. Playing the same approach (regardless of the principles around aesthetics) between home and away games could have been his undoing; something was amiss. My usual approach in FM has often been something similar: use a single formation that works in the majority of matches and only make tweaks. But I felt we needed to do something more drastic in away games with Murciélagos FC. In the Opening Stage we went the entire campaign without a single away win, the worst record in the league and a bit of a laughing stock.

The Mexican league adds further justification for seeking the away win too, because an extra bonus point is awarded. A sudden jump of a few +4s would not only guarantee survival, but also put us in contention of a Play-Off place. So, after speaking to good friend and ally Diego Mendoza…I was motivated to try a 4-4-2 away tactic, to push two men up top and really ‘go for it’. Crash and burn, we’d eventually get a win right? Wrong, another 5 away games during the Closing Stage without a win (and non-existent sexy Ojeda-ball) left me wondering what I had to do…so I went back to the 4-3-3 Home formation but with a really simple change:

Swap CF-S to AF-A.

It suddenly meant that Murciélagos FC had a persistent runner on a more aggressive mentality. Not only a goal threat but a guy to offer up the ball to and relieve pressure on our defenders. The first away game: a 1-0 Vs Potros, with the goal coming from the Advanced Forward. Then the last two away games ending unbeaten…a 0-0 with La Piedad and a 1-0 win at Celaya. Sometimes a simple switch of role can have a noticeable effect!

Ojeda’s 4-3-3- v1.1


Season 2023/24

Because I blogged before the conclusion to the Opening Stage, here is me finishing strongly to secure 11th place!

Building on our Opening Stage ‘success’, we were once again solid at home. The aforementioned problems away from home continued, but the little switch to Advanced Forward has given me hope for next season. We came a whisker away from reaching the Promotion Playoffs. I also saw the best and the worst of my team in the final two games of the season. A surprising, but merited win, away at Celaya…left me with real hope of a dream playoff appearance. Miguel Ávila, my loan signing from Club América who I introduced last time on the blog, heading home a near post corner routine giving me false hope of a first season fairy tale. But his yellow card later on in that game meant he would be suspended for our final match, where we were cruelly ripped apart at home by Club Irapuato 0-3. A deflating end to a largely productive season, where we were tipped to go down:

Our combined tally of 45 points means I am in a really strong position next year to once again survive, as we’ve got a 13 point head start (& alphabetical advantage) on teams like Zacatecas and Zacatepec. So, we’ll probably do away with looking at Average Points next season and have a stretch goal instead; achieve a playoff spot in either of the split stages.


New Signings

In order to push on and make the playoffs, I feel we need to strengthen in a few key areas. I’m not one for masses of new signings each season (as a lot of FMers seem to do), instead I like to focus on bringing one or two marquee signings that would improve us; and then maybe an additional youngster or two to comply with any Club Vision.

Ojeda’s War Chest

New budgets attributed to managers are often described as ‘war chests’, and that’s what it feels like with Hugo Ojeda’s new 2024/25 budget. But instead of investing heavily in the playing squad, I’ve taken this opportunity to flesh out the backroom staff. We now have an assortment of staffing roles, with a scouting setup in place and an Assistant Manager to ease the burden on our young manager’s shoulders. Including Hugo Ojeda himself, six Venezuelans are now also part of the backroom staff at Murciélagos FC…una revolución in process!

In terms of player signings, I’ve been quite dismissive of a few Full Backs/Wing Backs scout reports sent to me to fill Left Back…and therefore missed out on bringing anybody here. So we’ll go with Soria, my make-shift right footed LB until the next Transfer Window. The standout 2024 signing is Free Transfer 26-year-old Fredy Vera, a one-time youth international with Paraguay. Vera has a lovely mixture of Composure, Flair, Finishing & First Touch. He can play across the front line in each of the roles within my 4-3-3 and could be the decisive factor for us (remember I need those +4s away from home). I’m actually going to tweak a few instructions for the games he’ll play as an Advanced Forward or as an Attacking Winger. As I plan to be a bit more direct with our passing and make quicker transitions from back to front…utilising his modest quickness and good Off The Ball attribute. So maybe expect a 4-3-3- v1.2 in my next post.

My other Free Signing is Sinaloan Francisco Contreras, who has spent all of his career with rivals Dorados. You can’t be too picky in terms of what players to go for at this level, so I focused on a few specific attributes. I wanted somebody who was (1) fast and (2) hard working for a Central Midfielder Attack role. Contreras fits both criteria well (with great Determination, Quickness, Teamwork and Work Rate) and I really like his player trait of getting forward whenever possible. There will be lots of space to drive into, with the Advanced Forward pushing on, and I am hoping he can be an offensive threat for us.


Closing Comments

It took a fair amount of time to complete a single Mexican season during the pandemic lockdown, but I can’t wait to get going again for Season 2. Facing off against new clubs and getting to grips in a new league has certainly been a great challenge so far, and if anybody is feeling the need to switch up their save…don’t overlook adding new leagues within a current save as I did. Fully recommend it!

Thanks for reading/sharing/caring. Stay safe and stay alert.

FM Grasshopper

"The Fall - Hugo" #FM20


Part III

June 2023

Operation Isabella was the systematic removal of all known Russian presence in South America, the drugs trade was thrown up in the air. Whilst Chepiga thought he had taken out Bastardo’s Caporegime, he had not considered the ever-increasing Venezuelan army. They called us ‘The Free Folk’, untraceable loyal partisans ready to do Ángel Bastardo’s bidding. From all over Central and South America, we operated in unison…silo-by-silo the presence of Chepiga was removed. In its place, a more Mercosur focused regime was implemented: we’d take on the business of the drug trade but the money would no longer drift away across the Atlantic Ocean.

My instructions were to head to Mexico in order to broker a deal with the Sinaloa Cartel, and it’s here where the great Ángel Bastardo wanted his battle to resume. Operation Isabella signalled the end of Ángel Bastardo, Peñarol & La Celeste, the succession without himself as our leader. It takes a brave man to plan for this, but that’s what he was. I watched the incarceration of Bastardo live on TV, the Americans keen to broadcast and humiliate him to a global guidance. Yet he remained brave, I could see it.

Despite being in prison, Bastardo’s plan so far had been faultless…with the most pivotal moment, in his words, still to come. On the outskirts of Sinaloa’s biggest city, Culiacán, we had set up camp 34 days ago. We had been asked to reside next to an old watchtower overlooking a basin where a large river once meandered, in its place a small stream remained. It’s here where Bastardo’s instructions became meticulous in detail, offering an insight into the military mind of a seasoned commander.

The water was to be drained 100m upstream every night for exactly 5 hours at a time. Likewise, the watchtower brick-by-brick was reconstructed onto an enormous wooden wheeled trolley…this had to move 3 meters each night towards the site of where our drainage took place, with candles emitting a light from dusk till dawn to signify it’s occupancy.

Yesterday, on the 34th day, the written instructions in Operation Isabella told me to call the Tijuana Cartel of Baja California; to inform them of our agreement with Sinaola and offer an extension and future partnership between all three groups. The watchtower would be tonight’s meeting place, where the particulars would be discussed and agreed…but betrayal was Bastardo’s prediction. Sensing pressure from the other border states and upsetting the status quo, the site would be a massacre…one instigated by the Tijuana henchman. Outgunned and outnumbered, my mixture of Venezuelans and Uruguayans would rally behind the watchtower, along with Sinaloan representatives. We would face the Tijuana Cartel and the accompanying river that had now been starved of it’s most precious resource: water. The land was a nightmarish illusion, solid until pressure is met: quicksand.

It was by far one of Tijuana’s boldest moves on Culiacán soil since the Mexican Drug War began, around 50 soldiers advanced on the watchtower. Except the soil was now to the Sinaloa advantage, gunshots were traded back and forth towards the watchtower, but the mobile shooters now belonged to me. The Free Folk strafed around the watchtower and quicksand, encircling the Tijuana Cartel until we were behind them. It now looked like death by gunshot was the honourable solution for the men from Baja California, as men drifted into the abyss of mud. For 35 days of preparation, the shootout was over in no time at all. Sinaloa had secured a key victory in their quest for border control. The Sinaloan’s ultimate goal: to manage the San Diego–Tijuana conurbation, the largest urban link between the United States and Mexico.

Bastardo’s Mexican ambitions? Well, I guess we all were Bastardo now. Our aim is to undermine the United States, on our path to prosperity, and to honour the man that gave us freedom back in the Colombian jungle…

…I am Hugo Ojeda. I am Bastardo.


Note from the Editor - Mexico is where we now reside. I haven’t revealed the Football Manager element to our story just yet, that’s for one final [more serious] post to come. But I wanted to lay the ground properly, for what I hope will be a 4-5 season save before FM21 comes out (*pandemic dependant, of course). Hugo Ojeda will be our manager, a 20-year-old Venezuelan refugee who balances Bastardo’s splintered Empire on his young shoulders.

Can he keep it together, in the middle of a Cartel Drug War, and make a success of it all? I hope you can join me to find out.

As always, thanks for reading/sharing/caring.

FM Grasshopper