Football Manager Tactics: 3241 magic in Monterrey #FM24EarlyAccess

 
 

Hola a todos!

The #FM24EarlyAccess is here, and the excitement ahead of the full release is now at fever pitch. But before I go an embark on my SuperClub Diaries save, I thought I would try out some sweet tactical goodness in Mexico, with CF Monterrey. Firstly, why Mexico? Well, it’s a fairly short Opening/Closing league system with the addition of the newly re-formatted Leagues Cup containing Major League Soccer franchises. There are also no relegations + promotions right now, so it makes sense to manage in this nation for a relatively short period…rather than a long-term save. Secondly, why CF Monterrey?


Squad review

It has been a four-year spell without a trophy for CF Monterrey in real-life, yet there is potential to challenge for honours from the beginning of this save due to some great players being present in the Day 1 squad:

  1. Esteban Andrada - a former Miami Galáctico in an alternate FM Universe. Not sure why, but I love this Goalkeeper. Tall, dependable with old school ‘keeping attributes.

  2. Héctor Moreno - Mexico seems to generate many players with 100+ international caps. Moreno is 6th on the most capped list, with 132 appearances for El Tricolor…he is a classy left-footed Centre-Back who can bring the ball out of defence and pick a good pass.

  3. Sergio Canales, Jesús Corona (‘Tecatito) and Maximiliano Meza - Three technically gifted players here to build around, all three need to be in the First XI. All three have a decent mix of Flair, Technique and Vision.

There are a number of other players I have grown to like during this short play-through, but the five mentioned above are what drew me towards Monterrey. Here they are in FM24, (please do not mock the lack of club logos/facepacks…I’ve made no efforts to download them so far):


Building the tactic

So, the ideas of fitting the previously mentioned five players all went onto my tactical whiteboard. Here is the first concept of a tactic I had in mind for CF Monterrey:

 

My whiteboard.

 

The arrows crudely drawn by oneself hint at the kind of movement I was looking for, so you can probably guess some of the roles I intend to use. Maybe have a go at guessing before you read on?


4141 to 3241, with Positional Play

Positional Play, in my view at least, is not a new concept. I grew up with people telling me to pass as triangles on the football pitch, overloading a certain part of the pitch when in possession of the ball. Whilst I appreciate Pep Guardiola gets the modern day plaudits for Positional Play, in a lot of ways…it was already in grassroots football years/decades ago OR maybe it has always been in football? In Football Manager 2024 we now see players have a greater awareness of one another, so for the early-access content I wanted to use a few roles that trigger these transitional movements. Based on the previous screenshot I decided to try the below roles:

  • Libero (Defend) - moving CB to DM

  • Inverted Full Back (Defend) - moving FB to CB

  • Mezzala (Attack) - moving CM to AM

You can see clearly how the first couple of transitions work, the Inverted Full Back will slot in to the space vacated by the Libero (who forms a double pivot with my Deep Lying Playmaker). The final transition of the left sided Mezzala movement is not a new one, however the way Football Manager sees the players around him react to that movement has been tweaked. So, that means any wide player stays that little bit wider (to allow the Mezzala full occupancy of the half-space) and the Attacking Midfielder moving to the right slightly. Remember: FM24’s Positional Play is as much about the shifting of a role (e.g. an Attacking Midfielder) around a transitional role (e.g. Mezzala), than it is of the latter moving into certain spaces. I think it is important to bold this particular point, because I have seen a bit of confusion around the content creator community thinking Positional Play is the movement of certain roles themselves, which have largely always been there (think: Deep Lying Forward and Central Midfielder on Attack for example), nor is it the Enganche moving out wide under all conditions for example, rather it is the Positional Play from other roles forcing it to happen as a rotation.

Because Football Manager 2024’s user interface does not show you a general in possession shape, I made one myself (see below). In the far left image I have a stripped back 2D Classic view of the pitch in the various zones, which FMers on the forums from yesteryear sometime like to call strata. The middle is out of possession, i.e. the tactic that you see on FM24 and the far right is the general spaces the roles like to move into. I appreciate I have not yet shown you the actual roles in their entirety, nor the Team Instructions…that comes next:

There is a part of me that doesn’t sit well with showing an ‘in possession’ graphic, as there are so many subtleties that dictate the precise location of a player on the pitch at any one time. But that’s their general locations from the general patterns of play I see from an Opening Stage play-through with CF Monterrey. Below is how the wider tactic looks in FM24. Note - I’m not usually one for asymmetrical tactics as I feel the AI doesn’t cope to well against them, but the DLP-S is there for the progressive balls to Winger but also a nice cross-field switch is on for the attacking Mezzala. Anyway, all tactics are asymmetrical once we’re in possession…so I’m cool with it. Here’s how we set up:

CF Monterrey tactic.

As always, I’ve evolved the tactic…accepting that I never get it exactly how I want it right from the start.

Mentality - I’ve either been on Balanced or Positive in this save. Balanced is when I want to show slightly less urgency, usually when in control of the game already.

In Possession - I’ve always made sure CF Monterrey have been a team that play out of the back. It suits the skillset of the Centre-Backs and Inverted Full-Backs that are also capable of playing centrally. There were times I changed our approach play though, removing Work Ball Into Box when switching Deep Lying Forward to Advanced Forward. During this switch, I would also usually remove the lower tempo…increasing the chance of the Advanced Forward getting a forward ball sooner. Low crosses is also something I added to the tactic too, and for obvious reasons: we’re not overly tall or physical upfront, but rather quick and nimble.

In Transition - I think I also kept these the same across all games. But I did ask the Goalkeeper to slow down distribution during some gut wrenching Opening Stage Finals (more on this later).

Out Of Possession - The only change here is when I noticed long kicks from opposition goalkeepers reaching my Centre-Backs and beyond. One goal is the line in the sand for me to switch and drop lines deeper towards my own goal.

Player Role changes - the eagle eyed readers may have noticed that Jesús Corona was very advanced in my tactical whiteboard drawing in the Attacking Midfielder zone. I moved him down to the Central Midfield zone part-way through the season and he was on the ball a lot more as a result, which is what you want for somebody with Dribbling 18, Flair 18, Technique 17 and Vision 16! The move was justified, as he has topped our Dribbles statistic with 5.33 per 90 over the course of this Opening Stage campaign.

Now I should probably show you some goal highlights, and to do that I will do it in Loom - a video capture software that also allows me to to talk to you…

 
 

As for other bits:

  • I used default set pieces, except tweaked Defensive corner routines to help with counters - whereby two players are left upfield to break forward if given the chance. Surprisingly, I was amazed my Assistant Manager routine had everybody back, which kind of invited the pressure!

  • No Opposition Instructions used. Not against them, I just feel I did not need to mico-manage this.

  • Only two Player Instructions used: Defensive Winger set to run wide with the ball (stretch the play) and attacking Winger told to cut inside with the ball (overload central areas).


Magic in Monterrey

If you got this far into the blog, I’m guessing you want to know how it all went in the Opening Stage with CF Monterrey? Today is your lucky day…

Leagues Cup

The revamped Leagues Cup now contains all clubs from MLS and Liga MX and it offers a unique experience in FM by seeing two leagues go up against one another - dare I say it’s relatively unknown to FMers right now? It starts with 15 groups of three clubs, before 1st and 2nd places are then placed into four regions (Central, East, South and West) where it becomes a knockout tournament with Quarter, Semi and Final games. The four winners of these regional finals then enter the ‘Semi Final play-offs’. Here’s how we did:

Stay in your lane MLS…

Seeing that the Board only ever wanted us to be competitive, we surpassed expectations by making it to the regional final…losing on penalties to Tigres at home. Pretty devastated with that, but the main focus was on the Opening Stage domestically…

Opening Stage

One thing I struggled to do in the early access save was manage the fitness of certain players as we played every 3 days with Leagues Cup overlapping into the Opening Stage. Simply put, I probably needed an extra player or two during this run but I turned off the opening Transfer Window (damn). Once we only had the Opening Stage to focus on, the run was strong: 12 games unbeaten to finish the season in 3rd.

You can see that some little tactical tweaks from concept to finished tactic worked with the unbeaten run.

Opening Stage Finals

The Opening Stage Finals were a good reminder of the ‘h’ in FM-exico to grant the higher seed passage in the event of a draw. We made good use of that as Santos Laguna gave us a really good two ties.

Massive.

Seeing as Pachuca were our first defeat of the save in the Liga MX tie, I was keen to dial in a bit more and make some pragmatic changes. I decide to use the Focus Play Towards The Left vs Pachuca, because I suspected that they would play with IWB and an advanced Winger at AMR (based from Scout Report). With Canales returning from injury, it could be a good area of the pitch for us to exploit. So it proved too, with a healthy 5-2 aggregate score to take us into the final.

So, the Opening Stage Final: 3rd meets 8th. It’s classic Latin American goodness that I have come to love, whereby the league finish is really just a footnote. Bring your A Game when it matters, and you will do well my son. This is what Monterrey, and much to my surprise, actually did. With a depleted and tired squad, we had to show our mettle against a difficult Atlas side who had hit form when it mattered. Despite having five Moneterrey players in the match day squad needing a rest for the 2nd leg, we went to Atlas and won 2-0 (after drawing our home leg 1-1). It is time to celebrate the first trophy of FM24…

WE DID IT™

Too boring/long/short; did not read? I used three tactical roles that trigger Positional Play rotations: Inverted Full Back, Libero and Mezzala. We transitioned from a lop-sided 4141 of sorts to a 3241 in possession. Whilst we did not win the Leagues Cup, we managed to finish 3rd in the Liga MX and won the thing outright by progressing to the Opening Stage Final: beating Atlas 3-1 on aggregate. Gracias por todo, CF Monterrey.

Thank you for reading, and I hope you continue to enjoy the FM24 Early Access.

Tony / FM Grasshopper

SuperClub Diaries (Vol. 1) - Announcement #FM24

 
 

Super Clubs

Most journeyman saves, or saves in general, that I see documented on blogs or on YouTube tend to follow the pattern of starting from the bottom before working upwards to the top. My Ceuta save is a quintessential example of that. The elite clubs are instead often reserved for short stints during the beta period of the FM cycle. But for most of 2023, I’ve had super clubs on my mind.

I have taken special interest in the absurd events over at Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and Bayern Munich, where it would seem that a league title win is not enough to clear the air of contempt and fan frustration surrounding both clubs. Simply put, winning most games in a campaign does not necessarily mean a Head Coach meets the expected minimum level of performance…super clubs appear to demand two things: (1) winning in style and (2) the ultimate prize: the UEFA Champions League (UCL). Something both clubs failed to do, who duly made wholesale backroom staff changes in the Summer of 2023.

Speaking of the UCL, along with the super club mentality comes a feeling of superiority and that was best demonstrated with the 2021 European Super League. The aforementioned clubs of PSG and Bayern are not guilty of that, but eleven other heavyweights* decided that they would be better served in a breakaway European league, void of relegation and a guarantee of competition profits through a sizeable percentage of income each year.

You are right to think that all of this can be a turn off from wanting to manage a super club in FM, as they often act like spoiled brats. But maybe there is an FM save here by behaving like a super club? It’s something I never really do, usually players in my FM saves are carefully recruited with the aim to get as much out of the budget as possible. A super club would, and absolutely should, be in the moment of building an elite XI each year, with the aim to win it all. I think that’s where my save idea begins…

*and Tottenham.


The save premise

A journeyman at the upper echelons of European football with ten of the twelve founding members of the European Super League, with Bayern and PSG replacing North London (because it’s stupid to call Arsenal and Tottenham ‘super clubs’ when they have not won a league title for so long). Here is a map of the clubs I can manage:

 

The 12 clubs I can manage in SuperClub Diaries.

 

I am not going to be too strict on when I move on in the save, a lot of it is down to circumstance and chance, but I will begin my FM24 journey with Paris Saint Germain, and I will explain my reasoning shortly. But the overall aim is to win as many UCLs as possible, with more than just one club and certainly more than Carlo Ancelotti’s four winning manager medals.


Why Paris Saint-Germain in FM24?

Choosing Paris Saint-Germain may seem like no real challenge at all, but there is work to do ensuring their 2023 Summer rebuild integrates smoothly.  The Parisian club also have the added complication of Ligue Un dropping to 7th in the UEFA rankings and the threat of Saudi Arabian clubs now competing for the World’s best talents.  Paris needs to rediscover their attractiveness once again, and move away from the shitshow of the last 12 months where, despite winning a record breaking 11th Ligue Un title, many adverse things have happened:

So, within each super club during “SuperClub Diaries” I plan to have some club specific aims. For PSG I would continue the policy of signing the very best players, but alternatively they have been criticised for having let such good talent leave their academy. I therefore plan to bring some of the best ones back again to Paris. Here’s a fairly long list of the talent that has recently left the academy:

  1. Adrien Rabiot (Juventus)

  2. Alphonse Areola (West Ham)

  3. Arnaud Kalimuendo (Stade Rennais)

  4. Boubakary Soumare (Sevilla FC on loan from Leicester City)

  5. Christopher Nkunku (Chelsea)

  6. El Chadaille Bitshuiabu (RB Leipzig)

  7. Ferland Mendy (Real Madrid)

  8. Jonathan Ikone (Fiorentina)

  9. Junior Dina Ebimbe (Eintracht Frankfurt)

  10. Kingsley Coman (FC Bayern)

  11. Matteo Guendouzi (Lazio on loan from Olympique de Marseille)

  12. Mike Maignan (AC Milan)

  13. Mohamed-Ali Cho (Real Sociedad)

  14. Moussa Dembele (Al Ettifaq)

  15. Moussa Diaby (Aston Villa)

  16. Odsonne Edouard (Crystal Palace)

  17. Sekou Mara (Southampton)

  18. Tanguy Nianzou (Sevilla FC)

  19. Timothy Weah (Juventus)

  20. Xavi Simons (RBLeipzig on loan from PSG)

  21. Yacine Adli (AC Milan)

Can I tempt some of the better ones above and bring them home? Can I then form a predominantly homegrown UCL winning side, think Ajax 1995 but Parisian? After all, ici c’est Paris! If any of the above interests you, be sure to check back later in the year, where I’ll begin the save and subsequent diaries here on ☕️🏠 FM.

Thank you for reading/sharing and caring,

Tony / FM Grasshopper

"10 years at Ceuta" - Plazas de Soberanía #FM23

 
 

Previously on Plazas de Soberanía, Ceuta tactically evolved.


Intro

Has this been my favourite blogged FM save? Probably not, but I am ok with that. I cannot always find the most epic save ever or have the greatest in-game moments. Alternatively, this has not been a bad save either. I set out to do a One Club Save back on FM23 release day, and here I am in September 2023 concluding things with excitement building for FM24…AD Ceuta FC have kept the Football Manager flame alight for 10 months of the year. 10 in-game seasons that have held my attention.

The save has largely gone the way I had hoped too: an upward journey from Primera Federación Grupo I to LaLiga. Whilst we did not gain successive promotions, challenge for LaLiga right away or sell a Mauritanian Newgen for €90m…I did the save my way. €3-4m transfer spends on players that suited lowly Ceuta, evolving tactically and constructing a 15,000-seater new stadium in the process. I started out as the 133rd most reputable club in Spain in 2022 and now I finish with Ceuta as the 19th most reputable club in Spain in 2032.

Today’s post recaps on the 10th and final season, whether I met the save’s aims, I share my favourite FM23 player and I then reveal how the save will keeping going without me. Does any of this entice you to read on further?

Oh, and as a reminder…this is our story so far:

  1. 2022/23 - Primera Federación Grupo I - 6th

  2. 2023/24 - Primera Federación Grupo I - 4th (promoted via Playoffs) 🚀

  3. 2024/25 - LaLiga SmartBank - 13th

  4. 2025/26 - LaLiga SmartBank - 13th

  5. 2026/27 - LaLiga SmartBank - 14th

  6. 2027/28 - LaLiga SmartBank - 7th

  7. 2028/29 - LaLiga SmartBank - 1st (promoted as champions) 🏆

  8. 2029/30 - LaLiga Santander - 15th

  9. 2030/31 - LaLiga Santander - 14th

  10. 2031/32 - LaLiga Santander - ?

And all the posts so far:


Season 2031/32

The 10th and final season with Ceuta, in my Plazas de Soberanía series has been a blast. I completed the season quicker than I thought I would, mainly because I could see some of the progress we were making and the good football we were playing. I did not sign too many players, but Adonay Marichal is the standout signing as I channelled my inner David Moyes and recruited from the division below. Adonay arrived for €3.5m for Las Palmas and played a mixture of Deep Lying Playmaker and Attacking Midfielder (interchanging with the 🐐, Txus Alba - more on him later).

 

Adonay Marichal.

 

There was a brief moment where European qualification was a possibility, and part of me believed I could do it. Alas, 15 points at the end of the season was the difference and the line in the sand marked out as the next ceiling for Ceuta to breakdown:

Final league table.

14 green dots!


My FM23 Aims - Revisited

The previous save aims are found here. My Ceuta side never once challenged for the LaLiga title, and I never got to hear the Champions League theme. However, I never once got sacked here at Ceuta…and we did move into the new 15,000 ‘Ceuta stadium’:

 
 

After signing 14 North Africans in this save, we finally saw one capped internationally for the first time whilst present at the club. I left it late, 2031 Summer signing Amine Mekouar (and the final North African arrival in this save) received a debut for Morocco against Rwanda in which he scored. Phew, achieving 3 out of my 5 aims isn’t bad 😎


My fav FM23 player is…

…Txus Alba. Were you expecting me to write somebody else? Sure, ‘Kevin’ was a monumental signing and I titled three posts around the Ceuta born Nigerian…but Txus Alba was iconic for me in FM23. Txus Alba joined in 2024/25 (my third season in FM), Ceuta’s debut season in LaLiga 2. He so nearly joined on loan a year before that but opted to join league rivals Linares on loan from Barcelona. When his contract was up at La Masia, I swooped in and made him my highest earner on €200k per annum.

Txus Alba, club ‘Icon’.

Sometimes in FM, you get that one player whose trajectory grows alongside the growth of the club. This is something I see when managing a One-Club save such as this, and something I have experienced with Txus in my side. He’s been almost ever-present in the seven years I have managed him…either as my Deep Lying Playmaker or as one of my Attacking Midfielders. Txus has been my most used player with 330 appearances, 106 appearances more than the 2nd most used player: Luca Zidane.

It’s probably fair to say that both him and Ceuta have hit a ceiling together in mid-table LaLiga. The next step is probably to phase him out of the side and part ways, and that’s another Manager’s immediate job (more on this later). But for now I want to look back at Txus’ service here:

330 Appearances, 38 Goals, 76 Assists, 7.02 Average Rating. Below is his last LaLiga assist (number 33 in Spain’s top league), and probably one of his best:

Txus Alba assist Vs Elche (Season 10)

Other special players in this save are the aforementioned Kevin Carlos (51 goals in a couple of seasons) & Luca Zidane (Club Captain for many years) and Rubén Acuña (my highest goal scorer of 72 goals over four seasons). Perhaps in the tier below is Iker Losada (191 appearances, 39 goals and 38 assists) and Lorenzo Gonzalez (whose 34 goals in a single season [2022/23] was never beaten). I salute these virtual players and I will often think about them.


No El Fin…Announcing Ceuta’s New Manager…

I find that the motivation to leave a legacy wanes a little bit in a One Club Save. It might just be me, but the last few transfer windows in these kind of saves often see me just going through the motions - there’s no real desire to find that next wonderkid or leave the squad looking in a top shape. However, that all changed when CoffeehouseFM’s next top Blogger, José (@YouthIntake), got in contact with me over the Summer, asking if he could continue my save after me by loading up the save file. I was genuinely happy to share, because from that moment I had a greater motivation to conclude things with Ceuta in the best possible way.

The other added benefit for me was being able to share my save file six in-game months in advance of ending with Ceuta, in order to identify targets with José and seeing whether I could add a couple of players. After all, how often do you see new Managers IRL come in and totally disregard players that the club has only just signed? I was determined not to have this with Ceuta. The benefit for José is that he’s privy to the decision making now, meaning it is two positions he won’t have to worry about on arrival and they’ll get 6 months of football before José can come in and use them.

So, José and I got to work and we identified the Full Back positions as a place to recruit towards in January 2032, due to the players being fairly old there. These are the two players we signed:

Alberto Vega

Romario Barta

In my current 4222, the left sided full back is the more attacking one. With Alberto Vega signing this can obviously continue. He has good physicals to get up and down the pitch, and a decent enough cross. He arrives in a cut-price deal (€115k) from Real Madrid due to his expiring contract. The next signing becomes the first non-Spanish or North African in the save so far, but he’s José’s 1st pick for RB…and I can see why. Romario Barta (signing from Cluj at €3.8m) is a solid full back, who will offer good security in the defence.

I am unsure if José will blog his journey with Ceuta (or update us someplace else), but I am happy to know the club is in safe virtual hands. His immediate focus will be to keep the team competitive with the lowest salary cap in the league (circa €29m p/a), and that should not be underestimated considering the club does not generate much in the way of match day revenue. Additionally, now that the club is established in LaLiga, developing youth is something I think José and Ceuta can push forward with too 🙂

AD Ceuta FC, good luck in the future.

Thank you for reading / sharing and caring,

Tony / FM Grasshopper

"Ceuta's Tactical Evolution" - Plazas de Soberanía #FM23

 
 

Previously on Plazas de Soberanía, Ceuta survived in LaLiga.


Intro

Despite functionality being added to FM to allow the continuation of saves cross-edition, I know that this is the beginning of the end for my Ceuta save. Season 9 (which this post covers) is my penultimate one, with the aim to finish FM23 at the conclusion of a décima season. For this reason, I thought I would have a look back on the tactical evolution we have made over the save.

Why change a tactic?

It is important to stress you don’t have to change a winning tactic in FM. If one works for you, then you’re free to simply keep using it. However, I have two main reasons why I like to review and evolve tactically year-on-year:

  1. Changing leagues / reputation

    AD Ceuta FC have been relegation favourites at various points in the save (notably Seasons 1, 3 and 8) . But in other moments, they’ve been stronger than most in the league and have been chasing promotion (Seasons 2 and 7). As a result, the tactics have had to adjust over time; and hopefully that’s evident from when you read on below.

  2. Meeting Club Vision

    Another factor for the subtle changes is the varying flavours of football desired by the Club’s Board, who enter elections every few years. For instance, they were agnostic to any style of football early on in the save. But as we have progressed, the Board have craved for more Attacking and High Tempo/Pressing styles of football. I have tried to adapt my playstyle to suit. FM Eadster has done thing similar in FM23, and has documented his approach [very well] here.

The current tactic (4222) is the one I will keep now until the end regardless of the Board…it fits the current composition of the squad and also suits our plucky underdog style too. But I’ll first start with the 442 and remember where it all began in 2022…


Ceuta’s Tactical Evolution - 442, 433, 4141/442 and 4222

Season 1 (2022) - 442

 

Season 1’s 442.

 

The 442 tactic is class in most editions of Football Manager. What I like about the 442 the most is that it offers both a defensive shield and also fluid attacking movements with two wide players. I used this formation as it was the tactic that best suited the skillset I inherited with wide players, Liberto & Luismi, being the two best players in the squad and with one quick striker in Lorenzo Gonzalez. 442 allowed me to play all three in their best positions. I wrote about how/why I built it like I did here.

Result: I only used it a season, but it kept Ceuta up in the Third Division (after being one the favourites to go down). Ceuta finished 6th in Primera Federación Grupo I, and I would have probably kept it for the 2nd season had it not been for losing Gonzalez to FC Basel in the Summer transfer window.

Stats (from Season 1 league campaign only):

  • xG For 52.5 / Goals scored 54

  • xG Against 45.7 / Goals conceded 37

  • Goals per game 1.42

  • Goals conceded per game 0.97

  • 15 clean sheets (out of 38)


Seasons 2-4 (2023-2026) - 433

 

The 433 of Season 2.

 

My next tactic was the 433 formation, because it’s a nice shape for a high press/tempo style of football - something the AD Ceuta Board added in as a 2023 Club Vision. With three forwards leading the line, the tactic I used encouraged quick and incisive passing with a three-man midfield providing a strong foundation for building attacks. One player sat deep as a Defensive Midfielder (on Defend) and two central midfielders capable of initiating attacking moves or running into advanced areas (Advanced Playmaker on Support and Mezzala on Attack). I went all-in on the data approach to rebuild the side tailored to this formation and tactic. I did this by nominating three different in-game statistics to certain roles and then used a season’s worth of data to recruit statistically the best players within the allocated budget. Underpinning it all were the following requirements:

Based: in Spain

Minutes: at least 1,000 minutes

Expiring: 3 months

Salary offered limited to €125,000 per p/a

Result: The 433 not only saw us promoted via the Playoffs, it also kept us up the following season in LaLiga SmartBank. At a time when the club was fragile with players’ minimum fee clauses being reachable for most clubs in Spain, and in that awkward transition phase of having sub-par players…the 433 earned a mid-table LaLiga2 finish in 2025/26.

Stats (from Season 2 league campaign only):

  • xG For 47.1 / Goals scored 46

  • xG Against 31.8 / Goals conceded 26

  • Goals per game 1.21

  • Goals conceded per game 0.68

  • 21 clean sheets (out of 38)


Season 5 (2027) - 4141/442

The tactics of Season 5.

Tactical flexibility is demonstrated well in the 4141 and 442 formations. The 4141 is defensive solid and its compactness allowed Ceuta to have greater ball retention as we looked to adjust from being the major underdog to being more of a promotion candidate within LaLiga2. By simply pushing one of the midfielders forward into a second striker role, the 4141 transitioned nicely into a 442 formation - similar to that nice 1st season in FM23 - when I felt we needed more firepower upfront.

Result: The dual-running between 4141/442 earned a 7th place LaLiga2 finish, at that point the highest finish in the save to date. But with several outgoings, and a shift to more central creative players, the days of Wingers in Ceuta were over…

Stats (from Season 5 league campaign only):

  • xG For 52.2 / Goals scored 54

  • xG Against 54.4 / Goals conceded 52

  • Goals per game 1.29

  • Goals conceded per game 1.23

  • 13 clean sheets (out of 42)


Seasons 6-10 (2027-present) - 4222

The 422 in Season 8.

My 4222 formation in Football Manager has been so much fun. With two defensive midfielders sitting in front of the backline, there is a solid defensive foundation to work with. But it is in advanced areas where the tactic creates FM Grasshopper euphoria. The two attacking midfielders function as creative sparks who can unlock defences with their incisive passing and quick movement off the ball (both Attacking Midfielders on Support). The pair of strikers up front form a lethal partnership, constantly posing a threat to the opposing defence with their attacking mentality and strong movement (both are Moving Into Channels). Overall, I have found the 4222 tactic to offer the most fun out of all the tactics that came before it.

The 4222 system underwent a few enhancements during Season 6, as discussed here, when Matt/Throwing Copper looked over the tactic with me.

Result: The 4222 saw us promoted as Champions to LaLiga on Season 7 (the club’s first and only trophy) and it led to a 15th LaLiga finish in Season 8. Let’s now see how it performed in Season 9…

Stats (from Season 8 league campaign only):

  • xG For 46.1 / Goals scored 60

  • xG Against 70.9 / Goals conceded 72

  • Goals per game 1.58

  • Goals conceded per game 1.89

  • 6 clean sheets (out of 38)


Season 2030/31

I am using the LaLiga TV money that comes in ‘sensibly’. However, I did meet/surpass the €3.2m transfer record on three separate occasions during the 2023/31 transfer window, although each time it was not by much…

Rubén Acuña arrived permanently from Mallorca after his successful two-year loan spell with Ceuta. 26 league goals in Season 7 to get us promoted, and a further 11 goals and 7 assists in La Liga last year solidified my belief that the 22-year-old was good enough in LaLiga. He arrived for €3.2m, the same value of transfer as Wajdi Abidi a year before. With two forwards in the 4222’s starting XI, I required at least one more interchangeable option alongside last year’s top scorer Juan José and Rubén Acuña…so I was delighted when Noel López agreed a €3.8m deal to swap Venezia for Ceuta. With the firepower then sorted for the year, I went big on a Central Defender. The Recruitment Focus was set to dial in on young Spanish CBs 23-years-old or under of any Current Ability, but with a Potential of four stars…and up came A+ rated Liam Llaneza from recently relegated Santander. The Director of Fútbol negotiated a new club record fee of €4.1m, which took Ceuta’s transfer window spending in excess of €10m for the first time in the save.

Here are the three guys mentioned:

Seeing as the general theme of this post is tactical evolution, 2030/31 would see me shift mentality down to ‘Cautious’ in order to soak up a bit more pressure and hit teams on the break a bit more. Despite scoring five fewer goals and leaking a couple more goals compared to last season…we bettered last season’s points tally by 4. The main beneficiary of the tactical change, in my opinion, has been Rubén Acuña with 19 league goals as our Advanced Forward. A sizeable amount of goals have been derived from countering the AI on a higher tempo from balls from deep and via Acuñas’s clever runs.

The 4-1 home win Vs Almería (in which Juan José scored a wondergoal - see below) secured LaLiga for third successive year, and with the party atmosphere continuing into the 2-0 win against Cádiz I could have been forgiven for dreaming of a top half finish! But six defeats in a row to end the season saw Ceuta drop from 12th to 14th. Still, the 10th (and final season) will see the new 15,000 seater ‘Ceuta stadium’ open in LaLiga. Assignment complete ✅

Juan José’s 2030 entry towards the #GIFGoals hashtag 🚀

Below are the team stats for the 4222 of Season 9. Obvious improvements from last season’s stats are evident, but we’ve been terribly let down by an xG Against-Goals Conceded swing of -14. Interestingly, Ceuta bettered their xG Against by 10 goals compared to last season…but for some reason this is the worst negative balance of xG Against/Goals Against we have seen in the save so far. I am not sure why, but forgive me for solely placing the blame on the insane opposition Newgens we are coming up against. They’ve been painfully lethal…

Stats (from Season 9 league campaign only):

  • xG For 52.1/ Goals scored 55

  • xG Against 60.8 / Goals conceded 74

  • Goals per game 1.45

  • Goals conceded per game 1.94

  • 7 clean sheets (out of 38)


One More Year

This is it now. One more season of the FM23 Ceuta/ Plazas de soberanía save. There is a new stadium to open and some smart investment required to see us stay clear of another relegation fight once again.

Thanks for reading / sharing / caring,

Tony / FM Grasshopper

"Past, Present and Future" - Football Manager 2024 and beyond

Hi Readers,

If you’ve clicked on this before reading the main Sports Interactive blog, from Studio Director Miles Jacobson, what on earth is wrong with you? You may have already watched some of the YouTube reaction videos too, again what’s wrong with you?!? But seriously, if you’ve made it on to my blog to read my thoughts about FM24 and beyond…you’ll already be accustomed to my general admiration and optimism around the Football Manager series. This post is not Miles’ blog verbatim, nor is it hyperbole around the death of FM, it’s rather my thoughts on the series going forward. You see, I was fortunate enough to have attended the Sports Interactive offices last weekend. Albeit a bit later than others due to some personal stuff going on, but I was able to see [once again] the care & enthusiasm this game receives from the people who are responsible for making it. It was a great weekend, here’s a pic to prove it…

 

Dan Gear 86, myself and a fan.

 

FM23 - New Records

FIVE million FMers in FM23? That’s pretty good going, Blogging only captivates a small % of that player base…and it puts into context that our readers and the Super Fans (like those at SI on the day) make up a very niche profile within the overall pool of FM players out there. Moreover, it’s great to see the game grow year-on-year. For all of the criticism aimed at SI, they surely must be doing something right to grab the attention across a multitude of platforms with FM23 like they have done?

FM24 - 20th Tribute Edition + The Never Ending Story

My first thought reading Miles’ blog is about whether we’re going to get some amazing cover art? Perhaps the Manager Man comes back? Ripped shirt, weathered face, tie around his head…a mirror image of me depicting my own labour of love since Football Manager 2005.

It’s a love letter to football and the FM series as we know it. It’s the closing of this chapter of our history” Miles aka The 🐐 of Studio Blogs

Miles mentions that some features never made it in FM23, and they’d likely be dropped into this tribute edition which may suit the long-term player. Hell yeah, more of that please 🙏. Whilst FM23 had a nice Recruitment Focus new feature, the game felt a lot like the previous game before it (rinse repeat since FM19?). This is where it gets a bit humorous too, because the game might just feel like the same game again if you port over your current FM23 save into FM24! Still, it’s a feature that’s long overdue and it is desperately needed (imo) with the overall GamePass/Games As a Service methodology…which Miles hints at.

Will we now be writing the never ending story, within a save world that only concludes once you decide it does? Quite possibly.

FM25 - Unite behind Unity + Women’s Football

Friday 14 November 2008 seems like a long time ago…yet I can still vividly remember coming home from a field trip on my University course to play Football Manager 2009 [featuring the new 3D match engine] all weekend. As my train pulled into Exeter, St.David’s Station, I even remember the song I was [over]playing at the time (Ray J’s ‘Anytime’ for reference, it’s a banger 🎵). I reckon Football Manager 2025 is going to provide me similar levels of feels. The new-look engine is long overdue and Miles does well to introduce it in his brief blog post. Pencil Q2 of 2024 in your diaries, because that’s when we’re going to get some juicy visuals/footage of the engine and that sweet new-look User Interface (UI). I suspect the animations and stadiums are going to be light years ahead of what we’re used to, and the UI is definitely 10 years overdue. There is no point asking Miles, or anybody else at SI, for anything related to screenshots/videos though until FM24 is out on sale. You have been warned.

Another thing that has been documented previously in a studio blog post is the introduction of Women’s Football. It is now confirmed to arrive for Football Manager 2025. Again, it makes total sense to deploy Women’s football in the new engine…and not on the final few editions of the legacy one. As a football coach within the real-life female pathway…I’m keeping a close eye on how it translates into the world of FM. I think a lot of existing players may overlook it as a feature, but the work that would have likely gone in in terms of research + match engine (let alone the legal bits that Miles mentions) must be astronomical. I hope it’s a success and one day takes us to TEN million FMers and beyond.

Thank you for reading, are you as excited as I am?

Tony / FM Grasshopper