Toulouse 7.01: The Empire Strikes Back

Hello again! Would you believe it, another blog post. I’ve finally managed to complete the seventh season with Toulouse, and it will be the final season I blog for this edition of FM. An entire season without Ted…will that be good, or bad?

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Once again, I’ll be cramming an entire season into one post, as I say farewell to FM21.


Pre-Season:

I was hoping for a quiet transfer window tbqfh. Unfortunately, our disgruntled central midfielders had something to say about that. Particularly annoying, as I had decided to give a narrow 41212 a go this year.

Carioca had had a couple of absolute blinders for us, but more often than not, he had been merely OK. I had expected greater things in his two seasons so far. That said, I’d have liked to give him another shot. Alas, he was desperate to go there, but the hefty profit from when we signed him for €14.25m, combined with the fact that it’s another non-EU player off of the books, means I’m not too annoyed.

Colin Prent’s departure on the other hand was a sickener. As last season had gone on, he had begun to impress me more and more, and I was planning on having him in the starting eleven, next to Ugarte in the centre of the park. But he was furious that I hadn’t offered him a contract. I tried, but I couldn’t get through his agent (don’t get me started on player/agent interactions/promises, the system is pure shite). To make matters worse, he’s even gone for a slight loss.

Mubenga was one of two wide attackers to permanently depart as a result of our planned formation change. I didn’t particularly want him to stay in Ligue 1, but Monaco were his only suitors. Rabie Aribi also left earlier in the summer, for a meagre €11.5m (plus 20% profit) to Rangers. Melvin Camara’s gone out on loan, while both Mazek and Mazouch will be playing in different positions this year.

If not for those CM leavers, I wouldn’t be talking incoming transfers at all. Hurtado and Krasylnykov are Ted’s final signings (for the future), and Maurin and N’Goran are a pair of very promising French youngsters I brought in (back when I thought I might play for longer).

I don’t know if Ted would’ve had a couple of players in mind ready to sort out our midfield, but I really struggled to get any deals over the line. After losing out on more than a dozen players to other clubs or renewed contracts, I eventually managed to sign a pair of likely lads, though had to resort to a loan deal for the second.

Darijan Cvitkovic fulfils my need to have players “Dubbed the new…” in the squad, as apparently he’s the new Zvonimir Boban. Tedderz had had his eye on Kennedy Waziri for a few years, and I’ve achieved what he couldn’t, and brought him to Toulouse, albeit on loan.

The “new” players I really wanted to highlight however, are once again those that had previously been away from the club on loan.

José Gutiérrez has been on the books for three full years, since Ted picked him up on a free transfer from Peruvian amateur football. Three year-long loan spells, firstly at Paços de Ferreira, then Rennes, and finally Hertha Berlin, have seen him develop marvellously, adding three or four points to most of his central defender attributes.

I was in the market for a CB this summer, but the choices were limited to players that would only go for €100m+, players inferior to José, and Josko Gvardiol, who wanted staggering wages, so I’ve stuck with what we’ve got instead. It does mean I’ve got a non-EU problem again, as Gutiérrez can’t be registered until Ugarte’s paperwork to become a French national comes through.

Jarne Vandendriessche’s year in Germany went very well. He top scored for Mainz with 16 goals as they finished in an impressive fourth place. He’ll be vying with Hwan Solo and Nestorovic for a starting role this season.

After signing in Ted’s very last window, Wesley performed superbly for Juventus, winning the Coppa Italia, and breaking into the Brazilian national side, which finished third at the 2026 World Cup. It’s fair to say I rate him a lot.

Initially, I had planned to give Mazouch a go up top, with Cvitkovic in the centre of the park, meaning my first team squad numbers would’ve been 1-11. It didn’t take long to make a change though, with Mazouch a pale imitation of himself up front, and Cvitkovic looking like he needed more time to settle. So the first XI for most of the first half of the season was the below:

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August to December ‘26:

We lost the stupid charity shield equivalent thing 2-1 to PSG. Fourth time in a row ffs.

Then, ridiculously, it took until our 17th Ligue match to concede a goal. Yet somehow, despite only conceding two goals, and only dropping two points, it looked like we were part of a three horse race for the title.

Actual madness.

Actual madness.

The big story, for me at least, was that I finally beat PSG, at the seventeenth time of asking. We faced them in the second game of the season, and two goals from Nestorovic were enough to see us to a surprisingly comfortable 2-0 win. Our dropped points came two games later, in a 0-0 bore draw with Lyon.

All three of our strikers were in double digits for goals, and Wesley had been pulling the strings very nicely as the AP. The defensive unit was obviously immense, and though Ugarte’s paperwork took bloody ages, Gutiérrez was finally able to make his league debut on October 31st.

In the Champions League, we got a pretty favourable draw. I do so love to see Leverkusen come out of the hat. We’ve played them six times now, and have maintained our 100% record over them.

The highlight of the round was a smash and grab 2-0 win over Man Utd at Old Trafford. A Hwan Solo double separated the sides, but Arnau Tenas was the PotM, with an 8.5 rating, and a saved penalty to boot. He really does his best work against the big guns in Europe.

January Transfer Window:

More bloody midfield nonsense. You give a guy a chance, and he kicks you in the nadgers. Pierre Dufour, nothing special, but I gave him a shot at being our back-up BWM. Half a dozen starts later, in which he was merely fine, and he was demanding first team football and throwing his toys out of the pram. Begone.

Mazek had actually turned a bit of a corner since a fairly poor season last year. However he was constantly unhappy as I consistently refused to give him a €120k+ p/w pay rise. When RB Leipzig came calling, I let him go for the sake of the dressing room. He started precisely 100 games for Toulouse, which yielded us 44 goals and 32 assists from his three and a half year stay.

I’m very disappointed to lose Hugo García, but when Liverpool make a deadline day bid, there’s not a whole lot you can do (other than add a 30% next sale clause). FM didn’t give Hugo a lot of love in terms of average rating, but he really was an excellent BWM, and the number of times he broke up attacks and turned them into opportunities for us was really vital, he’ll be a big, big loss.

Fortunately, I’d started the search for a new BWM when Dufour left, so we did manage to replace García before the window closed.

Boubacar Kamara signing is a sure fire signal that Ted’s gone. No way he’d be signing a non-newgen at this stage of a save! It’s a lot of money, but he’s a very fine player, in his prime, and versatile. He’s also HG in France, which with our recent outgoings, is actually vital.

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After four and a half seasons on loan, Arnau Tenas has finally become a Toulouse player proper. €15m is good value, and if he’d signed another new deal at Barcelona instead, I may have shouted at my computer like a total loon.

Alfaro and Santos came in as future prospects/non-EU headaches. Ryad Talbi arrived as an extremely short term fix. With a couple of injuries, and the Asian Cup in January, we were pretty short-handed up front.

Coupe de France:

We got a really ugly draw in the 9th round. No semi-pro opponents for us, instead, Marseille away.

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We came through fairly comfortably in the end, and then very comfortably in the next couple of rounds.

But then PSG. The absolute bastards. We actually went to their place and were ever so slightly the better side. But we had a ‘mare in the first 45. Their first four shots on target all went in, as Arnau Tenas may as well have been a cardboard cut-out. A spirited second half performance wasn’t enough, and we’ve once again failed to retain the Coupe.

Ligue 1:

Following our early season draw with Lyon, we had been on a fifteen match winning tear. Our first Ligue game in January was PSG away. Once again we played alright against them, but they nicked it in the 86th minute to win 2-1.

Two games later we went to Lyon. The sides cancelled each other out in a poor match, but Lyon scored from their only shot on target to win 1-0. Suddenly, after the most comfortable half to a season I can recall, things were out of our hands.

We bounced back to win our next twelve, conceding only a solitary goal in an otherwise mundane 4-1 drubbing of Marseille. And yet, PSG continued to win too, and Lyon’s form wasn’t bad either.

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We needed Lyon to beat PSG. They did. If we had won our remaining fixtures, the title would have been retained. But we’d drawn 3-3 with Monaco. For once, I couldn’t complain, they had tonked us. We were highly fortunate to escape with a point. We needed PSG to slip up again…

…they didn’t.

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Nine goals conceded in an entire Ligue season. NINE. And it wasn’t good enough.

No f***ing kidding.

No f***ing kidding.

We played some lovely stuff this season, and our defending was superb, unaffected by the huge amount of squad rotating I did. Even the second goalkeeper started fourteen games. I’ve never seen three teams finish over 100 points before, and I need a sit down…

Champions League:

…but there’s one more competition to cover before I can rest.

After winning our group, I was hopeful we might get a fairly easy task in the first knockout round. Instead we got Blue Liverpool. This season, we went to the bridge first, and rather than capitulating, were an even match. Nestorovic came off of the bench to grab us a deserved 88th minute equaliser. Not our usual classy goal, as he got on the end of a Dieng big lump forward, but the way he coolly rounded the keeper was nice. In more “not our usual” news, the second leg happened.

We destroyed them, it was fantastic. The two boys up front combined for the goals, but the whole team played well, limiting Chelsea to a single attempt on target in the second leg. Special mention to Boubacar Kamara who assisted the first two goals.

The quarter final is never kind to us. As you might expect, by this stage most of the teams are quite decent. Next up was regular Liverpool. I once again traipsed to Anfield, fully expecting more of the same (see FMs 19, 20 and earlier in this save for all my pain on the subject). This year the team competed, in a fairly even contest. The only real difference in the stats was our far superior xG, as our chances had been the better. Though with 6 minutes to go, we were 2-1 down. That’s when Jarne Vandendriessche got his second of the game, to get us another 2-2 away result.

Couple of things.

That was in the 42nd minute of the second leg, still 0-0, we had been ever so slightly the better side, then they got the penalty decision. You know the one. Opposition going left to right, their player gets into the box at the top of the screen, your player sticks out a leg. It’s a total FM21 classic.

Thank goodness for Tenas and his Champions League penalty heroics! Time ticked slowly down in the second half. Much like the first leg, we were creating better openings, but there was no end product. As the minutes dragged by, the fear that Liverpool would Liverpool me once again grew and grew. Could we hold on, and just for once, win on away goals?

No, there would be no away goals win for us.

Champions League Best Goal Award winner, 2026/27.

A semi-final! An actual huge semi for Toulouse. Out of the hat came Juventus, a refreshing change to play a non-English side. This time, the first leg was at home. Our 41212 seemed to match up well against Juve’s 541, and we created some good chances. It took a scrappy goal from a corner in the 78th minute to make a breakthrough though, with the big Belgian, Jarne Vandendriessche knocking the ball home. A 1-0 lead to take to Turin and all their Zebras. Would it be enough?

The second leg was a very different affair, despite both teams fielding unchanged sides. Their 541 seemed to match up well against our 41212 this time, and they tore us to shreds early on down the right flank. Federico Chiesa was the danger man, and after a mere 20 minutes, he had played a part in three goals. We were 3-1 down (3-2 on aggregate), our goal from a Hwan Solo penalty. I made an uncharacteristic first half substitution, sacrificing our numerical advantage in central midfield, for more bodies on the flanks in a 424. It did its job defensively, but we still needed a goal.

Half time came and went, and the second half was an even contest. As it went on, my hopes for a reprieve fell, at the same time as my tactic became gradually more desperately gung ho. Juve brought on a fourth CB to play in midfield to see out the game, and before I knew it, it was injury time.

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Champions League Best Goal, 3rd place, 2026/27.

Another wondergoal, this time to get us out of jail at the very last. We’re going to a Champions League final!

There we would face last seasons runners up, Bayern, who had triumphed over Man City in their semi. I was relieved. They are a good side, but City with Haaland would’ve scared me a lot more. The game would be played at the Stade de France, practically a home game! Although a quick scout showed they’d likely start with a Frenchman more in their team than us. The quick scout also increased my belief that we could win. Both sides were to be at full strength, each only missing a back-up full back for the big day.

My only question mark going in was, Busquets or Mazouch? I’d been going with the former in big games, as he’s far more solid, but Mazouch’s end of season form had been excellent, and I wasn’t afraid of the Germans. Mazouch got us here, and he got the nod.

The first real highlight, in the fifth minute, was a goal…

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1-0, nerves settled. The first half was…easy. They had one, pretty unthreatening highlight, and Tenas wasn’t tested. In the 44th minute, Jarne Vandendriessche latched on to a poor back pass, and it was two. Half time in the Champions League final against Bayern, two nil up, piece of cake.

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Immediately after this banger, it finally happened…Bayern had their first shot on target in the 60th minute. Tenas saved.

The 71st minute brought a fourth. Yes a fourth. Wonderfully, it was team captain Manuel Ugarte, getting on the end of a Wesley free kick to nod in at the back post. The final ten minutes, Bayern finally came out to play, hitting the woodwork twice, and forcing Tenas into a second save, but it was a lot too little, much too late.

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Those two saves were weirdly enough to secure our goalkeeper the player of the match award. The truth is it could’ve gone to anyone on our side. From front to back, the team excelled and dominated for 80-85 minutes out of the 90.

Criminally underrating our midfield smh

Criminally underrating our midfield smh

A mad season all around. Hwan Solo won the race to be our top scorer, finishing the season with 29 goals. 11 of them came in the Champions League, which was enough for him to win the Golden Boot. Vandendriessche was just behind him on 27, while Nestorovic continues to be more of an early season threat, his second half not as good, meaning the three way battle to be our top striker never materialised. 18 goals for a third choice forward isn’t bad though.

It was Wesley who won the hearts of the fans though, getting the Fans’ Player of the Year award, equalling Ugarte’s assist record (with 17), and setting a record for most PotM awards in a season, with 9.

There’s no doubt we’ve put a great team together, and much of the credit should go to Ted for that. Some of his youthful acquisitions really came good, Gutiérrez and Hwan Solo standing out in particular. We didn’t have as much success with our own youth players, with only Dieng being a first team regular. Perhaps with a season more, promising forward Gökhan Soyudoğru may have joined him.

This season I saw some of the best football since the beta, and my best defence since Milan in FM19. Sure, we didn’t win the league, but it was a crazy year. A Champions League trophy though? I didn’t expect that.

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I’m not going to do any sort of review of FM21, but it’s fair to say it hasn’t been my favourite edition. There are some things which need fixing, and I hope that’s a priority for FM22, rather than any more half-baked new features.

Still, I’ll inevitably return to blogging in the next edition. I think I’ll be leaving Europe for the first time, as some of UEFA’s upcoming competition changes make me want to vom. I’ve not got much further in my thinking than that.

Until then, you can still find me in my channel (#from_eleven_one) on FM Slack, where I’ll probably play with Toulouse for just a little bit longer…

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You know it. Thanks for reading, stay safe x

Toulouse 6.01: A New Hope

Hello there, welcome back to France, and indeed, to the new blogging digs. It’s been a while, and as such, I’ll forgive you if you can’t remember how things stood back in April. Long story short, we’d just won our very first Ligue Un title, usurping perennial incumbents, PSG. For the full story, you could read the older blog posts that I’ve painstakingly transferred to the Coffee House…

The big news is…TED’S SACKED! Not really, but this season took an absolute age due to my on/off relationship with this year’s FM, and my overall playing speed was therefore glacial. As a result, Ted has opted not to renew his contract and this will be the final season with him heading up the transfer dealing. In a further blow to the quality of this save/blog, he’s become so big time with his Latte’s and his flash new series, that he’s become self-aware, and has binned me off.


Ted’s Transfer Tsunami:

Ted’s last summer in Toulouse involved massive amounts of cash. There had been surprisingly few transfers out to proper big clubs before this point in the save, but it seems that finally our talents have appeared on their radar.

In terms of the major outs, I’m sorry to see most of them leave. That’s not true of Ahmet Eris, who accomplished little for us. The price Ted got for him is quite incredible business.

TVHN looks a top right back, but with homegrown considerations, Dieng is always likely to hold on to that position. Also, Ted got him on a free just one year ago, and after a pretty mediocre season, he’s turned into €50m! Bacanin has always done sterling work off of the bench, but his lack of progression finally irked Ted enough to sell him. Vlahovic was good for us (72 starts, 48 goals), but that price tag, plus some of the strikers we’ve got on board already (:eyes:), mean the transfer makes total sense. Also, he wanted off.

Sarmiento and THB have become the latest victims of the limited non-EU players we can register. Sarmiento (92 starts, 25 goals, 29 assists) is another free transfer acquisition turned into big wonga, and has gone directly because of a player we’ve promoted from T2, the “New Hope” I’ve alluded to in the title, and perhaps the most overt example of me meddling with Ted’s squad building, using my primary weapon: unrelenting, borderline embarrassing, begging and pleading.

Ted really amassed some talented squad depth here, we have many, very high quality players out on loan now, and new €29m signing, Jarne Vandendriessche joins the loan army. Hopefully a year in the Bundesliga with Mainz will hone his skills even further. He’s a very promising 18 year-old striker.

First though, I’m going to refuse to channel my inner Redwood, (focusing on his final full-back crush Zoran Milevski), and I’m going to instead highlight Czech wonderkid Jiri Mazouch. Outside of those two, the remaining signings are for back-up purposes, or future investments. Here’s Jiri:

Another ginger signing. Ted’s the best.

Another ginger signing. Ted’s the best.

A player so good, he could feature as a starter up top or in central midfield, but he’ll begin out on the right flank for us. He looks a perfect fit for the inverted forward role. Whilst admittedly playing on the opposite flank, I hope he’ll fill the hole in the squad left by Sarmiento’s departure.

A New Hope:

One summer ago, Ted signed a young Korean striker. He had a rather poor goalscoring record (8 goals in 27(8) for Pohang Steelers) when Ted brought him aboard for €3.8m, and he was one of three players sent to our Spanish affiliate club, Real Sporting, on loan. At this point, I hadn’t even noticed he existed. In my defence, Ted signs a lot of Korean players that go out on loan, and after a while, you kinda get sick of the bastards.

But then the rest of the staff kept badgering me with reports of his exploits. By the end of the 24/25 season, he had banged in 31 goals, leading Real Sporting into La Liga for the first time in the save, making their favoured personnel list, and the feeling was mutual, as they became a favoured club for him. When Ted started making noises about sending him back for another year, I started making noises about wanting him to stay. Really, really annoying noises.

Could this be the real reason for the FEO/Redwood divorce? For the inside story, send cash (to me)

Could this be the real reason for the FEO/Redwood divorce? For the inside story, send cash (to me)

He looks a proper talent, and I expect him to start putting the pressure on Nestorovic for the starting role pretty soon…

Behind The Scenes:

During this season we had another crap intake, and the board decided to build a new stadium. At this stage of the save (its deathbed/twilight, depending on how generous I’m feeling), I’m not sure either thing really matters.

August to December ‘25:

After all this change, the season began in its reassuring, traditional fashion, with us losing the Trophée des champions against PSG, this time on penalty kicks after a 1-1 draw.

Late last season, I changed from a 4231, to a 4123 formation, and that’s the tactic I started this year with, albeit an inverted version to accommodate Jiri Mazouch, in the position and role I favour him in, out on the right flank.

I have no idea what happened to Ted’s squad number game this year

I have no idea what happened to Ted’s squad number game this year

We stumbled out of the gates in the Champions League. Despite a much easier group than last year, we drew our first three games, only scoring a single goal. A pair of narrow home wins eventually saw us through, though our points and goals totals were suspect.

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Goals had not been an issue domestically however, with the change in tactic yielding a similar amount up top, though tightening us up in defence. At the end of the first half of the season we were on top of the table, and feeling cute.

At this point, I did have a mounting concern about the wide players. Apart from our Czech new boy, no-one had been impressing on the wings, with former mainstays, Mazek and Camara being especially useless. After an impressive start to the season, firing in 9 goals in the first two months, Nestorovic had gone quiet, with only 2 goals since the beginning of November. Hwan Solo had 6 goals from his limited appearances by this point…was it time to properly bust out the new hope?

January ‘26:

Ted certainly thought so, giving him a start and an appearance off of the bench in the Coupe. Solo duly bagged five goals, and although two were penalties, a) the rest of the squad are shit at penalties, and b) three goals in 115 minutes is still pretty good. Ted’s got us through to the Coupe quarters again, though the eleventh round victory, 4-3 over Nantes, was a close run thing.

Ted finished his tenure with six victories from six, the three in the league taking us eight points clear at the top, with PSG surprisingly dropping points at Nancy.

January Transfer Window:

Ted’s final window was a relatively quiet one, in terms of its impact on the first team squad anyway. He did spend another €40m on players for the future, one of whom I love the look of, but he’s yet a further non-EU headache. We’ve loaned him to Juventus, and if there is another season, I hope he’ll be a part of it.

Actually, looking back on it now, I think maybe Ted was trolling me. He signed eight players, and seven of them are non-EU…

The Toulouse 2 squad is heaving with players on various loan deals. At the very least, they’re a future revenue stream.

February to May ‘26:

The Champions League is where the real fight is, and this season the knockout stages presented us with Inter Milan, and a chance to face off against Sarmiento and Vlahovic. Well, the former anyway. After spunking €30m on our Serbian target man, Inter couldn’t register him at all as they had exceeded their own non-EU quota. Poor lamb.

After our pretty poor showing in the group stage, I wasn’t anticipating much from this tie, but the first leg was a doozy. An end to end first half finished three apiece, with Sarmiento naturally amongst the scorers.

The second half continued in a similar vein, although with less clinical finishing. Colin Prent banged one in from the edge of the box in the 53rd minute, and Arnau Tenas confidently claimed corner after corner, to see us take a slender lead to Milan.

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Speaking of less than clinical finishing, the second leg was a shitshow of dreadful efforts, but we did enough to secure our second Quarter Final appearance in three years.

And for once, we avoided Liverpool. Though we got Chelsea, or “Blue Liverpool” as I think of them, and another of our former players in TVHN. For forty-five minutes, we bossed them. Two nil up, we were really good. After half time, we weren’t, and yes, TVHN scored. They equalised in the 93rd minute, which was a real kick in the unmentionables.

In the second leg at the bridge, we were completely dreadful. We only lost 1-0, but it could’ve been more, and we only mustered a single shot on target.

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Let’s get back to France. The Coupe was kind to us this year, by which I mean, we didn’t have to face PSG (who were knocked out on penalties by Lille in the tenth round. As a result, the trophy was ours TOULOUSE.

In my experience, there’s no such thing as luck

In my experience, there’s no such thing as luck.

Even if a couple of those games needed a late goal for the win, we were on top throughout the entire run, and a second Coupe in three years is deservedly ours.

In the Ligue, things were if anything, even simpler, as we went through the season unbeaten. Even PSG failed to overcome us, as we drew with them 0-0 in a pair of desperately dull matches.

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A point less than last season, and a distinct lack of quality out wide (Mazouch excluded, who bagged 15 goals from the wing) if I’m being really picky, but it’s a season of utter dominance.

Nestorovic and Hwan Solo finished as joint top scorers with 21 goals apiece, although Solo’s came in 531 fewer minutes, as he tore up the second half of the season. Perhaps the time is right to go two up top, especially considering that young Belgian from earlier…

Hwan Solo won the Ligue 1 Most Promising Player award, and Manuel Ugarte finished the season as our only representative in the Team of the Year, somehow. His division leading 15 assists crowning another great year for the captain.

We’ve grumpy players o’plenty, I have a desire to get more of our second team loansters involved, plus it’s my first transfer window, so things could change a lot in the coming pre-season…assuming I can sneak one more blog post in…

Thanks for reading, stay safe x

Toulouse 5.02: Left (Back) 4 Dead

Welcome back to Toulouse. We are sitting in what has become our almost permanent, very comfortable second place spot as the calendar turns over. We have looked decent so far, but I have some ideas on where we can improve, and hopefully we can run our rivals from the capital close this year.

Ted promises a quiet January. He’s said that before. All I want for Tedmas is a left back, so quiet would be fine. I wrote a very polite letter, left out a mince pie, a glass of milk, and a large sherry. I even had the chimney swept beforehand. Hopefully it’s time for Ted to deliver…


TedRedwood:

With FEO flying on the field, that’s where I’ll start my breakdown of the January 2025 transfer window. I was gifted a side 3 points behind leaders PSG, and I departed with us 6 points behind. So what happened? I switched to a 4-2-4 the moment I took charge, as F had confided in me that he thought I was an excellent tactician. We were rewarded with two two-nil victories over RC Lens and OM…and that’s it. Quite simply, PSG played a game more, and I played you.

In the Kup, we strolled through the ninth and tenth rounds against lower league opponents, before a clinical PSG side knocked us out at the end of the month. A 2-0 defeat seemed a little unfair, seeing as they only made one proper good chance, but we didn’t create all that much either. We have failed to defend our crown.

The juicy stuff always comes on the transfer page though, right? I had shared with FEO that I expected January to be quiet, even with Alonso departing and leaving us short of a recognised senior left back. What actually happened though was that we signed 8 players (with two having been pre-arranged) for around €25m. Within this melee of incomings were two left backs, one couldn’t be registered due to non-EU spots being taken up, and the other is a young Czechian lad who isn’t good enough (yet, or ever, maybe). Only one of the players signed will end up featuring this season (I presume), and that’s Carioca.

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Signed from SPO (FEO FEEL FREE TO PUT THE REAL NAMES IN BTW LOLZ) (Editor’s note: no.) for €14.25m. It looks like he can do a job anywhere in the midfield, and is good cover for Manuel Ugarte.

Most of the departures were on loan or for nominal fees, which included two first-team defenders who could do a job at full back. All-in-all, the business in January looks a disaster – I’ve weakened the defensive options by choice after being forced into the sale of Alonso following my failure to sort a contract this time last year (he may still have asked for a lot, but I didn’t even check). My reasoning is vaguely simple – Sarmiento can play at left back (just about). In addition, Sylla 2.0 needs minutes to become as good as Sylla 1.0, and the guys I’ve loaned out need more regular game time in order to fulfil their potential.

It makes sense in my head. I trust that FEO will be able to get the most out of the squad regardless, and maybe find a creative solution to the left back issue. Champions League and Ligue Un glory awaits…

FEO:

Let’s cover the positives first. Carioca looks a great prospect, and on paper we now have five top players for the centre of the park, with a nice variety of different skills between them.

Although the first team squad is smaller than previous seasons, for nine of the ten outfield positions, the quality of back up has never been better.

Left back though. Left back Ted. The Alonso situation is not on Ted in my opinion, and the money we got for him was a relief. The failure to replace him? I’m not too irked by that, sometimes the right player isn’t there for the right money.

But Ted. Why do you be loaning out two potential solutions!? You absolute madman. Especially loaning out the wonderfully named, Christ Merali. Following Sarmiento’s injury, Merali had filled the first team role solidly, if unspectacularly.

Not satisfied with that, Ted then also loaned out Sawadogo, a versatile, ambipedal young defender, who theoretically would have been perfect as a covering squad player for the remainder of the season.

Next, just to make extra sure, Ted went into the Toulouse 2 squad and sold Mulugeta, who I admit, was not a great left back prospect, but had played a few minutes last year and was earmarked by me as an option if things got really desperate.

Why Ted, why!? :crying_cat_face: It’s not just that we don’t have back-up, we don’t have a single left back over the age of 16! I think someone got carried away by Sarmiento’s performances in January. Yes, he played well three times for Ted, but one of those appearances was on the wing, and two were against lower league teams in the Coupe.

Fortunately, I am mighty.

February and March 2025:

And so is Tony:

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Despite Rouault being right-footed, I couldn’t overlook Sarmiento’s dodgy defensive work any longer, and made the change. He made that flank look more solid, and became accomplished at left back quickly, becoming the unquestionable first choice for the rest of the season.

Results wise, let’s quickly get Liverpool out of the way first eh? We improved upon last year’s 8-1 aggregate drubbing, by being comfortably knocked out 7-3 over two legs. We were only slightly worse than them in the home leg, but missed a number of great chances. So that’s some solace, I suppose.

Domestically, our good results had continued:

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Our 16 match winning run was brought to an end by Lyon, and in total, resulted in us gaining precisely 0 points on PSG.

Despite this, our performances weren’t the best, outside of Nice away and the first half at home to Monaco. A couple of times we’d been baled out by switching to a 424 (Auxerre, Guingamp), and on a few other occasions, we’d been rather fortunate in our results (Nantes, Lyon, and Rennes).

As I mentioned last time, anybody playing AMC may as well have been at the beach. I tinkered with a Rensian 433 a few times, using Carioca as a Mezzala instead of an AMA. He remained invisible, but it came with the added bonus of making the entire rest of the team useless too. Apart from during the Coupe games against semi-pros for Tedderz, Carioca had done very little up to this point.

From the Strasbourg game I made a permanent formational switch, doing away with the completely irrelevant AMC, and bringing in a DM instead. The ball-winning midfielder was dropped back there, with Carioca in as a Mezzala again. It’s fair to say it didn’t change much.

April and May 2025:

For the start of April, I made one change, just the one. Mezzala was out, box to box midfielder was in, with our Brazilian wonderkid on his last chance before a dropping.

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We’d had to do without David Carmo for a month due to injury, with “the next Nemanja Vidic”, Miroslav Djokovic covering ably. But from April onwards, this was without doubt our first team. Being out of Europe and the Coupe meant we had eight games to go, all on weekends, and rotation went largely out of the door.

First game out of the gates as a box to box midfielder, at home to Reims, Carioca FEO-assisted all three goals in a 3-1 win. There had been some lovely attacking moves on show, and these continued during an extremely comfortable 3-0 win at home to local rivals Montpellier, and a 2-0 victory away at Angers that was never in doubt.

The front three of MazekAribi and Nestorovic were combining beautifully doing bits (between them, they scored 18 out of our final 19 goals of the season). Mazek’s form was so good, he nabbed the Ligue 1 Player of the Month award for April (with a much improved Carioca in second), an accolade that I was beginning to suspect our players were exempt from.

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Meanwhile, in Paris, Lyon had grabbed a creditable 3-3 draw…

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A point behind, with an easier run-in, and PSG were still in both the Coupe, and Champions League. Could we at least take it to the final day, for a title showdown with a side that we’ve played three, lost three against so far this season…?

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Oh it’s on. It’s so on right now. Perhaps none of the scorelines suggest it, but we were playing wonderfully. On paper, the biggest challenge was against a strong Lille side, but we dominated from start to finish, only our shooting keeping it relatively tight. The first goal, when it finally came, showed the almost psychic link that our front three had been playing with recently.

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So, a simple calculus then, we need to beat PSG to win the title, correct?

Wrong. Miraculously, whilst I was suffering from just a few nerves at Lorient, in their penultimate game of the season, PSG lost at home to St. Etienne 1-0. Their first Ligue loss of the season, and their first Ligue loss at home during this entire save.

Absolutely appropriate alliteration

Absolutely appropriate alliteration

We were two points above them, and we “only” needed a draw. I’d love to say, “It’s over PSG, I have the high ground”. However, our record against PSG stood at: P11, W0, D1, L10, GF 10, GA 27. Apologies Teddy Baby, your Coupe win on penalties last year is technically a draw. My own record against PSG was a perfect 9 losses from 9 (10 from 10 if you include the #lq save).

We were at full strength, PSG chose to omit a half-fit Raheem Sterling, but still had an impressive front three of NeymarMbappe and Haaland. With Harry Kane in central midfield.

The first half was a quiet (dare I say drab?) affair, with Kane rattling the bar by accident from a cross, and only one real chance. Fortunately for us, it fell to Nestorovic:

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That was the 12th minute. In the 15th, a David Carmo header hit the bar from a corner, and almost nothing else happened before half time.

The second half started differently. Neymar missed a great chance almost immediately from the kick off, and fewer than ten minutes later, PSG went 424 to put the pressure on.

Tenas made a couple of decent saves around the hour mark, but PSG didn’t create a chance as good as the one Neymar had missed. He did score however, with just ten minutes to go.

I won’t lie to you and say I remained calm. I most definitely did not. But my team did. I confess to being too superstitious to mess with the tactic in order to attempt to shut up shop. After the equaliser, the best two chances fell to us, though both Ugarte and the substitute Sarmiento were unable to convert…

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Special mention for Anthony Rouault at left back, who kept Mbappe basically silent on that flank, condemning him to a 6.4 rating. tEd WaS rIgHt AlL aLoNg.

We’ve still not beaten PSG, but it doesn’t matter, because I’m led to believe that the league table doesn’t lie:

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Congratulations to PSG, for equalling the record we set last season for most points accumulated to not win the league.

“Stats”:

Most goals: Nestorovic (28), Vlahovic (16), Mazek (14)

Most key contributions: Aribi (7), Mazek (6), Camara/Ugarte (both 5)

Most assists: Ugarte (14), Aribi/Camara/Mazek (all 11)

Most secondary Assists: Ugarte (9), Garcia (6), Busquets/Prent (both 4)

Ugarte’s proliferation of stats slowed noticeably in the second half of the season, partly because the rest of the team clicked, and partly because of a few minor knocks that he took (he rarely saw out a full 90 minutes from February onward).

Our usually steady flow of set piece goals also dried up following the formation changes. I could’ve got under the bonnet and tweaked, but I was too superstitious to touch it after the box to box midfielder magically transformed us into a beautiful footballing side.


Why the end to the big pause?

Well, I’m an FMer, so it’s only natural to put out a couple of weekly posts immediately after alluding to an end.

We had a bit of a backlog to attend to, and then for the first time in a long time, I found myself “in the zone”. The final 14 games of this season all took place on the same day, with the last 11 happening in one session. It’s been about four months since I last played like that. Seeing the team play great football and getting results was good fun, and of course, I feared turning off due to the ever-present peril of succumbing to a classic #MythMike scenario.

My issues with FM21 remain the same, though I have partially mitigated some of them by handing off some responsibilities to my (in-game) Director of Football, Tomáš Rosický, and choosing to ignore certain other issues.

Anyhow, we’re basically fully caught up now. Ugarte’s demanded a new deal, and I’ve sent the save to Ted a bit earlier than usual as a result.

Speaking of Ted, sharing this save with him has been great fun. I don’t think it’s overstating it to say that without his input, I’d have stop playing a while back. If you’ve somehow missed the embedded links to his blog in these posts, here’s a more obvious one (he’s really good):

https://tedredwood.wordpress.com/

If this is reading a bit like an au revoir, that’s intentional. I have no idea if the next blog post is two weeks away, or six months down the line, and that’s fine. Winning a Ligue 1 title was the main aim of this save, and we’ve got one :smirk:

As always, thanks for reading, stay safe, get vaccinated x

Toulouse 5.01: Déjà vu

Hello again. A bit of a quicker turnaround this time. It’s back to a more routine half season update today, mainly because Ted’s summer dealings have given us quite a lot to talk about…

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Last season was a bit unprecedented. A Coupe de France for the trophy cabinet, 101 points accumulated in the league (still finished 2nd ffs) and a Champions League quarter final. I don’t think we’ll be able to reproduce all that, but we’ll do our best. Anyway, down to (Ted’s) business…


TedRedwood:

Back again, eh? What’s that, the only trophy FEO won was the cup that I set up for him by knocking PSG out myself? I’ll let my loyal fans decide what they think about this. (Editor’s note: Ted’s a wee dick).

I mentioned in F’s previous blog that I was aware of some expiring contracts, as well as the fact that I’d brought in replacements in the previous window, so the removal of five first team players (PorozoSyllaVDBNTOAK-AK and Sidibé) for €38m was good business. I also shipped out Mavro after he sustained a broken leg last season, as I never trust someone who’s been through that – €18m for someone who arrived on a free a year ago and hardly played is inspired.

What was not good business was neglecting Spanish wonderkid wingback Guille Alonso’s contract situation – he has twelve months left, and was only happy to sign a new deal after the conclusion of the transfer window. He was satisfied with my transfer dealings, but he demanded a whopping €285k p/w to stay…

With gaps in the defence and midfield forming, I smashed the chequebook open to sign Colin Prent for €46.5m, and Hugo Garcia for €7.25m. Prent is especially expensive, however he’s a great long term hold, and both add real world-class depth to the midfield.

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The defence was strengthened by the signing of yet another Portuguese centre back, Henrique Fernandes, for almost €13m, and the free signing of German-Vietnamese wonderkid, Truong Van Hoai Nam. What a Nam.

In addition, as always, around €15m was spent on vague youngsters, most of whom departed on loan immediately, with a couple landing at new affiliate club, Sporting Gijon.

All-in, I’d say it’s a very good window, although at some point I need to let these youngsters settle, improve, and take Toulouse to glory, rather than breaking the team up every window.

FEO:

A fair bit to unpack then. To defend Ted against his own criticisms, the majority of the players he’s let go weren’t all that young, and with expiring deals and the potential to upgrade significantly, the moves make total sense. Porozo is only 23, but as he was a back-up CB (where we have plenty of depth) and critically, an occupier of one of our four non-EU spots, I’d argue his departure was necessary.

Sidibé’s woeful record scoring from two years worth of targeted corners is still baffling to me. He also didn’t develop as much as I’d hoped. He was decent enough, but it seems Ted came to the same conclusion I did, we can do better than his 13 goals, 4 assists, and 9 secondary assists from 110(15) appearances. Even from a defensive option in central midfield, I’d expect more.

With Porozo and Sidibé out the door, space has been made for my favourite of Ted’s signings, Hugo Garcia:

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He looks great, I expect him to put pressure on Oriol Busquets straight away for a starting berth, and he looks like he could become a world-class ball-winning midfield option. I think that role will be returning to the tactical fold.

Reliable second choice left back, Sylla, who outperformed his attributes (and arguably Alonso too), departs after 63(10) apps, 2 goals, 25 assists, 5 sec. assists for us. Ted has signed a new 16 year old left back prospect, also called Sylla, which won’t be confusing at all.

In a move that’s bound to get us both blocked by ShrewnaldoVDBNTO has also gone. His influence on the team was on the wane, this is Ugarte’s house now. Van den Boomen leaves after 92(32) apps, 15 goals, 20 assists, 17 sec. assists, and some sweet-ass free kicks.

I feel like Ted’s been a little harsh on Mavro, perhaps because he never got to play with him. I must say, I would’ve kept him, given how great he was before the broken leg. However, there’s no doubt that an injury that severe can derail a career, and the profit turned is impressive.

The Alonso situation sucks, but I don’t think Ted can be blamed overmuch. We’ve done everything to placate him to the point where he’s “happy to stay” (Alonso, not Ted), who could’ve predicted he’d want that much money? Considering our current top earner is new boy Colin Prent, who is on €40k p/w, Alonso’s demands are outlandish, and we will now likely face a desperate rush to sell him for something in January.

We also have a bit of dressing room disquiet to contend with this season, as both Camara and Aribi are agitating for new deals. I can tell Camara is on Ted’s naughty list, as he only signed a new contract 12 months ago, and Ted doesn’t like that sort of thing. Aribi is more likely to be offered an extension, but that may come with consequences, as a large portion of the first team squad think he should pipe the fuck down…

August to December ’24:

That sure was a lot of words about the summer changes. I could probably cover the next five months by just saying, it’s almost an exact duplication of the start of last season.

But then I’d not get to mention a Champions League “Group of Death”, which is always fun. Seriously though, Milan, Bayern AND Barcelona? Are you taking the piss?

Defeat in the Trophée des champions to PSG? Check.

Great Ligue record, but lost to PSG, so still second? Check.

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Somehow through to the CL knockouts? Check.

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Bizarrely, this was no lucky progression, we were the better side in the first five games, although Barcelona schooled us in the final match (even before we suffered a 28th minute red card), and with Milan having a highly fortunate away goal advantage over us, we needed Bayern’s only win in game six to get us through (I think that’s how it works…).

We’ve drawn fucking Liverpool in the First Knockout Round, and seeing as they did us 8-1 on aggregate last year, I’m not optimistic. Once again I wonder if I shouldn’t be throwing CL group games to get in to the Europa League instead…

No broken leg for a key defender this time around, though there’s been an epidemic of wrist and other “lower arm” injuries, including a broken arm for Mazek in the final game before January.

Alonso’s Toulouse career came to a premature end when he broke his collarbone in November. He’ll be off to Atletico in January for €22m plus 25% of the next sale, which is better money than I feared we’d get. Seeing as Ted had removed all semblance of first team ready depth from the left back department in the summer, Sarmiento was the unlikely man chosen to fill in there. He was excellent in games against difficult opponents (Bayern, Lyon, and he had a game winning, player of the match performance coming off of the bench in the first game against Barcelona), but useless against Ligue 1 rubbish. And then he succumbed to an injury of his own.

Despite the injury problems, we’ve won ten in a row in Ligue 1, and have looked pretty good doing it.

Tactics:

We’ve been a lot more consistent with our tactical choices this season, with 4231 our undisputed primary tactic.

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I’ve not necessarily given up on the wacky looking 3331, but it was designed to combat two striker systems, and we haven’t faced one even once this season so far. There have been a few occasions when we’ve changed to the 424, both successfully (at home to Barcelona) and unsuccessfully (away to AC Milan). A brief experiment with playing it from the start in Ligue 1 fixtures didn’t show me anything, but I still see it as a decent option when chasing a game.

While we have looked “pretty good”, I do have some ideas for how to improve further, and suspect some changes will be looked at during the second half of the season.

“Stats”:

Most goals: Nestorovic (15), Vlahovic (9), Ahmet Eris (5)

Most key contributions: Ugarte (5), Aribi (4), CamaraMazekSarmientoVlahovic (all 3)

Most assists: Ugarte (10), AribiCamaraMazek (all 5)

Most secondary assists: Ugarte (6), with no-one else getting more than 2


Aribi did get his new deal, and his form picked up after signing it. That’s not particularly difficult as he was totally useless beforehand. It caused some low level murmuring in the squad, but nothing came of it. As an aside, I neglected to mention that a while back he decided to abandon Algeria, and switch his allegiance to France. As a result, he is no longer “Touted as the next Tedj Bensaoula“, but instead, “the next Michel Platini” :eyes:

Camara also had a dire start to the season, but he’s emerged from his slump without any new financial incentive so far.

If I have any concerns, they are relatively minor ones. Goals from midfield have dried up, I wonder if we are perhaps now overly reliant on Ugarte’s brilliance, and I’m getting next to nothing from anybody who occupies the AMC role.

On the whole though, the save heads across Essex with things in top shape…though Ted is due a shit January…

Toulouse 4.01: Room 101

Welcome back to Toulouse. It’s been some time. I’ll perhaps cover why that is at the end of the post, but let’s do the actual save first. This will be a bumper post, covering the entirety of season four, with two appearances from Tedderz. You lucky people.

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After last season’s performances, including being mere moments away from the Europa League final, the hope is that we can deposit something in to the barren wasteland that is our trophy cabinet. Otherwise it’s the usual, attempt to catch PSG as they spend hundreds of millions of Euros, every year…over to Ted…


Ted Redwood:

My task for Mr From in the 2023/24 season is simple – continue closing the gap to PSG. The previous two campaigns had Toulouse 10 points behind, then 9 points. Is there anyone I can sign that will increase the quality of the side to such an extent that we can definitely take 6 points off them a season? The short answer is no. The long answer is nooo. Nevertheless, there are always transfer shenanigans when TedRedwood is involved, so I tried my best.

Over the course of the campaign we made a net loss of €23m or so, which is by far our biggest over the save. There was only one real first-team player sold in the summer, with Kelvin Amian bringing in €5m as he jetted off for Nantes. Mohamed Dieng is easily my preferred player at right back, so we may as well make some coin off the old guard.

The incomings during the summer were well targeted – Tenas remains on loan for a second campaign in goal, and we replaced some of the other loanees with permanent signings. We needed a centre back to replace Gabrielsen, so I acquired Konstantinos Mavropanos (Mavro) on a free. Rabie Aribi and Grzegorz Mazek fill out the forward positions for €16m combined, and are good investments for the future, as well as winger Joao Mubenga for €900k, one that F had brought to my attention earlier in the summer. I decided that we needed to up our game in the middle of the park, so Oriol Busquets joining for €4.8m is a bit of a snip. On top of all that, there were the standard 10 or so youngsters coming in that may or may not succeed.

FEO:

Some great looking transfer business, I’m especially excited to see what Mazek can conjure:

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I confess I’m not entirely sure where he should be playing, but we’ll try him all over and see where he works best.

I think it’s only proper I give a little mention to some departures though. Ruben Gabrielsen was a great captain, especially off the field, and a reliable performer at the back, adding goals to his repertoire when we changed our corner routines last year. With his contract up at age 31, it’s the right decision to let him go. 80(1) appearances for me (and Ted), and 6 goals, all scored last season.

Kelvin Amian had two good seasons at RB, but last year, for whatever reason, he seemed to stand out as our biggest defensive vulnerability, whilst also contributing less in attack. Dieng’s progress made his departure…inevitable. 82(5) apps, a goal and 12 assists in the last three seasons.

Tactics:

I mentioned last time my desire to have interchangeable tactics, and I worked on a pair. The team instructions for these aren’t dissimilar from how we’ve been playing, and the shape for the primary tactic is the same. However, as the season went on, I became a four tactic man.

Tactic #1: 4231:

The main change here was also alluded to previously, with Manuel Ugarte’s role becoming more ambitious, as his talents have expanded. He’s our best player in my opinion, and it’s time to make him the centre of the action. We’re going to give the roaming playmaker role a try.

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To compensate for the freedom being afforded to UgarteBusquets is a CMD, rather than the BWM that I’d been considering, to hopefully keep his position more reliably.

Tactic #2: 3331:

Yes, yes, I’ve been reading books on football, what of it? I won’t bore you by re-purposing what I’ve read in order to try and convince you I’m smart, I hope you’d see right through that sort of bollocks.

This is not a tactical recreation or anything like that, though I confess it may have started out that way. Watching it in action, pragmatism led me to change some of the midfield roles, the striker role, and to remove an offside trap, amongst other things.

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Both central midfielders and both ball-playing defenders have the “stay wider” player instruction, to try and avoid being crazy narrow. It looks a bit daft, but as Ted pointed out, wide attackers are pretty decent at contributing defensively, so those red boxes didn’t worry me overly.

What brought this on? Mainly, because when playing four at the back, we seem very susceptible to leaking goals against two strikers. Even if they’re shite. We’re not squaring off against systems like this too often, but when we are, I want to try this.

The above line-up is probably not the strongest we could have here, but one of the points of having two main formations was for them to be interchangeable, and I believe Alonso and Dieng are capable enough to thrive outside of their usual positions.

Tactic #3: 42DM31:

Or, my old Champions League tactic.

Mostly, this will be reserved for trying to see games out, or for particularly stern opponents (like PSG). Quite often I’ll couple this shape with both DMs and the AMC set to man mark their opponents in the centre, which seemed to work pretty well when I tried it last year against PSG.

Tactic #4: 424:

Everyone’s got at least one tactic for when things aren’t going well, surely? I actually have two, the first is our default shape with the lines dropped and the pressing reduced, in an effort to suck particularly defensive opponents forward before going on the attack.

The other is this attacking 424, which I kind of see as a last resort when all of my cunning plans have failed me. It turns out both Ted and I have independently developed variations on this shape. “Never mind the manoeuvres, always go at ’em!”, as Lord Reiss Nelson used to tell me last season.

I don’t think it really works against “park the bus” types like Lorient and their flat back five, but I like it against slightly more ambitious opponents. Having said that, if we’re using it, something has likely gone wrong.

July to December ’23:

The season started with PSG comfortably beating us 2-0 in the Trophée des champions, which I assume we qualified for by coming second in the Ligue, and not being des champions of jack shit.

We were presented with another tough task in the Champions League, though our performance last season had me more optimistic this time around.

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We weren’t as good as last year, but Roma’s failure to beat repeat group whipping boys, Leverkusen, meant we were through with fewer points than we’d failed with last time.

We didn’t really get near City, our back three formation had Roma’s 352 on the ropes twice, but our finishing was poor. I’d welcome Leverkusen in our group every year, they have been rubbish. 13 goals in 6 games is pretty good, slight concerns about conceding 10 though. Did that sort of thing happen in the league?

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No! What a start defensively, more than three games per conceded goal, ridiculous. Of course, the loss was against PSG, and despite our outstanding record, it’s still not enough for us to top the table.

Unfortunately, the last game before Christmas (a 5-0 win at home to Auxerre) resulted in a broken leg for Mavro, and his season is likely over in any meaningful way. He’ll be a big loss, as he’d formed a formidable partnership in central defence with David Carmo, and we’ll likely be much weaker at the back without him. Unless Ted’s got a trick up his sleeve…

TedRedwoodGamingLtd:

As mentioned earlier, summer was quite a targeted window, where we strengthened positions in need of depth and extra quality. January was where I decided to start throwing the cash around, as well as having a hand in some good form.

Covering the results first – we progressed through three rounds of the French Cup (including a penalty win against PSG after going 3-1 down in the 89th minute), as well as winning both of our league games. 24 goals scored, 5 conceded – I’m pretty satisfied with my efforts this year.

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After analysing the squad (mostly – more on this next time), I realised that a few of the lads had only 18 months left on their contracts, so decided that I’d be cashing in during the following summer window – this was to ensure that FEO had the resources to challenge on all three fronts for the rest of the campaign. My forward thinking didn’t just stop there, however, as I also tried to bring in the newer faces a few months early so they could really hit the ground running from next season.

After checking the player search for expiring contracts, I signed Man City centre back Taylor Harwood-Bellis for €1.6m. Dragoslav Nestorovic (whom FEO had pleaded for after the scouts had unearthed him in December) had a contract that was up in six months, but we had another #FMThings situation where a demand for €18m or so quickly became €160k for an immediate transfer after I’d agreed a contract with him. The final, luxury, signing was Turkish striker Ahmet Eris, arriving from Sivasspor for €18.5m.

My gluttony resulted in the squad becoming quite bloated, with a different 11 being able to be played in successive games, whilst still not being able to give every senior player a game. In my mind, it left FEO with no excuses about squad depth going into the second half of the campaign. I was hoping for at least one trophy, but hopefully PSG could finally be caught, and their domestic dominance brought to an end…

FEO:

Oh, Dragoslav, I think I’m in love:

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I’ve done my level best to be true to the save by not interfering with Ted’s transfer policy. Before now, I’ve only sent forward any interesting reports that his masterful team of scouts provide me (see Mubenga). But when they found Nestorovic, I was enamoured. I think Ted thought we were sorted up top, but I saw Mazek and Aribi more as wide options, and wanted another striker. And then Ted signed yet another striker in the shape of Ahmet Eris. He’s a complicated guy that Ted. But don’t get me wrong, it’s a delight to welcome our new Turkish sensation. Our stable of FM Wonderkids is getting quite large.

February to May ’24:

In some ways, progressing through the Champions League group isn’t ideal. As we saw last year, we have a legit chance of glory if we drop into the Europa League, whereas in the CL we are completely outgunned.

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What a night! Did we batter them, as the scoreline suggests? Not at all. They probably should’ve won by a couple, but Tenas in goal had an absolute stormer, with ten saves, at least three of which were world class. He was PotM both accordingtoFM with an 8.7, and from my eye test too.

He had another good game in the second leg too, as try as I might, I couldn’t get the lads to do anything other than sit back against United’s onslaught. We lost 2-0, but progressed on aggregate 3-2 from a tie that could’ve finished 6-1 to them.

Regular readers of this blog will not be surprised to hear that Liverpool knocked us out, and very comfortably:

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Sakes.

Though once again we finish as the overachieving team in European competition. A run to be proud of.

Moving on to our Ligue 1 form, it was still very good. Unfortunately, PSG’s was even better. We rested players in the game before the United second leg (I’ve seen more than enough “comfortable” first leg wins overturned in my time), and losc away at Lille.

As anticipated, the loss of Mavro from our defensive line had seen our defensive performances reverting to the norm compared to the incredibly watertight unit we’d been before Christmas.

PSG meanwhile were still unbeaten. We still had a slight chance though, and seeing this news item is always welcome:

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We needed PSG to drop points somewhere and we had to beat them at their place.

PSG did drop points, losing the penultimate game of the season at Lyon. Unfortunately they’d tonked us 4-1 the game before.

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101 points for second place. I need to do a sick.

Coupe de France:

After Ted did the heavy lifting in January by beating Dijon 10-0 PSG on penalties after an incredible comeback, we would surely never have a better chance of lifting a trophy.

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And we won it with three confident wins. Amiens’ goal in the 87th minute of the quarter final was their only shot of the game, at no point were we troubled.

Next season we can lose to PSG in the Trophée des champions safe in the knowledge that at least we deserve to be there.

Aribi’s form after Christmas was particularly good, slotting in brilliantly on the right wing as Camara suffered another string of unfortunate injuries in the second half of the season, denying him a great chance of being a 20 goal a season winger.

Dieng outperformed his more attacking counterpart Alonso from the full back positions, and I suspect I’ll be binning off the CWB role on the left next year. Nestorovic bagged 9 goals up top after his signing, really our only alternative to Vlahovic as a striker, as all our other attackers performed better in various AM positions.

In terms of individual accolades, Mazek pipped Alonso to the NxGn award (whatever that is), Ugarte was the Ligue 1 Foreign Player of the Year winner, and third choice CB, Anthony Rouaultwon the Ligue 1 Revelation of the Year award, featuring heavily in the Ligue as we rested our more prominent stars for our European adventures.

“Stats”:

Most goals: Vlahovic (23), Aribi (15), Camara (14), Mazek (13)

Most key contributions: Sarmiento (10), Dieng (9), Camara (8), Bacanin, MubengaUgarte (all 7)

Most assists: Ugarte (21), Mazek (14), Sarmiento (13), Mubenga (11)

Most secondary assists: Ugarte (11), Busquets, Dieng (both 5)


What are the plans for next season? Basically the same as this one, keep trying to catch the big boys from Paris…

I’ll sign off now, and leave the reasons for not posting for well over a month as a post script, as you may not be interested in that part. Thanks for reading, stay safe out there x


Why the big pause?

As the bartender said to the bear. Mainly, it’s because I’m not really enjoying this edition of Football Manager very much. There are so many flawed features, from the minor issues, such as press conference questions referencing the wrong things, to the major problems, like stats being banjaxed. I personally detest club vision. Maybe because I expected it to be so good, and it just doesn’t work as intended (I assume, if it does, then that’s worse).

My natural cycle with Football Manager is actually not to get the game every single year. With the relatively slow way that I play, I used to like the extra time to get deep in to a save. Also, when I was younger, cash was tight, and a CM/FM every year felt like an unnecessary indulgence.

There are two types of FM release as I see it; the one with big, important changes, and the meh. It feels to me like we’ve had two successive “meh” editions now. Old (young) me would probably still be playing FM19. FM21 feels particularly buggy and frustrating. Probably the only reason I’m still playing it, is that I’m really enjoying sharing this save with Ted. Genuinely, the most enjoyable part of this save from my point of view is when Ted has it…

Since picking up FM18 halfway through the FM year, in April 2018, my blogging has played a part in my decisions to buy the new games, in fact, it was never in question that I would. I’d never bought Football Manager as soon as it came out before, let alone pre-ordering the thing. Doing so in order to blog about it is not about views, hitz, or even flags for me (though I do love flags), but rather the interactions with others on similar journeys.

What does this mean for the future? Well, in terms of this series, we’re about halfway through playing season five, so there’ll be another post for sure, but I don’t know when my desire to play will vanish again, so there’s no guarantee it won’t be the final season. When I didn’t want to play with Toulouse, I tried out starting a couple of alternative saves, but they were extremely short lived. Because the problem for me isn’t the save, it’s the game.

And beyond? At this point I’d say it depends on FM22. If we get a big upgrade edition, I suspect I’ll be diving straight in, as I have for the last couple of years. If that doesn’t materialise though? I’m not sure. The way things are, I imagine that instead of trying out the game to prepare for a blog, I’ll instead be using the beta period reading the blogs and Slack channels of other FMers, to decide whether I’m buying the game at all. It’s entirely possible I’d go back to playing an old save on an old version, and whilst you’d probably not be as interested in reading about that, I feel like I might have more fun. And isn’t that the point?

Toulouse 3.02: Rotation, Rotation, Rotation

How do you do, fellow kids? Welcome back to Toulouse, where things are very comfortable indeed, despite the 2022 World Cup making the schedule look disgusting, prompting me into rotating the side to the extreme. Honestly, some of the players I put in the side will have Ted in tears at one point…

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Today’s post will run through to the conclusion of season three. How far can we get in Europe? Will there finally be a cup run? Towards the end I’ll take a look to see how our new corner strategy has worked, and whether big Melv is still involved in the first team…but first, how about we see how January goes, with just a bit of Ted?


Ted Redwood:

On the assumption that I’ve just been highly praised – thanks FEO.

January’s have been very miss and hit so far for myself at Toulouse. Summer is a wonderful time, full of disturbing scouting methods, looking for the next 6’9″ colossus left winger, but the winter window is fraught with peril. Not only do I need to try and improve the squad’s weak points to maximise results, but I also need to actually gain some of these results myself. My first January was horrid, but last year was very successful, which in turn led to F adopting most of my tactic full-time.

Naturally, with the team sat in the Champions League spots, I decided to tear the squad apart somewhat, with at least four first-teamers departing, among others. Most, like Efthymis Koulouris, left as their contracts were up in the summer, however there were also a couple of cases of upgrading existing, complicated options. Domingos Quina joined Norwich for €5.25m after kicking up a fuss over his contract. He’s a talented lad, but exciting attacking options are easy enough to come by, and he wasn’t worth the hassle. The other departure was another contract clown, Fabio Cardoso, who fetched €10m from lowly Benevento. I replaced him with a new centre back, one far younger and more powerful. We raised close to €19m in transfer fees, and freed up a tonne of wages (don’t ask me how much, because I wasn’t paying enough attention, as always).

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The board were stingy again, considering our sales, but I still managed to spaff €13m on a few young rogues who will hopefully bless our team in the years to come, as well as three players I intend for the first-team right now. Despite their contracts expiring in the summer, winger/strikers Wahid Faghir and Dušan Vlahovic joined for a combined €3.8m right now. It’s one of those funny instances of the AI demanding €7m for a player valued at €1m despite an expiring contract, so I offer him a deal, accept the deal, then ask to take him now – all of a sudden, that player is now being sold for his value. #FMThings. My replacement for Portuguese centre back, Cardoso, is Portuguese centre back, David Carmo. He’s younger (23), and as good as his predecessor. We’re paying a little more in wages, but he’ll surely still improve a tiny bit, and have a higher resale value. Coining it in.

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On the pitch, things were…well, bollocks, to be honest. We had a busy January, with six league games scheduled, as well as a cup match against Ligue 2 Ajaccio (in which we crashed out on penalties, as apparently I have used up all my good luck in my regulation save over at tedredwood.wordpress.com – like & subscribe). The six league games were dross. Two wins, three draws, and one defeat doesn’t sound that bad, but considering the form going in to the month, it was a disappointment.

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Realistically, I was too quick to change things if we went a goal down, and I definitely over-rotated with the wrong options. I feel like I’ve undone a lot of From’s hard work, so he’ll need to work extra hard to try and regain some ground in his title challenge…

FEO:

Title challenge forsooth.

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Ain’t no title challenge, but we’re in the CL mix again. There is no need to be upset.

Ted’s perhaps been a little hard on himself I feel. What about second pre-season? Really there was no form to speak of, it’s a bit like a re-set. We’re still well positioned, and other teams around us have dropped points too, even PSG have *gasp* drawn a match.

Despite both being amongst our top performers last season, I’m glad to be rid of Cardoso, and especially, Quina. They’ve been rubbish since kicking up a contract stink and had both lost their places in the first eleven, even before reinforcements have arrived from the South.

I’ll spare a moment for Efthymis Koulouris though. He’d done nothing wrong particularly, but I agree with Ted’s assessment that he wasn’t the answer long term, and it was sensible to grab some cash rather than wait for his deal to expire. He was really just a poacher in season one, scoring twenty in our Ligue 2 campaign. He surprised me by being more involved in play, and handling the step up in level with no problems, although he has been outshone somewhat by some of our other options. He scored 41 goals for us in his 30 months under our stewardship, good luck to him at Samp.

In terms of incoming deals, alongside Ted’s usual plethora of young signings, David Carmo looks great, an improvement on Cardoso, and five years younger (favourable comparison screenie), but it’s Dušan Vlahovic I’ll focus on:

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He and Faghir are slightly different to our “usual” types up top, and have me mulling on some tactical changes for next year. We’ll stick with how we’re playing for now, and try and gently introduce them over the next few months. I have fond memories of Vlahovic from a glorious season on loan (cc: Christopher Johnson esq.) in FM20 at Mačva Šabac, and look forward to what he can bring to the table.

Ligue 1:

February started wonderfully, with four good performances making a mockery of Ted:

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Before we turned into a steaming turd in the double header against bottom of the form table Lens. We rolled with our Champions League tactic against PSG, and played quite well, Haaland’s 94th minute winner was a kick in the nadgers and no mistake.

We went with a 523 that I’d been pondering for a while behind the scenes, for the derby against Bordeaux, but in truth, things looked the same as against Lens, not very good, and lucky to grab any points, let alone the full three.

Then, from out of nowhere, we were magnificent, even better than early in February really. Had we just bewildered opposition scouts or something?

Our top form continued:

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The end of season draw with Monaco aside, we looked superb throughout. The second XI’s batterings of Lille (who had just beaten PSG) 5-2 and then Lyon 4-1, sandwiched the first XI failing to beat Stade Brestois. It has been a weird season. Alas, after his goal against Lille, Faghir broke his leg, and faces a battle to be fit for the beginning of next season.

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It was another great season, serious props to the squad depth Ted has provided us with. I don’t think I’ve ever rotated a side so drastically, even as a dedicated devotee of rotation policy. We can’t beat PSG or Monaco for toffee, but our consistency against everyone else has left us flying.

Europa League:

We started our campaign with a one-off tie, away (due to them being the higher seeded team) against Vitória de Guimarães:

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Seeing as our Champions League 42DM31 had done so well, we kept the faith with it here. It was a humdinger of a tie, with both sides having more than twenty shots on goal. Our inability to hit the target was frustrating, until a triple change on 69 minutes, and a switch to 424 brought immediate success.

Curtis Jones scored the winner in extra time to send us through:

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In the Second Knockout Round, we faced CSKA Moscow in another one-off tie, away once again (due to them being the lower seeded team…what?):

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Again, we stuck with the 42DM31. This game was not as good. Rain throughout the 120 minutes wasn’t enough to melt the snow on the pitch, maybe that effected the quality of football? Tenas and Sarmiento were the shootout heroes, as we progressed 5-4 on penalties.

The quarter finals brought an all French clash with Marseille, and over two legs this time. Here, we reverted to our “normal” 4231, which had been so successful in domestic football. The first leg (away) was pretty similar to the CSKA match, but we emerged with a 1-0 win, courtesy of Moise Kean.

In the second leg, we murdered them…

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Parrott and David Carmo were particularly guilty of spurning good chances to score, but a win’s a win.

Semi-final! And we faced Sp*rs, reverting back to our CL formation. At home in the first leg, we were comfortably the better side. They had one shot on target, a penalty that they converted. We left it late to get the goals we deserved but two Ugarte assists got us a 2-1 win, the first a corner, and this the second:

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A win, but a dangerous away goal. In the second leg, we started as we had played in the first, but in the second half we didn’t do a damn thing, with our xG story flatlining.

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They took us down with a 90th minute long shot, and our dream was over. Fortunately Roma beat them in the final :smirk:. No Only a bit of shame losing to them. Our performance in the Europa League was enough to earn us the “biggest overachievers” tag, but it always hurts to get so close to a big final. We remain trophyless.

It’s been a fun season, in a sick kind of a way. We’ve proven that we can mix it with the big boys, though our back-up players have been the real inspiration for me this year, BacaninSylla, and Camara especially. We’ve given a whopping 40 players first team action, with plenty of Ted’s young signings, as well as some academy youngsters from our first intake, getting their first minutes.

Most goals: Kean (14), Jones (11), Parrott (11), Vlahovic (9)

Most key contributions: Jones (8), BacaninCamaraParrott (all 6)

Most assists: Ugarte (13), Bacanin (11), Jones (11), Sylla (10)

Most secondary assists: Jones (6), Van den Boomen (6), Bacanin (5), Ugarte (5)

Manuel Ugarte has made a big step up this season, adding set piece assists and wonderful through balls to his repertoire. We may face a fight to keep him this summer, as of the end of the season, both Liverpool and Barcelona are showing an interest. With captain Gabrielsen’s contract to expire, I’d quite like Ugarte to take over leadership of the team, and perhaps give him a chance to play in a more ambitious role. We shall see what Ted decides…

Corners, II:

I had a whinge last time about our useless record at corners (3 goals from 82 matches). After making one change to our routines, that of removing 6’7″ goliath and ideal target Sidibé from the penalty box and sticking him back with the full backs, how have the numbers stacked up for the season?

Much better! 14 goals from 52 games this season. We’re not a dominant set piece team by any means, but at least I’ve stopped rolling my eyes every time we get a corner, it was getting medically dangerous. The main beneficiary was captain Ruben Gabrielsen, who scored his first ever goal for Toulouse, and then got another five.

Why though?

The Curious Case of Melvin Camara, II:

He ended the season with 8 goals, 6 key contributions, 5 assists and 2 secondary assists from his 1’886 minutes of football. He continues to pass the eye test. I hope Ted can find more unexpected young bargains like Melvin Camara, as our intake this year was absolutely diabolical.


Any Other Business:

Both Ted and I have some work to do in the staff department this summer. Some contracts are winding down, and I think substantial upgrades need to be brought in. I’ve already replaced our Head of Youth Development.

Ted’s ahead of the game on transfers, and has got some player deals lined up for the summer, the following January, the summer after that, and even January 2026 ffs. The budget looks a bit more generous than seasons past, so I eagerly await what Father Tedmas brings us next year.

I am working on a pair of complementary tactics for the future, as I think there are things we can improve on, weaknesses I’ve spotted, plus I’ve been reading books recently. Always dangerous. I’d ideally like to write a blog post devoted to my thinking, with examples from the game, but this version of Football Manager doesn’t make it easy to do that sort of thing. So many of the screens display nonsense, or contradict each other, and finding specific highlights is onerous. If I was to do something like that, it would probably involve re-watching this entire season, and I think I’d rather play on/do something else.

As always, thanks for reading, and stay safe x

Toulouse 3.01: The Eye Test

Hello, welcome back to France. Last season went swimmingly, and we’ll be playing European football already. That comes with challenges for the squad, especially with the 2022 World Cup looming large. We’ve had two seasons of mostly weekend matches, now comes the fixture congestion…

Today, we’ll run through to the end of the calendar year, including setting up a Champions League tactic, glancing at corners, and welcoming a new youngster to the first team scene. But first, time for Ted…


Ted Redwood:

I am ‘Amazing Ted’, but you can just call me Ted, because ‘amazing’ I already know. I feel like I can justify this somewhat thanks to my decent transfer record for FEO’s Toulouse side, which managed to finish second after an excellent Ligue Un campaign. As always, there’s additional pressure on this window compared to the last one, as we’ve not really had a chance to actually consolidate a certain position/expectation.

Funds were extremely limited going into a Champions League campaign – even with €9m worth of sales, we only had €7m cash to burn, and the budget for wages was simply what we’d saved. Four backup members of the first team departed permanently, as well as loans ending for ‘keeper Mike Maignan, and winger Reiss Nelson.

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Very pragmatically, I sought six players to fill the gaps made by these departures– this is very unlike me. The free transfer of Lazio’s ex-Toulouse man, Jean-Daniel Akpa Akpro (AK-AK), was sought for depth, experience, and influence in the middle of the park. €825k went on Ecuadorian centre back, Jackson Porozo, as he is a cheaper, and better, version of the €2m departed man, Wilker Angel.

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We replaced our loanees with…more loanees. In sticks is Barca youngster, Arnau Tenas (a lesser version of Maignan, but cheaper, and could potentially hang around longer), and on the wings is Scouse sensation, Curtis Jones. After his excellent stint last season, Moise Keane returns for a second spell, on similar terms. Additionally, I brought in Troy Parrott on loan. Additionally, I brought in Troy Parrott on loan. I actually requested our final incoming transfer through the board, as we were lacking €5m to pull it off – Spanish left wingback wonderkid, Guille Alonso, joins from Cadiz for nearly €12m.

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Overall, I’m about as satisfied as I can be with our business. Goal posts are shifting at an alarming rate, and I’ve not really had much opportunity to even start building for the future, as we’re already a few seasons ahead of where I thought we’d be. With funds so tight after an excellent season, the best I could do really was to try to replicate the previous season’s type of transfers, but to try and increase the quality by a notch. I think we’ve done that, even with the loans, and going forwards we can try to secure some more permanent, prime, rib roast talent, now that we’re bringing in European money. Over to F to show that my transfers are actually naff.

FEO:

I was mainly left stunned at how stingy our board were. I wasn’t expecting Ridsdale sized profligacy, but giving us less than we even made? Bastards. AdmitTedly, they came through eventually with the wonderkid left back, so I can’t whinge too much. I think for the first time, a TedRedTransferWindow hasn’t got me thinking that we’re significantly improved. I’m not pointing a finger, sometimes the right players aren’t available for the right price, and our overachievement coupled with our tight board has tied Ted’s hands somewhat.

Still, I do think we’re better off in terms of depth, and that could be essential in a season where we face more fixtures than we have at any point so far. It’s not just about the incoming transfers either, with Mohamed Dieng developing nicely, arguably ready for a berth in the first eleven, and Anthony Rouault returning from a successful loan spell in Portugal to vie for a first team spot. Also, I don’t think we’re weaker either. Apart from maybe in goal, and even there, Tenas looks a good player, with potential to improve, even if he’s not a patch on Maignan (yet?).

I’ve picked out Curtis Jones as my favourite of Ted’s deals:

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I think Ted sees him as a replacement for Nelson on the right wing, but I think I’ll be trying him as an AMC at first, and slotting Quina in on the right. The fact is though, Jones easily looks good enough to play in any of the six most forward positions.

Finally, we have a little bit of dressing room strife. Two key players from last year, Fábio Cardoso and Domingos Quina, are not happy about Ted denying them a pay rise. I’m entirely behind Tedderz on these decisions. The fact is, there’s no room in the budget, and they’ve both got two years left on their deals, so it’s hard cheese. It remains to be seen whether this will impact on team and/or individual performances…

Ligue 1:

We rather stumbled out of the starting blocks:

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The Monaco game was close, but we wasted the better chances, and the match in Strasbourg was just dire.

I don’t know what to say about the PSG shootout. They’re too good, and it’s a miracle we were that close at the end. They added Haaland as expected in the summer. Their front line is so good, Harry Kane is now playing in central midfield for them.

From this point on, with Champions League football occupying our midweek, I heavily rotated. Like, a minimum of nine players rested. Only in the Auxerre game below did we play the first team. I don’t know if this was the best plan, but the World Cup was approaching, and it’s a weird old season, with games crammed in to shorter periods (just wait ’til Ted sees January…). So naturally our results cratered were immaculate:

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We didn’t deserve any points against Lille, but otherwise played well, sometimes very well, and we’re even scoring from set pieces…

Definite props to Ted for our strength in depth this year.

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After finishing second last year, the board naturally want a mid-table finish. I say balls to that. We’re chasing CL qualification again. Over the course of a season and a bit, only PSG, Marseille, Monaco and Nantes have consistently worried me, and only PSG have looked to be way ahead of us.

After the World Cup, there was also a 4-0 win over semi-pro opponents in the cup, but there was no way of screenshotting that that wasn’t horrible.

Champions League:

New to modern European competition, Toulouse were always liable to face a tough group. We were inevitably seeded in the fourth pot, and were placed in the group of death, with Juventus, Chelsea, and Bayer Leverkusen.

But on the plus side, no Liverpool. It was always my intention to create a different tactic for the CL, and this group sort of reinforced my reasoning. Our record against the rest of the Ligue 1 top five last season was (understandably) poor, W1 D2 L6, featuring two 0-0 draws and a cup exit, though to be fair, no total maulings either.

So where to start? Well, the shape will largely be staying the same, but I think we need a bit more defensive solidity, and to dial back on the team instructions somewhat.

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Nothing particularly mind blowing. We’re up against some of the finest players in the world (Ronaldo, Sancho at Chelsea, and André Silva of Leverkusen looks well good), so shoring up the defence was my first priority. We’ll be playing with a bit more caution, and trying to minimise mistakes by keeping the ball and not overly committing with pressing. I’m hopeful our front four has enough guile, pace, and flair to pop up with the odd goal.

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A great first half of the group stage. We fought gallantly for an arguably undeserved win against Juventus, before Chelsea swatted us aside. A solitary penalty doesn’t tell the full story of our excellent performance in Germany.

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Leverkusen then came to us in France, and we turned them over easily. This time a result we deserved versus Juve, before Chelsea once again crushed us like an insect, after taunting us with a half time lead.

So what became of us?

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Ten points is a great haul, more than double what I had hoped for. There’s a little disappointment as we were actually top going in to the final match with Chelsea, but we didn’t get near them either time. How Juventus won the group after being unable to beat us, I don’t know. I wasn’t very impressed with them, and Leverkusen turned out to be tripe.

Arguably, finishing third is for the best. Hopefully we can get through a knockout tie or two in the Europa League, and swell our coffers a little more.

With rotation in full effect, there are a wide range of names on the faux stats list so far:

Most goals: Parrott (6), Kean (5), Koulouris (5)

Most key contributions: BacaninDiengKean (all 3)

Most assists: Bacanin (4), Dieng, JonesSarmiento, Sylla, Ugarte (all 3)

Most secondary assists: Jones (4), Van den Boomen (3), Akpa Akpro (2)

Corners:

Uh-oh, here we go again, FEO banging on about setty p’s…I’ll keep it brief.

In season one, we scored from one corner. In season two, we scored from two corners. I can feel the eyes of mathematicians upon me. That’s 82 competitive games, 3 goals.

Time to change something up. New routine? No. New set piece taker? No. I’ve made one change. The man who has been the target for the vast majority of our corners so far, has been reassigned. Sure Sidibé is big, great in the air, great off the ball and arguably the best target I’ve ever had for a corner routine…but he doesn’t score. He is now assigned to stay back with the full backs, and we’re aiming for our inferior centre backs instead.

It’s early days, and a small sample size, but we’ve played 18 competitive games this season, and have scored from four corners. Gabrielsen has three of them, and he had never previously scored. Draw your own conclusions.

The Curious Case of Melvin Camara:

With the frequency of fixtures likely to cause fitness issues, and dressing room disquiet messing with certain individuals’ form (cough…Quina…cough), we’ve needed support from unexpected figures so far. Ted actually brought in a couple more players back in mid-June, both on permanent deals from lower league French clubs. The one to make an impact was a €425k pick up from Troyes, Melvin Camara:

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As well as hitching my wagon to #FuckStats, and my very recent allusion to #FuckHeight, I have been known to occasionally #FuckAttributes too. Don’t get me wrong, at 16 years old, he’s a promising prospect, but on paper, he’s not ready for the first team. Turns out, paper is stupid. Here’s a clickable image for a Quina/Camara comparison.

It’s early September, it’s four days before our debut in the Champions League against Juventus, 66 minutes into a game at Angers in which we’re 1-0 up, but not being very convincing. Attacking midfielder Brahima Outtara takes a knock. Who’s on the bench? Sidibé? It’s too early to shut up shop. Quina? Playing dreadfully so far this season. Parrott? I want him fresh for Juve. Sod it, send the kid on.

This is where the eye test comes in (thanks for waiting). He looked the part straight away, heavily involved in his 24 minute cameo. He almost done a goal:

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Before standing the ball up for Koulouris to get his second, putting the game to bed:

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Whilst the first gif is the one that made me sit up and take notice, whether because of chronology or the fact I’m a sucker for a woodwork strike, it’s the second that’s more important, especially in that it hasn’t been a one off.

He’s involved in crafting an attack down the right hand side, driving towards goal, and providing an assist. All things that I haven’t seen out of Quina this season. Mainly what I’ve noticed from him is woefully misplaced passes.

In the following games, he also showed the capacity to get on the end of moves, and became Toulouse’s youngest ever goalscorer in the process.

As the new year dawns, Camara has accumulated 654 minutes of first team action, and has 3 goals, 3 key contributions, 2 assists and a secondary assist to his name and has looked at home on the right flank.

Quina meanwhile has played for 920 minutes, in which he’s managed a solitary assist. Which was a corner.

These numbers should be couched somewhat by the fact that Camara wasn’t registered for the Champions League, and as such, on average, he has played against “easier” opponents than Quina. Would I have tried him in the CL if I could have though? Absolutely yes.

It’s the Adriano Mari principle, and perhaps it needs reiterating. Attributes and stats for other teams (Camara had done sweet FA for Toulouse 2) don’t tell you everything. Sometimes (always?) you need to clap eyes on a player in action to make an informed decision, and hopefully this will serve as a reminder for me to give the more peripheral figures in the squad a chance.


Other News:

The Europa League has presented us with a tricky away tie (one leg due to WC22) at Samo’s Vitória:

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After consultation with Teddy Cool, we’ve decided to crank both our junior coaching and youth recruitment up a notch. The board have decided to offer Ted some more money to spend in January:

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Holland won the World Cup, we’ve got a new contract to take us to 2026, but the less said about this…

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…the better. Thanks for reading, stay safe x

Toulouse 2.03: Nothing Toulouse

Welcome back to Toulouse! After Ted refused to sabotage us in January, I’ve been left wondering if the other shoe is ever going to drop. Or is it possible that we’re just good?

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We’ll get through the remaining four months of the season today, and see whether European football will be on next season’s agenda. Could there even be a trophy? A bit of a shorter post today, and we’ll start with just a soupçon of tactical talk…


Tactics:

Ted’s tactic has hit the ground running, I’d be crazy to change it. So I’m going to change it, just a little bit:

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The only team instruction changed is the removal of short kicks for goalkeeper distribution. Maignan can kick, throw, has good passing, technique and decisions. I trust him to do what’s best.

I haven’t messed with the front six, but at the back, some roles have changed. I’ve reduced both the goalkeeper and left back to support mentality, firstly because SKA gives me the fear, and secondly because I’ve changed Amian from WBD to FBA. I’ve liked what he’s done in that role so far and want to persist with it.

I’ve added a Ball Playing Defender, but only when it’s Cardoso (which it usually is). He’s our best CB, and has the skills to play the odd lovely pass out of defence. I like the variety that he can provide.

I’ve also sorted out the defensive set pieces, because Ted “doesn’t do set pieces”. Sakes.

February:

We played two lovely games of football, before Nantes did us again:

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My first cup game ends in defeat. A stupid red card for Quina and a last minute goal cooked our goose.

I hit our confit-dence at a bad time, but we scraped a win over Stade Brestois, before a dull, but very respectable 0-0 with Marseille. PSG dribbled through our wide players like they weren’t there, and we were very lucky to only lose by one goal, even though one was a comedy in-off, and the other, one of the many, many penalties they get.

Issiaga Sylla has returned from the African Cup of Nations, just full of beans. Rumour round the old water cooler is that Ted tried to shop him for peanuts in the summer too…

He seems to be loving the new formation, despite his role being essentially unchanged. He’s getting forward plenty, heavily involved in our attacks, and delivering pinpoint crosses that decry his meagre attribute of 10.

March & April:

Bang on form, baby:

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This was easily my best spell of this save so far. Lyon and Lille are no mugs, but we comfortably beat them. We were magnificent going forward and solid at the back, apart from against Angers, who deserved their goals in a rip-roaring game.

We played very well to get a measure of revenge against Nantes, in a match that could’ve easily finished 5-1, before thoroughly dismantling a Lorient side that we made look absolutely useless.

Reiss Nelson has been wonderful down the right this season. He’s had a couple of injuries, and quiet spells when recovering from them, but when fully fit, he’s been great. He’s provided assists from wide, but has also got on the end of plenty moves, often our best goals culminate with a simple finish for him:

vs Lyon (H), Saturday 5/3/2022

vs Lyon (H), Saturday 5/3/2022

May:

But alas, these runs can’t last forever:

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In May, we only really turned up as a team on the very last day, relegating local rivals Montpellier, which was delightful. In the other three games, we weren’t with it at all, and failed to score a goal from open play in any of them.

Manuel Ugarte was the star of this, slightly less than stellar month. He was very good, while all around him struggled. But our form shouldn’t detract from his accomplishments this season. He just about misses out on getting a mention in the faux stats bit later on, but he provided 5 goals, 4 key contributions, 3 assists and 3 secondary assists, all whilst providing a solid, reliable presence in the centre of midfield. All that at the tender age of 20/21. He was considered a wonderkid until his birthday, and has made his full debut for Uruguay.

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I had this save sort of pencilled in with three distinct stages; 1) Promotion, 2) Consolidation, 3) Challenge at the top. Looks like we’ve totally skipped stage two.

PSG are an absolute machine though. An invincible season (ably assisted by French refs giving them 19 penalties in the league), they also went all the way to win the Champions League, with a minimum of fuss. They spent €286m this season, and are being heavily linked with Albert Braut Tjåland’s cousin, Erling Haaland.

Toppling them will take some doing, and may be impossible. I wasn’t expecting that to get anywhere near our focus so early in the save, but there you go. Second place gets us straight into the Champions League group stage, so there should be some money coming Ted’s way…

Most goals: Koulouris (16), Kean (15), Nelson (9), Sarmiento (8)

Most key contributions: Kean (6), Koulouris (6), Quina (6), Nelson (5), Sylla (5)

Most assists: Sylla (10), Quina (8), Nelson (7), Kean (6)

Most secondary assists: Quina (7), Amian (5), Iñíguez (4), Sarmiento (4)

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Manuel Ugarte not only won himself an award, but was our sole representative in the Ligue 1 team of the season.

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I suppose I should share this with Tedderz really. Go ahead and give yourself 12% of the credit, Ted. An argument could be made for 15…


Behind The Scenes:

Not a great deal to add, though I should say, I’m yet to see any strong evidence that my change in approach to training has made any difference. Something to keep an eye on next year.

A brief mention for rant about corners. We didn’t score from a single one before Ted bagged one with Cardoso in January. Despite being the target of almost all our corner routines, and, on paper at least, a real aerial threat, Sidibé only scored once from a corner, at the end of April.

Corners and Sidibé’s bizarre inability to header the ball anywhere but directly at the ‘keeper, are beginning to boil my piss. Click on his profile and let me know where I’m going wrong, cos to me, he looks almost a perfect target (big, good in the air, and off the ball). Seriously, Sarmiento (all of five foot five ffs) has scored more headers this year, and from far fewer opportunities.

We both forgot to mention last time that Ted also added an affiliate club, with Incheon of South Korea hopefully boosting our coffers in the years ahead.

Speaking of cashy money:

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Who knows what trouble our trusty Director of Football will get up to next…?


Next time out, it’s the dreaded 22/23 season, which means a ridiculous schedule due to the World Cup. Given that we’re also going to have some regular midweek football too, it’s going to be quite a change of pace compared to the first couple of years.

Thanks for reading, stay safe x

Toulouse 2.02: TedRedvolution?

Welcome back to France! Last time, our start to life in Ligue 1 began remarkably comfortably, which has us more dreaming of Europe than fearing the drop…

Today’s post will cover three months from the middle of the season, with Ted attacking another January with vigour, and a little bit of youth development (or lack of it) chat at the end. First, a very quick bit of club stuff, before cracking on…


Behind The Scenes:

Just a few tidbits. I’ve added a new, Bosnian affiliate club (Željezničar Sarajevo) to perhaps one day secure the next Edin Džeko. I’ve signed a new contract to theoretically get me through to the end of the 23/24 season. Talking about 23/24, the board have decided we have achieved the goal for that season of “becoming an established Ligue 1 team”. Great news all round.

November & December:

Plenty of luck to talk about:

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We’re not playing all that well. So that points haul is somewhat fortunate, although ironically, we didn’t deserve to lose the one we got spanked in. It feels like we’ve been found out a bit. I don’t know if that’s the way it works, but we’re being stifled in the attack whilst playing our usual tactic. Our most impressive win came about when going to a 424 formation after going 1-0 down.

For the first time, we went with a different formation from the start at home to Monaco, and though it didn’t work as I’d hoped, it didn’t not work, and a draw is a decent result from that one.

The pre-match presser for the Auxerre game revealed to me that our home form is inferior to our away form (by quite a bit it turned out), and though some of that can be put down to the teams we’ve played in those games, I tried a more positive 433 against Auxerre, and despite the final score, we battered them, in our best performance for more than a dozen games.

We remain, miraculously, in second.

In horrible news, Mike Maignan has signed a new long term deal for Lille, so our hopes of bringing him in on a free at the season’s end have been dashed.

So once again, with January approaching, and Ted’s imminent arrival with it, I leave him a) in a great situation on paper, whilst b) starting to see the tactic unRavel. Sorry Ted.

Ted Redwood:

Expectations can be a funny thing in Football Manager, and the prospect of them being quite high often diverts me from choosing sides who are expected to compete from the off. I thought I had changed that myself by choosing Sporting Cristal in my own save, however, it’s here in Toulouse that I feel the most pressure.

Under From’s management, the purple demons have defied their own expectations, and sit in 2nd place in Ligue Un upon my arrival. Another January, another set of fixtures for me to navigate, as well as trying to ensure that FEO has enough depth and quality for the remainder of the season.

We are overachieving, but it’s my job to ensure that this continues. My attempts to build on FEO’s success have been somewhat hampered by myself prior to my own arrival. Four of the five future transfers arrived on January 1st 2022, and only attacking midfielder Mateja Bacanin is vaguely ready for the first team squad. I had presumed the club would be working its way up the league over a few seasons, but now we are short of cash for wages and transfers, and are battling for European football next season. The solution? Fob on around €3.1m of expiring/useless talent (including top earner Wesley Said), and make room for the permanent transfer of Mike Maignan. Wait, what? He signed a new deal at LOSC?

Best scour the loan market for some other scoundrel that needs some love, and give F the boost he needs to continue smashing the league, then:

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Overall the deal is costing in the region of €850k for the wages and loan fee, which I feel is well on its way to being repaid so far…

Extensive DMs from the manager revealed that he’d left me with a potential tactic to use for forthcoming league and cup games, however I decided to completely ignore him. I ported my tactic over from Season Three of my own FM21 save as I felt it was trying to do something similar anyway:

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Against strong opposition I’d simply go to More Direct Passing, and drop Work Ball Into Box. Easy. Against teams of a similar quality, I felt that the strength of our boys on the ball would be enough to hold, probe, and provide that moment of spark when needs be. Nothing revolutionary, but how did it go?

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It went pretty well, to be honest! Last season I presided over a dreadful run in January that FEO had to recover from, whereas this time it was 7 points taken from 9, and advancing through three stages of the cup and into the quarter final.

A huge element of our fortune was down to Moise Kean – returning 7 goals in 4 games, and generally looking an absolute menace in the ME. NelsonQuina, and Sarmiento also stepped up offensively, and I was overall really happy with how the team looked going forwards during my six-game spell in charge. Over to FEO to review my month in charge, and to hopefully carry on my undoubtedly excellent work…

FEO:

Amazing. Ted’s gotten the goals flowing again, and created a real four-headed monster up top. Something Ted forgot to mention (leave him alone, he’s busy), is that all this happened with the African Cup of Nations going on, meaning he was largely without first choice options; Sylla at left back, and the big lad Sidibé in central midfield.

There’s been a lovely variety of goals scored, even, by some miracle, a goal from a corner, but I couldn’t help but highlight this one, featuring every member of that front four:

My choice for goal of the season so far (@Chris Johnson, with a large helping of middle finger)

My choice for goal of the season so far (@Chris Johnson, with a large helping of middle finger)

Ted’s had another great looking transfer window, and whilst Moise Kean is the headline deal, the vast majority of the business is looking to the future.

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My selection of player to highlight is the young lad who’s “Labelled the next László Bölöni“, Ted’s €325k pick up of József Szilágyi:

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I like him a lot. Since joining, the coaches “only” have him as a 2-3 star potential player, but seeing as Kean is a three star player, that could still be very good indeed. We shall watch his career with great interest.

I think Wesley Saïd deserves just a little goodbye. 39(7) apps, 11 goals, 6 key contributions, 7 assists and 4 secondary assists in his 18 months with #EssexFM at the helm. Was he massively overpaid? Oh yes. But he made invaluable contributions to our promotion campaign, especially in the second half of last season. A €2.5m transfer fee and his wage gone…I’m happy with that.

The table has us in the Champions League qualifying battle:

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Which is a bit mad really.

Most goals: Koulouris (11), Kean (7), Sarmiento (6), Nelson (5)

Most key contributions: Koulouris (5), Kean (4), Nelson (4), Quina (3)

Most assists: Quina (6), VDBNTO (5), Amian (4), Kean (4), Koulouris (4), Sylla (4)

Most secondary assists: Amian (4), Quina (3), Sarmiento (3)


Youth Development:

It’s not been such plain sailing on the development front. For whatever reason, I’m not seeing the overall gainz that I’m used to from training.

We have good facilities, coaches that compare favourably in the division (top 4 in almost every category, and we’re giving our younger players ample chances to play first team football. Yet something’s not quite clicking.

My two biggest concerns are Kelvin Amian (soon to turn 24), and Bafodé Diakité (recently turned 21). Both have featured heavily in the first team, with 51 and 41 starts respectively, but both players have an abundance of orangey coloured arrows in their “all time” progress screen. Disgusting.

More positively, our diminutive Argentinian winger, Darío Sarmiento has barrelled his way in to first team contention at the tender age of 18. Fingers crossed this will help to develop him even more (I’m really struggling to find players who have significantly improved).

Probably the best example of growth comes from prodigy of last season’s intake, Mohamed Dieng:

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He made five appearances for our first team before his loan move, but it should be noted, the majority of his attribute development has come since moving to play in Liga NOS.

I have reluctantly come to the conclusion that I’m doing something less than optimally with training. My training strategy for FM20 was to go double intensity on a suitable additional focus (choosing two or three for each player during a season, depending on their needs, incorporating player traits where appropriate), while not focussing on a positional role (except for training new positions). Coupled with additional team training modules, this seemed to work a treat. Not so much with Toulouse so far. It’s time to give positional role training more of a go, and see if we can’t turn some of those orange arrows green…

Finally, I am a little ahead of the blog, and have gotten beyond this season’s youth intake, which was a disappointing one. Only Gökhan Soyudoğru looks like he has much potential, though after last year’s crop, I can’t complain too much.


Next time we’ll be concluding season two, and our unlikely charge towards European football. I’ll maybe have an initial look at how the changes I’ve made to training are working out, but just four months may not be enough time to see a definitive difference.

Thanks for reading, stay safe x

Toulouse 2.01: I Know What Ted Did Last Summer

Happy holidays, and welcome back to the South of France. Not all that much FMing has been going on for me of late, but there’s just enough done to post an update for the start of our first season back in Ligue 1.

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First up, Ted will run us through a vital summer of recruitment, before I step in and chronicle our first three months back in the big time. I’m hopeful that our very solid defence from season one will provide a base for a comfortable enough season, but the media and bookies don’t fancy us much…


Ted Redwood:

With a promotion under F’s belt (and title winners to boot), the club obviously has a decent base to build upon to solidify its position in Ligue 1, and not a lot of business needs doing. Naturally I then decided to spend €10m on 12 permanent transfers, circa €4.5m on future transfers, and €2.5m or so on loan fees for two players. This was somewhat offset by bringing just over €10m back into the club through the sale of fringe players, as well as selling the next sale clause for Jean-Claude Todibo for almost €8m.

The finances of the club are in excellent shape, having also reduced the weekly wage after contractual increases for promotion came into effect, and this has been achieved whilst looking after the present and future of Toulouse.

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I sought to add real strength in potentially wobbly positions, with Mike Maignan being a top target – he wouldn’t talk to us about a permanent transfer, but a creative loan-based solution secured our man, and hopefully he falls in love with the club over the next few months and will agree a pre-contract for a freebie next summer.

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Aside from that, I’m very happy buffing the spine of the team with sensible experienced options, and promising players who are capable of delivering now. As mentioned before, some youngsters will be arriving in future windows (including one in 2.5 seasons time…), which will hopefully assist Toulouse 2 in their National 2-D campaign – it’s surely a worthy endeavour to keep the reserves in the playable leagues for our own youngsters sake.

One of the perils of contract negotiations with young players is the ‘locked’ demand for sending them out on loan. This issue is especially pertinent when Toulouse’s reserve side is now in a playable league at a decent level for those 16 year-old prospects, who would no doubt progress far quicker with our facilities/coaching versus clubs with their first team in the same division. It’s forced a couple of departures already, and I think I had to accept a couple of these demands from agents for the incoming future transfers, too…

There were also plenty of loans out

There were also plenty of loans out

On the sales front there’s no-one I’m particularly worried about having lost. Manu Koné looked promising on paper but wouldn’t sign a new deal, so we cashed in for almost €1m and a next sale %, although the fact he’s gone to Nottingham Forest may indicate he isn’t really that great after all.

Hopefully From will give some feedback on his favoured signings that I’ve made – it’s been a busy window so I don’t want to keep adding words. Over to the manager to figure out how to effectively use this many new signings in a previously settled squad and tactic.

FEO:

Ted has had a dream of a summer there. He’s already pleased the board too, which is nice. I’m likely not going to spend a lot of time discussing Club Vision in this series, but I feel I should at least let you know what they want:

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The 5 year plan makes sense, I approve. I’m not wild about the defensively solid football and counter-attacking football additions, but they also wanted direct football. After a bit of persuading, they put that in the bin where it belongs. I’m sure it’ll be back in twelve months.

Back to the transfer business, I’m a little disappointed to lose Koné, but he was agitating for a move, and wasn’t going to be first team in this, the final year of his contract. It’s wise to have got some cash and let him go. To have only spent €1.75m more than he recouped is great work from Tedderz, as the squad looks both leaner, and meaner now.

I’d entirely agree that Maignan is the top acquisition. I especially like the signing, as it’s not something I probably would’ve even conceived of. A masterful move from the DoF. Despite last year’s #1 grabbing the Goalkeeper of the Season award (I think they’ve been Dupéd by our brilliant defence there), Mike’s a massive improvement between the sticks.

My other favourite signing is Domingos Quina (pronounced keeen-waaa):

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He’s versatile and quality, and I’m hopeful he can carve out a starting role toot sweet.

I’m going to save any talk on the younger signings (and future signings) for the next part, when I’ll focus a bit on youth development.

August – September ’21:

I intended to largely keep the faith with the tactic that got us up, but made a couple of minor changes in anticipation of tougher challenges:

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I’ve removed the counter press and higher defensive line team instructions, and added force opposition outside, as I fear top class through balls more than top class crosses. The goalie will be instructed to distribute short to try and minimize the amount we give the ball away.

Role-wise, VDB (not that one) becomes a DLP rather than an AP, which suits him to be honest. The Pressing Forward returns up front once again.

The fixture computer was pretty kind to us first up, although both of our rivals came out of the hat as away ties in the first three fixtures:

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Smoke it. Bizarrely, our first six performances got exactly the results they “deserved”. We were really good in particular against Stade Rennais, Reiss Nelson getting two goals that his early season form warranted.

His injury just after half time against Stade Brestois coincided precisely with our worst half of the season, but we just about held on for a win.

Koulouris has been a bit weird. 7 goals in 184 minutes (plus injury time) where he looked like Ronaldo, no goals outside of that, when he was all but anonymous. Still, our first month in Ligue 1 and he got the Player of the Month award.

What a start! 19 points already, halfway to safety.

September – October ’21:

Of course, such a friendly start on the fixture list means the harder games must be around here somewhere…

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If you’d offered me seven points from this run of fixtures, I’d have had your hand off. We were thoroughly outclassed by Marseilles and PSG (as you might expect), and we totally robbed Lyon with a VDB (not that one) direct free kick, and an unquantifiable goal, that will come up in a mo.

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I certainly didn’t expect to be sitting this pretty at any point in our first season in Ligue 1, although I did think we had enough about us to finish in a fairly solid mid-table position. I reckon we’ll probably fall down the table a wee bit, as truly impressive performances have been relatively rare, but I’m already confident we’re safe.

Most goals: Koulouris (8), Van den Boomen (4), Nelson (3)

Most key contributions: Koulouris (3), Van den Boomen (2*)

Most assists: Amian (3), Van den Boomen (3)

Most secondary assists: Amian (2), Saïd (2), Sidibé (2)

#GifGoals:

*Can’t decide whether best goal ever…

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…or total fluke…


Next time out, we’ll cover the middle few months of the season, including the (probably quiet?) January transfer window. I’ll have a gander at some of our youth prospects, including a couple that should be arriving on January 1st. A cup run would be nice…

Thanks for reading, stay safe x

Toulouse 1.02: None Shall Pass

Welcome back! Exciting times today, as Ted takes command of January and his first transfer window. After this little introduction, you’ll be reading words straight from the horse(man)’s mouth.

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We’re in a solid position at the turn of the year. We’re favourites for promotion, and after a very good start, the aim has to be going up automatically, at the first attempt. There are definitely tactical changes on my agenda when I return in February, and a look at our most exciting intake prospect, now that it’s happened, but first, let’s see what Ted got up to…


TedRedwood:

Upon receiving the file from From, I realised that there’s very little surgery needed to this Toulouse side that are topping the Ligue 2 table. Much like my own Sporting Cristal save, though, there are a lot of players hanging around in the Reserves squad that have expiring contracts, and a couple of first team players not getting minutes. If I can shift a few of them, then that’ll bring in a few bob to the €2m transfer budget graciously handed over by the board. The board were also kind enough to allow me to hire another scout, so naturally I signed up Thomas Radzinski, because anything else would have been a disaster.

Like a kid in a candy shop, I jumped onto the Scouting page to uncover a few Argentinian folk with expiring contracts at the end of June, and needlessly signed right back Emanuel Iñíguez for €1m, who demands to be an Important Player, despite us already having a great option in that position already. After replacing our backup goalkeeper with a slightly younger model, I then proceeded to strip away any semblance of depth within the squad, so I’m hoping an injury crisis isn’t on the horizon. The bright side is that I then signed Yohan Cabaye, as well as a generic Argentinian centre midfield all-rounder, Alexis Alegre, on freebies. My finest work came from looking for youngsters, gifting FEO with Lamine Cissé and Brahima Ouattara for a combined €173k. The future’s bright, the future’s purple.

(FEO): Straight back out on loan…but I want him now (shakes fist)

(FEO): Straight back out on loan…but I want him now (shakes fist)

When it comes to everything outside of transfers, I was responsible for a 9th Round French Cup tie penalty defeat to Ligue 1 Brest, as well as five league games. FEO mentioned in his blog that form wasn’t great (despite results) going into January, and I feel like my management style didn’t help matters. I was a little too hasty with changes to playing style during matches, rather than being patient and sticking with a winning formula. Having initially stretched our lead at the top to 7 points after 3 league games, I was then responsible for it being cut to 3 points. Whoops.

I’ve not managed to do as much as I’d have liked in this window, however the first eleven remains in place, and there are a couple of different options in the attacking third to perhaps try something different. I may have left FEO a little short, but summer will be better once we have Ligue 1 status to attract players…right? Over to you, F.

FEO:

Overall I’m pretty happy with Ted’s January. He had some tough fixtures, especially considering we were out of form. No shame in losing on penalties to Brest. Tis but a scratch.

Transfer-wise, there’s absolutely no doubt the squad was bloated, and he’s done well to get some spare parts off of our books permanently.

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He’s also let eight more players go out on loan, most of whom bring in a little more money. Before January, the club was losing around €1.3m a month. There’s no way this will be brought under control this season, but Ted’s business looks to be wise, considering our position.

19 players out, and 7 in. Of the incoming transfers, Iñíguez and Alegre look solid and versatile, definitely sensible with reduced numbers. Cabaye is a much needed experienced head, his hard working nature, as well as his technical ability should mean I can rest our key central midfielders a little more. Like Ted, I’m most excited by the youngsters he brought in. I’m already pondering on how to develop Ouattara, once he returns, and Cissé will get some first team reps this season for sure.

€3k. €3 freaking k!

€3k. €3 freaking k!

Tactics:

I’m tearing up the tactics. I’ve not been able to get much out of the AMC position so far, and it feels like playing with ten men at times. All too familiar a refrain for me. Perhaps my season with Boca was a one-off, and a 4231 just isn’t my strong suit?

Yeah yeah, we’re top of the league, what are you doing and so forth. One of my tendencies in FM, is my willingness to change a tactic when I feel like I can improve upon it, when results are still good. If we’re top whilst getting little from a position, how well could we do if all eleven players contribute?

I decided to strip back some team instructions, play on positive mentality, and lose the AMC. As Ted mentioned above, the first team had been kept intact, and this was the tactic and team selection I eventually settled on:

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There were a few matches that resulted in tweakage during February. After a brief dalliance with three CMs, I dropped one to be a DM. I changed to an advanced playmaker from the previous CMS, re-introduced the advanced forward rather than the pressing forward, and added low crosses to the team instructions. Speaking as someone who’s played a lot of 90 minute FM so far, if they haven’t recently nerfed headers, then I’m a Dutchman.

Speaking of heading, Sidibé had been given a go as the CMA, with his height (6’7″) and ability in the air, I thought he could be a danger arriving in the box. And I was correct, up to a point. He was always popping up on the end of crosses. In two separate games he had double figures for efforts on goal, the majority of which were aerial chances. When it comes to heading the ball straight at the ‘keeper, he’s arguably the world’s finest talent.

In terms of other personnel, Machado’s frequent errors, specifically giving the ball away cheaply, got on my nerves, and Moussa Diarra usurped him at left back. Dejaegere returned on the right, after Janis Antiste’s early season impact waned. He’s young, and will hopefully be a serious part of our future, especially with Dejaegere only here on loan for this season.

The only position that no-one really claimed was the CMA. Manu Koné had a couple of great games, but he also stunk it up at times. Spierings and Alegre also had moments, but without fully convincing.

Losing the AMC seemed to particularly benefit Wesley Saïd on the left flank, as he was frequently cutting inside and driving into the central space. Occasionally he’d run so far he popped up on the right wing. He looked far more effective from February onwards. Koulouris thrived on through balls from deeper positions, scoring plenty with his feet.

Three draws and thirteen victories later, the title was ours:

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The new tactic worked like a charm. We weren’t often likely to play beautiful football (though the final few games in particular were nice), but we did improve our goal output after the change.

The defence also upgraded from “tight” to flat out “miserly”. 23 conceded in 38 games is a record to be proud of, with just 8 conceded in the 16 games since the change in tactics. I suspect we’ll be needing that as a base next season.

Our dominance was reflected with seven players in the Ligue 2 team of the season:

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Despite not making the team, Maxime Dupé won Goalkeeper of the Season. In truth, he had very little to do, and didn’t really impress me. He was at fault for three of the goals we conceded.

For me, the pick of Ted’s signings was Iñíguez, who played well in three different positions and allowed me to rotate more during the second half of the season.

Most goals: Koulouris (20), Saïd (10), Bayo (9)

Most key contributions: Van den Boomen (8), Dejaegere (6), Saïd (6)

Most assists: Dejaegere (9), Van den Boomen (7), Antiste (5), Saïd (5)

Most secondary assists: Van den Boomen (9), Dejaegere (4)


Behind The Scenes:

Not a lot to report here. Money’s too tight to mention, so nothing was invested in facilities. Hopefully promotion will lead to more funds for this in future.

The youth intake happened, with a fair few players of promise, but one in particular shines brightly:

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I’d have given him a debut already if I’d been allowed to register him. He has bags of potential, and hopefully we can develop him to become a first team option for years to come.

Next time, Ted gets to sink his teeth into a full summer of fun, as we prepare for a step up in class. I have some ideas on what we need and what I want, but that’s not my role here. My only input will come towards the end of the transfer window, if there are players I don’t think I’ll be giving game time, I’ll feed that back, otherwise recruitment is all on Ted.

Thanks for reading, stay safe x

Toulouse 1.01: 90 Minute FM

Bonjour! Do not fear, I won’t be butchering the wonderful French language too much this year. Probably. Welcome to the beginning of FEO & Ted’s excellent adventure in the South of France.

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Following on from last month’s introduction, today’s post will include a bit of squad analysis, some tactics talk, and how the season has progressed up to the end of December. I’m also going to attempt to provide a little context for my own in-house stats, with the help of some guest #GifGoals…


Note: Bad news folks, today’s post will be almost entirely Ted-less. Originally, we were going to start with the transfer window open, for Ted to have a quick crack at moulding the squad in his image, but with the 2020 changes meaning the window remains open until after the ninth league game, we decided to abandon that plan as impractical.

So it’ll just be me today, playing through until the end of December. Ted will open the next post, with his approach to January…


“Stats” Talk:

I was looking for some goals to illustrate what I’m talking about in regards to “Key contributions” and/or goals people were interested in how I would score them. I put the word out to some FM legends. Unfortunately, they were all far too busy, so I asked in FM Slack instead…

FMSamo got back to me first, with a full-on #MovieGoal, which I’ve cut down to a gif here…

The pass! Key contribution? I think so. There’s still plenty to do, but it’s a situation transforming ball. The finish (and run)! Key contribution, nailed on. Impudent that finish, he’s totally Dønnum. The pass qualifies as an assist for sure, but I’m not giving out a secondary assist for this one. You don’t see it, as I had to cut it out, but Bjørdal, H’s simple pass back to Bjørdal, J, is not worthy in my eyes.

Two of my fellow #EssexFM boyz sent me gifs of goals that are similar, and scored by me in the same way. First up, this lovely Ce(n)tré from FMGrasshopper:

And then this wonderful flowing move sent in from ***checks notes*** Toulouse Director of Football, TedRedwoodGamingInc:

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Both goals feature a quality secondary assist that I award a key contribution for. I love a pass that spreads the play, and putting the wide players clear is integral to the goals.

Crosses and headers are areas I’ve found most difficult to make decisions on scoring so far. In these examples, I rate both assists as key contributions, as the crosses are near perfect (plus the movement of the wide players for that matter), but I don’t always give crosses that credit, say if I judge the movement and/or header more important to the goal. Whilst both these headers are good finishes, I don’t rate them as a KC, as the crosses have put them on a silver platter in my opinion.

Hopefully this makes a bit of sense. The last thing I’m trying to work out, is how to go about weighting these things to get an overall score (probably one for assists, one for goals), although I’m not totally convinced that it’s worthwhile. I’ll revisit once I have a season’s worth of numbers.

Want a goal scored by this system? Got a really good goal? Confused by what the hell I’m talking about and need more examples? Send me a #GifGoal. Find me on Slack or Twitter, I’ll happily take a look. Don’t want those things? Then, errr…don’t.

Day One Analysis:

Toulouse are considered strong favourites for an immediate return to Ligue 1, and the board expect promotion.

Imagine my surprise then, when the Team Report showed me that we’re not all that. The good news, we’re the finest Off The Ball outfit in the division.

I don’t tend to spend a lot of time worrying about the comparisons, however, the midfield screens in particular gave me pause.

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Some concerns there for sure. There’s also a dearth of leadership in the team, the squad contains zero Team Leaders.

Still, there are two players I’ll pick out to start with, and contrary to the above, they’re both midfielders.

There’s only one man for a more defensive midfield role at the start:

Khalidou Sidibé will be playing as a Central Midfielder on Defensive mentality. That’s not necessarily how I see him in the long term (assuming we keep him that long), but as of now, there’s no-one else I trust to anchor the midfield.

Next to him in midfield will be new vice captain, VDB (not that one):

He’ll be playing as a CM on support, a role I enjoyed with Boca in the beta, and will have the PI “Take More Risks”, to hopefully encourage some more through balls from deep.

You may have noticed, they’re not the most dynamic pair. Both lack pace and dribbling ability, and that’s fairly typical of the options available to us in central areas.


Note the Seconde: I’m watching the entire game, every game, until I’m confident enough in our tactical set-up. Even after that, if we have big fixtures (derbies, top of the table clashes), or games where I’m worried about how our opponent is likely to line-up, #90MinuteFM will be my go to. It’s what I’m enjoying at the moment, and bearing in mind my current attitude to stats, I won’t be dropping below comprehensive highlights at any point. It really helps that FM21 is super fast.


Tactics: How It Started:

I’m not going for a long-term ideology or anything to start with. Hopefully that will come after I see what Ted brings to the table in the transfer market. For now, it’s more pragmatism from me:

I’ll explain my reasoning from back to front (clickable names klaxon). Maxime Dupé doesn’t look like a sweeper keeper. With his acceleration, first touch, and rushing out all in single digits, he’ll be a bog standard goalkeeper, and we’ll keep our defensive line at standard too.

I’m fairly happy with our centre back pairing, but the full backs are not the most exciting attacking talents. Still, I’m confident enough in their defensive abilities that a full blown defensive midfielder seems like something we can do without.

Stijn Spierings is another that lacks in the pace department, so I’m giving the Enganche role a bash to start with. Hopefully, Wesley Saïd can provide some magic from the left flank. He’s got the most flair and technique of our starting eleven (and by far the highest wage), so here’s hoping he can impress.

Brecht Dejaegere isn’t a natural (or even accomplished) right winger, but he offers decent pace and crossing ability, and is a hard worker. There are some promising young players for the wing roles, and we’ll be watching them keenly when they emerge off of the bench.

Up top, it’s Efthymis Koulouris, not the most thrilling of strikers, but I’m hoping that having a pressing forward (and preventing short distribution from the goalie), can lead to us winning the ball back quickly in midfield, as the spine of the team is tall, and should dominate in the air.

The First Seven Games:

Results wise, a pleasing start:

Defensively we looked sound. The Châteauroux game was a bit of an aberration, as they did nowt but score two blinders.

It’s going forward where I had concerns. If you remove the two corner goals, the three direct free-kicks and the penalty, we only scored seven goals from open play. Not great.

Why seven games? It was during the seventh that I started to make changes to the line-up. Spierings was the first casualty, as he’d been largely anonymous (one spectacular free kick aside). The Enganche role didn’t really seem to be doing what it said on the tin, dropping really deep and occupying the same space as the CMS a lot of the time.

Janis Antiste was the first of the youngsters to impress from the bench, and moved into the first team on the right wing. Dejaegere had been good, but moved to the AMC position as an Advanced Playmaker.

Eleven More Games:

Have the gradual tactical changes made a difference?

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A very tentative yes, although it may not look it, and with an additional caveat. These games did not contain a single set piece goal for us (a separate problem), but we were better from open play at least.

We were very impressive against Auxerre and Caen (both in the top four when we faced them). We were actually very good at Amiens too, but the ref gave them two penalties for two perfectly good tackles, to completely screw us. I was beginning to think we were making some progress…

…but then, the caveat. The last three league games have been turgid. At least Le Havre are challenging at the top, the last two are one goal victories over relegation candidates, and were not enjoyable games to watch.

Tactics: How It’s Going:

After all the tweaks (90 minute FM continues…), this is the current set-up:

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Big changes out wide. The wide attackers needed more support. The full backs may not be the biggest attacking threats in the galaxy, but they’re alright. And the defence has been solid enough.

Antiste made a couple of appearances on the left as an inverted winger, and looked dangerous. Changing the role for Saïd too, has made him more impactful. He’s only bagged three goals, but two were blinders (and game winners), and he’s been more involved in general.

Koulouris got a more attacking role, and low crosses are out, as he’s been a danger in the air.

Outside of the first eleven, Manu Koné has put some disappointing early season performances behind him, and has played well of late. I expect he’ll feature more in the new year.

Given the caveat outlined above, and the potential of transfers in and/or out in January, there may be some more changes when I return. We shall see.


Most goals: Koulouris (8), Bayo (4), Antiste (4)

Most key contributions: Dejaegere (4), Koné (3), Saïd (3), Spierings (3), Van den Boomen (3)

Most assists: Dejaegere (6)

Most secondary assists: Van den Boomen (4)


The almighty table:

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I feel bad handing over to Ted at this point. On paper, we’re looking good, but current form leaves me worried. He’s also got to face Ligue 1 opposition in the 9th round of the Coupe de France first out of the gate, with the board expecting us to get to the 11th. Sorry Ted!


Still, there are many reasons to be cheerful. We’re in the driving seat for promotion, some of the young players are developing nicely, and we’ve had a lovely intake preview:

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Next time out, you’ll actually get some Ted time, as he deals with the January transfer window, and six games too. He can lead off writing the next post, and maybe a fresh eye is what’s needed with this squad. As I write, he has no transfer budget to play with, but hopefully a cheeky ask of the board will give him something to play with, seeing as we’re top…

Thanks for reading, stay safe x

FM21: Toulouse

My, hasn’t the year just flown by.

Another season, another FM. I’m personally in a bit of a funny place with Football Manager at the moment. Like some of my fellow bloggers, I’ve struggled, and in fact failed, to find a club that really grabs my interest. In the end, the club has been a bit of an afterthought, and with that rousing and inspiring vote of confidence, it’s Toulouse FC.

Really, the team doesn’t matter all that much, it’s more the nature of how the save will be played that counts. More on that later…


Toulouse:

Still, there were a few reasons that Toulouse appealed, and unusually for me, it’s a selection I came up with a fair while ago (and then failed to come up with a better idea). They’re recently relegated, wear purple, and they play in the fourth biggest city in the country, yet don’t win anything of note (other than a solitary Coupe de France, way back in 1957).

The country is probably the biggest draw for me. I’ve not played in France for a long old time. It should, theoretically at least, provide a harder challenge than some of my previous saves, but I’ve said that before. They did have a takeover in July this year, so I’ve no idea what to expect from the board.

I’m not going to make any promises about this being a one club odyssey or anything. I do enjoy a building project, but it’s started to feel a bit repetitive. So, I’ll play it by ear.

FEO:

So what’s different for me this year? Well, inspired by playing in a couple of FM20 succession saves over on FMSlack, the highly enjoyable Black Crow blog series (first blog post linked) from CJ feat. Mike, and [redacted], I’ve decided to share this save with another.

The Black Crow series has a whole lot more going on than is my intention here, but for the purposes of this save, I’ll be having my very own human Director of Football.

Why? I really enjoy the match experience, the player development, and tweaking tactics in FM, but I’m a little weary of scouting, contracts and transfers. It’s all begun to feel a little samey, and I want a break. I also like the idea of having to adapt my style of play based on the decisions of someone else.

Additionally, I thought it might be interesting for the blog to feature the thoughts of two players, to see our different ways of playing, and whether a unified approach emerges, or we have a constant tug-of-war on our hands. Either way could provide an entertaining read!

I won’t be giving any instructions. The transfer business both in and out will be totally in the hands of the DoF. I’ll be in charge of the team, but the team is whatever I’m given. I’ll be completely hands-off between seasons, and in all likelihood, will be giving the save up for the January transfer window(s) too.

So over to my new boss, Ted Redwood. Oh yes, it’s #EssexFM, baby. Ted writes a mean blog post, is an expert in the loan market, and I’m really happy to be sharing this save with him.

Ted Redwood:

Much like the idea behind my involvement within this save, I have been given no information or restrictions in regards to an introduction.

Over the last few editions of Football Manager I have always noted the success that FEO brings wherever he manages, and wondered what could truly test his abilities within the game.

It seems as if he reached a similar conclusion to myself when managing in a ‘lesser’ European nation during FM20, although it’s the sort of chokepoint you could force yourself through with enough gaming the AI, and of course excess time to play until you burst through.

I feel like I was offered the chance to take over as some kind of rogue Director of Football for FEO after he witnessed my ability to shift Mesut Ozil during a brief Arsenal succession save held within FM Slack.

He’ll be delighted to hear that I’ll be attempting to be as financially prudent as always, however with the added caveat that I’m aware of how good he is at the game, so he’ll probably be showered with players with no real style in mind, and will rue the day he sees how many players are on loan at any given time.

What’s Next?:

Well said, Ted (I wrote this part beforehand, so that’s a total guess). I’m really looking forward to which players he dumps on my doorstep stylishly unveils in future, and I’m so pleased to have his words feature this year.

I’ll be playing a beta save again this year, firstly to have a no consequence try of the game, but also to spend a little time working out how we will start in France.

Similarly to this choice, I won’t be basing my beta selection on an interesting club, but this time on a player, and a specific skill. More next time (once I’ve actually decided…).

Thanks for reading, stay safe x