This isn't another Rafa thread but a footballing one in general.
After watching a dismal World Cup (after the dismal 2006 World Cup) I've been thinking about our former manager's so-called (by me) anti-football approach... is it the way of the future?
If Holland, who played a formation of 6-4, can get to the World Cup final kicking everything that moved (and kicking those that didn't move until they moved), if Greece can win the 2004 Euros playing ultra defensive football, if a cautious Inter Milan can win the CL, if a Brazil team is set up to play without flair, if Portugal don't try a leg going forward, if a respected Irish football writer praises Maradona for building his team around Mascherano (a defensive midfielder who offers nothing to his team when in possession), if cultured passer like Xavi Alonso can be substituted in a WC final while Busquets stays on the pitch, then surely it is the way forward.
I've watched players over the last few years preferring to play for the free kick, throw-in or corner instead of taking a full back on. Where is their ambition, the love of the tricky play? Teams nowadays are content to pack the midfield, stop the other team playing and hope they can snatch one on the break. I heard one pundit call 4-4-2 'outmoded'. Surely this is a bad thing.
I bemoaned Rafa's rigid 4-5-1 formation but didn't every team at the WC play that? Is football changing to the uber-defensive and is Rafa ahead of the curve in that respect? I'm sure Rafa knows what a great game of football is - we all do - but has he known that those days are gone before the rest of us?
Disclaimer - I'm not flip-flopping on my Rafa judgement (I still can't stand him but he's not on his own), just wondering if his style is the way football seems to be going/falling.