argsgsgs gnngndg yeah I got quite confused as to why that wasn't a free kick... Did the rules used to be different back then, goalies could handle pass-backs?
Gullit has a huge role in this goal. He is the “anchor” like Xavi in Barcelona. Everyone throwing their ropes (passes) to him. He is playing like number 6 sometimes and number 8 sometimes too. He is also getting into opponent’s penalty area. What a player.
One of the things I love the most about the whole process towards this textbook goal, is when you don't focus about the ball movement and focus on the players moves, you can see that Ruud Gullit manages to ALWAYS make himself available. Then, at one point, he did identify a terrific mismatch at 0:56 and darted towards it while the man responsible for keeping an eye on him at this unusual wing position did the mistake to not follow him. Then the setup for the goal was complete. I find this to be really interesting because Gullit used to be known more for his skill with the ball and not particularly for this ability to play without the ball, and I find this a proof that this trait in his game was a preponderant part of his game and ability to live anywhere in the midfield. He's not called the Black Tulip for nothing after all...
Very very nice and footballistic comment there!! I'm not sure if a player said this before, I think Croyf did, that a good player knows what to do without the ball in his possession. After all, the clear time a player has the ball in his possession is approximately 5 minutes, what about the rest 85? Total genius..
@@mpiulg83 This is true, constantly pressing was not a viable defensive tactic back then, and it's more common nowadays because players are way more athletic and able to sustain that kind of effort for the whole duration of a game. Also, you can see that the centre-backs are defending really close to their goals the whole time. The offside trap tactic was not nearly as prevalent back then compared to now. It was considered back then to be less dangerous to defend low and prevent or abate the consequences of anything going deep than risking a one-on-one with the goalkeeper. They were not nearly as comfortable getting away from their line as they are nowadays. All of this high defense and constant pressing, became popular a couple of years later, when Arrigo Sacchi used those tactics successfully on the European stage and influencing a lot of future managers (like Josep Guardiola, playing with Barcelona on the same stage right around that time, in the early 90s').
Sadly, holland never lifting world cup trophy.Just imagined cruyff be a coach of 90's holland world cup team...they probably could won the trophy twice...
@Rahim Sharif smaller football nations are prohibited by the FIFA bosses to win World Cup titles since 1950 because smaller market and economically makes no sense. Yes I am rooting for Croatia today but France wins because the high powers want it so.Wait and see today.Its all about money.
paolo bignardi You kinda forgot Germany in the 90’s. World Champion ‘90 + quarter finals ‘94 + ‘98, European Champion ‘96 + Vice European champion in ‘92. No offence there, mate
I remember watching this game against England in 88 , was entertaining and England held their own to eventually draw 2 2 ...but was obvious Holland were one of the best teams then and won the European championship few months after this friendly
It's amazing how a country with such a small population, has been able to produce a multitude of fantastic players - and teams, compared to countries with much larger populations.
This is brilliant, and shows so many things. First, all teams really do want to play direct, but good teams pick the best moments, and recycle possession until those moments arise, or more accurately, when they create them. Witness Gullit’s run and the recognition by his teammate of the run and when to play the ball...
At that time there were so many great national sides though. England was disappointing on this play. Gave them an unusual amount of space. Probably bc it was a friendly.
But at the end of the day all this really came down to was getting a good cross into the box. Possession football is great to watch, but sometimes I think modern teams are trying too hard to walk the ball in to the net or are too scared to just put in a good ball into the box, there is a lot to be said about getting the ball out wide flooding the box and getting the ball into the box, by doing so you at very least give your opponents the chance of making a mistake defensively.
+Rodrigo Barriga Gibson I think even the likes of Van Basten would struggle in the modern era teams defend a lot better now, back in the 70s the only time you'd put loads of men behind the ball was if you were protecting a precarious lead late on or you were Italian, now everyone does it. It wouldn't matter what team or player you were from history you would struggle to beat a team like Morocco that put every man in the box like they did against Spain. especially using Tika Taka or total football. The only way to beat teams that play like that is to get loads of crosses with lots of spin on them into the box and force defenders into making mistakes.
+BABA BLBbIb Says it all when for the first time in world cup history the 2018 World Cup had the majority of goals coming from set pieces. With teams defending so deep and in so many numbers the only way to break many of them down, is a good ball or shot from outside the penalty box and a bit of luck.
the total opposite, hardly any teams operate with the "modern" style. far too many spend the entire game crossing the ball into the box or shooting at every second chance they get, passing football is only good for the game.
The truth is, many international teams up to a point, adopted this way of playing. This is partly why England often looked so lost playing decent teams, even some half decent teams - because they were adopting, to a certain extent, this way of playing. It took England decades to get up to speed. We have only really seen it over the last 7-8 years. Watch some of England games with Scholes, Gerrad and Lampard - they would often lose the ball.
Para mí aunque Holanda no tenga mundiales ganados, es claramente una de las selecciones más grandes del mundo, siempre son candidatos a ganar todo y son una máquina de producir grandes futbolistas, seguro algún día se les va a dar el ganar un mundial, saludos desde Argentina!
Creo que es un país demasiado pequeño para ganar la Copa del Mundo. Las reglas siempre cambian para favorecer a los equipos más grandes. El Mundial tiene más partidos que nunca y creo que hay más sustituciones que nunca. Todo eso favorece a los países más grandes con equipos más profundos.
@@Jose-sy1je Yes, The Netherlands is the 68th biggest country worldwide, but at the OLIMPICS we're on # 7 leaving many big countries behind us, like Germany, Spain, Italy, Brazil, Argentina, etc. and just ONE place behing the UK! Just saying!
@@peterdevalk7929 That depends on how much sports are funded also. East Germany was second in the medal rankings in 1988 (before the US) and West Germany were 4th. Now Germany as a unified country are 10th bc they don't fund it sufficiently. As a small country the Netherlands have always been really good. I'm actually very surprised by a small and poor country like Serbia. They almost beat the US at basketball. They dominate in water polo, have had the greatest tennis played in the world, best basketball player in the world and several other great athletes
@@poopsieaxel3916 The English called it soccer from the 1870s to the early 1950s. Only recently did the entire world adopt the term football. So don't say that America lives in it's own world by calling the sport soccer. It was originally named soccer.
I like the fact that Total Football is about making the opposition tired but nobody is even pressing from the opposing team except for 2 to 3 players per pass. Rest of the team be like "Bro, I don't like this. We better get the fuck back."
Well, if you are confused about why at the beginning of the video the goalkeeper catches a player's pass using his hand and it's legal, because the background of the video is during the 1988 Euros, while the rules only came out after Denmark won the euro in 1992 when Schmeichel and several Danish defenders made repeated catch passes (a time-wasting technique).
It is Total Football because you see players changing positions, for example Ruud Gullit. And Rinus Michels (Founder of Total Football) was coach at that time.
They were a very good team and the total football worked,that’s what Ajax played they won The Champions League in the 90s the following year they played Juventus as reigning holders Juventus kicked the living daylights out of them and won that was total football out the window.
Strategy & Tactic : EXTREME HIGH PRESSURE✅️ POSSESSION GAME✅️ QUICK COUNTER✅️ HIGH PRESSURE✅️ LONG BALL COUNTER✅️ LONG BALL✅️ OVERLOAD✅️ OUT WIDE✅️ FLEXIBLE✅️ FLUID✅️
The difference between Spain and the Netherlands is that the Dutch are not afraid of shooting missiles from long ranges, and attack more often. When Spain plays, it would be like 4 attempts on target with 1 goal. The Dutch would be like 20-30 attempts with 2-3 goals. In general, the Dutch always look far more threatening even though they've had lesser success.
This is smart, precise, and incisive football. You do this in the World Cup, everyone cheers. You do this in FIFA, your opponent calls you trash and a bunch of random slurs.
Even with this horrible resolution, you can tell where Ruud Gullit is all the way through. He's the orange with the big black dot. Commentary: Little black dot. Little black dot. Blonde dot. Little black dot. Big black dot. Blonde dot. Big black dot...and so forth.
Total football is about taking positions of your teammates. If a defender has the ball and he is able to attack, he can go for it. This means a midfielder or even attacker takes the position of the defender. The team is constantly moving, thus difficult to mark and you're making the best of each situation. Tika taka is constantly one touch triangle play, high up pitch pressure, like barca. In this vid, holland's basically using both techniques :)
It's perfect. The hardest is how Gullit controls the ball from Ronald Koeman, between two England defenders. Then he sends it back to Van Aerle (maybe) to make a crossed pass into the England penalty area for Kieft to score.
No pressing high up the pitch no pressing in midfield just when defending. Just positioning and passing of the ball. Good to watch so that you learn some basics of positional game otherwise useless for todays game.
@@fortnajt You need to remember that high pressing wouldn't have worked here with the back pass rule being what it was back then. A player who is being pressed and has no option to pass around, would easily slip the ball back to the keeper and the high press would be dead there and then.
Many people underate football in 70s and 80s. But after watching their highlights, i can say that football was more technical and competitive. Its only that current technology, and heavy investment in modern football has made it look outstanding compared to how it was played 3 to 4 centuries ago
The fact that they never won the world cup just shows that even total football has its flaws. Thus football management should be flexible and requires much study
Laughing so hard at the virgins who are commenting “what’s new” or “this is not total football” This Dutch side revolutionized football 30+ years back and played such beautiful football that the term total football was made Because of this you wouldn’t have the great Barca team Pep had or the tiki taka football you see today
You can laugh as much as you want but you are the stupid, ignorant virgin who doesn't know what he is talking about. Total football is much older than 30 years old. Maybe it was popularised by the Dutch around 50 (not 30) years ago, the dumb fuckshit but in reality it goes back much further than that.
MrRhurbarb the total football as we know it is made by the dutch though, there was some kind of total football before that.. I forgot who introduced that, but the Dutch made it the way it is now. The total football before that was far from what it is today.
Of course, the Dutch took the idea of total football to a new level; they popularised the term and made it their own. For me, as much as I would do anything for England to win the world cup, the Dutch deserve it so much. The players, the tactics, the managers they have given our game. Too many to list. Maybe one thing about them though - as great as they are, they are a nation of individuals, sometimes stubborn ones. Often they just can't agree on whose idea is best. That can be a disaster for a team sport.
Only the combination of Rinus mitchel, johan cruijf and the golden generation of netherlands national team can did it, because nobody able to do total football except this combination
The Dutch often manage to fuck things up last minute despite often having the superior team, they haven't got the winning mentality which the Spainish have.
ObtuseSam um Spain had a far superior to that of the Netherlands in 2010. The Netherlands roster lately has actually been quite poor, but they've still managed to perform well at the last two WCs
Not true. The thing is we've always been wanting to win by beautiful and attractive play. That can make you vulnerable against strong opponents. We almost did it in 98. In 2010 we made it to the final and almost won it, but the play was very defensive and destructive. I prefer the attacking total football.
ElNaranjoMuziek If Arjen Robben had taken his chances, especially the 2 1v1s he had, Holland would have and even should have ended that game in the first half alone! Chances upon chances went begging. The Spanish defenders were having a nightmare of a game, but the Dutch attackers, especially Robben, were totally shocking in their finishing! And in football you would always pay if you don't take your chances.
Good question. Let us go to the academy level. In the earlier stages (for eg.) let us consider when Dennis bergkamp was in ajax youth. There Johann Cruijff , and all other coaches told players to play however they liked to, play total football, therefore the right back would play as an attacker as well. That was total football. The problem now is if you notice , there was a period in Dutch youth leagues where the focus shifted from the creative stuff to taking penalties. If you notice there was a time around 2008-2011 I guess? Where every youth game had to finish with a penalty shootout Anyways to put it more specific , since the game has become so technical, the coaches try to knock technical and tactical sense into young players, they can't play in any other way, therefore creativity becomes less, a normal youth ajax rb won't play the same as an ajax youth rb in late 1980's . Though the revolution started by Johann cruijff is taking place almost perfectly and ajax still are developing youth right now, like Justin kluivert, de ligt , Kasper dolberg, Andre onana. Spain and other countries adopted total football but the dutch themselves forgot to play their way in a way. Hope I have answered your question.
One reason Holland or anyone else wont' play like this anymore is it is easily countered by adopting man marking and flooding the midfield with players.
A lot of those passes were going back rather than forward, something that many fans complain about with todays teams, especially Man Utd. So basically it's only 'total football' when a goal is the end product.
Brazil perform that total football before Netherlands , with much more efectivily in the world Cup 1970. Search on UA-cam If you doubt me. Well, but that was quite a goal thou
Re the long thread started by argsgsgs about goalie rules I see it as valid in this particular scenario. The subject of this very clip is about the total ball that the Dutch team introduced in the days of Cruyff and Neeskens. And that is displayed so well by this '88 team. The Germans literally do not even touch the ball for a good while. And for a minute there I found myself thinking that they were right; letting the Dutch basically run around midfield. That's until the Orange scored. About the goalie rules I have to say that Lee Wee Tak's post schooled me a bit. I knew that goalies had adopted new habits but I was not aware of new set of actual rules.
It was a revolution for the time, but to me it shows how far football has come. Just look at that space they're being given! That is insane. It's like watching the stone age; is everyone really that impressed by a 25 pass goal?! Welcome to 2020- now watch some Chelsea under Conte, or Guardiola's teams. Though they were fantastic at the time, football has moved so far beyond this level.
Here's a fun thing to try to understand how good this play is. Look at one players position throughout the video, then look at another's. The overlaps the movement and more made this so good. So annoying they never won a world cup.
Imagine Spain beat Holland in the world cup final with the same strategy the dutch invented, that's messed up lol
Spain won with diving and tumbling about and crying like little girls.
That's not the Dutch way of football.
RuudJH De jong should’ve gotten a red card
@@RuudJH haha butthurt Käsekopp, shall we talk about ur kung fu Football vs spain 2010?
@@RuudJH Netherlands lost by thinking they could go play a football match like it was kung fu
2014... 1-5... Drops mic
It's not about making the opposition tired. It's about finding or opening the spaces in defense.
but closing down space when opposition attacks
@Dead Puffy - What are you talking about? Netherlands beat Germany 2-1 in the semis, then won 2-0 against the Soviets in the final.
Shubham Shirpurkar
Well that’s just like the basics , isn’t it.
This is really about not giving the ball away.
It's about the ball moving faster than the players.
@Dead Puffy nope, get your facts
0:06 i cringe a little when the goalkeeper could still do that
argsgsgs gnngndg 😂
argsgsgs gnngndg yeah I got quite confused as to why that wasn't a free kick... Did the rules used to be different back then, goalies could handle pass-backs?
Simon Gregory ye
Cringe how so?
@@simongregory9453 yes, backpass was allowed until 1994.
Gullit has a huge role in this goal. He is the “anchor” like Xavi in Barcelona. Everyone throwing their ropes (passes) to him. He is playing like number 6 sometimes and number 8 sometimes too. He is also getting into opponent’s penalty area. What a player.
OOO kanka naber Türk buldum sonunda ya.
Snebek Kyent merhaba :)
dogru!
A classic no.10
Basically a Kevin de Bruyne type player.
This is an old laws of the game. After 1992 the rule prohibit a goal keeper from handling the ball when receive a back pass(leg) from his team mate.
Uncle Petrus it wasn't in place back then
It was 1988
I noticed that straight it looked so wrong lol
@Saucy London because dino Ziff this rule was applicated
Saucy London no after the 92 euro
One of the things I love the most about the whole process towards this textbook goal, is when you don't focus about the ball movement and focus on the players moves, you can see that Ruud Gullit manages to ALWAYS make himself available. Then, at one point, he did identify a terrific mismatch at 0:56 and darted towards it while the man responsible for keeping an eye on him at this unusual wing position did the mistake to not follow him. Then the setup for the goal was complete.
I find this to be really interesting because Gullit used to be known more for his skill with the ball and not particularly for this ability to play without the ball, and I find this a proof that this trait in his game was a preponderant part of his game and ability to live anywhere in the midfield. He's not called the Black Tulip for nothing after all...
Very very nice and footballistic comment there!!
I'm not sure if a player said this before, I think Croyf did, that a good player knows what to do without the ball in his possession. After all, the clear time a player has the ball in his possession is approximately 5 minutes, what about the rest 85?
Total genius..
I agree, but you can also see there was no pressing from the other team, they just watched.... It was definitely the beginning of a new era.
@@mpiulg83 new era with no title.
@@1989Ezal sad life huh.
@@mpiulg83 This is true, constantly pressing was not a viable defensive tactic back then, and it's more common nowadays because players are way more athletic and able to sustain that kind of effort for the whole duration of a game.
Also, you can see that the centre-backs are defending really close to their goals the whole time. The offside trap tactic was not nearly as prevalent back then compared to now. It was considered back then to be less dangerous to defend low and prevent or abate the consequences of anything going deep than risking a one-on-one with the goalkeeper. They were not nearly as comfortable getting away from their line as they are nowadays.
All of this high defense and constant pressing, became popular a couple of years later, when Arrigo Sacchi used those tactics successfully on the European stage and influencing a lot of future managers (like Josep Guardiola, playing with Barcelona on the same stage right around that time, in the early 90s').
Imagine how much a prime Gullit would cost in today’s market
What about van basten then!
@Hippo Drome lol you’re showing your age young man.
@Hippo Drome gotcha, sorry I took it at face value lol. Difficult to detect sarcasm in such a small thread!
@THE OUTLAW and the rest.
@THE OUTLAW So Gullit would only be worth a quarter of Neymar? That's pretty laughable.
Sadly, holland never lifting world cup trophy.Just imagined cruyff be a coach of 90's holland world cup team...they probably could won the trophy twice...
Holland team was strong in the 90s, but France, Italy and Brazil were stronger, so.... even with Cruyff I'm not sure at all they could have won
@Rahim Sharif smaller football nations are prohibited by the FIFA bosses to win World Cup titles since 1950 because smaller market and economically makes no sense. Yes I am rooting for Croatia today but France wins because the high powers want it so.Wait and see today.Its all about money.
+Andrij S if croatian loses tonight against france...They still champions in our heart...
@Lucas Lucas LOL you are supporting an African team. 60% of France´s World Cup squad are originally from Africa.
paolo bignardi
You kinda forgot Germany in the 90’s. World Champion ‘90 + quarter finals ‘94 + ‘98, European Champion ‘96 + Vice European champion in ‘92. No offence there, mate
It looks like me playing Fifa..... apart from the goal.
In fifa it would hit the inside post to the other to the back of the keeper and then hits the crossbar so hard that you just scored an own goall
@eoe123321 This is how burnley play against me on fifa
I remember watching this game against England in 88 , was entertaining and England held their own to eventually draw 2 2 ...but was obvious Holland were one of the best teams then and won the European championship few months after this friendly
It's amazing how a country with such a small population, has been able to produce a multitude of fantastic players - and teams, compared to countries with much larger populations.
It's the Dutch mentality. Fluency and Beauty.
As a dutchman, shoutout to suriname and our other former colonies!
I love how this clip got recommended after Barça lost to Bayern with 2-8
Spain actually adapted this style in the future, also clubs like Barcelona
My boi Cruyff did a good job
Spain is Barcelona
sudhakaran nair Are you ?
@@Jza-GZa40k dumb
passing to other players is a style of playing this game, it's not like everybody does this
This is brilliant, and shows so many things. First, all teams really do want to play direct, but good teams pick the best moments, and recycle possession until those moments arise, or more accurately, when they create them. Witness Gullit’s run and the recognition by his teammate of the run and when to play the ball...
That may have been one of the best National sides I have ever seen...they were so in sync and just magical! Should have won a world cup!
At that time there were so many great national sides though. England was disappointing on this play. Gave them an unusual amount of space. Probably bc it was a friendly.
But at the end of the day all this really came down to was getting a good cross into the box.
Possession football is great to watch, but sometimes I think modern teams are trying too hard to walk the ball in to the net or are too scared to just put in a good ball into the box, there is a lot to be said about getting the ball out wide flooding the box and getting the ball into the box, by doing so you at very least give your opponents the chance of making a mistake defensively.
+Rodrigo Barriga Gibson I think even the likes of Van Basten would struggle in the modern era teams defend a lot better now, back in the 70s the only time you'd put loads of men behind the ball was if you were protecting a precarious lead late on or you were Italian, now everyone does it.
It wouldn't matter what team or player you were from history you would struggle to beat a team like Morocco that put every man in the box like they did against Spain. especially using Tika Taka or total football.
The only way to beat teams that play like that is to get loads of crosses with lots of spin on them into the box and force defenders into making mistakes.
I think there were many great "individual" goals on 2018 World Cup
+BABA BLBbIb Says it all when for the first time in world cup history the 2018 World Cup had the majority of goals coming from set pieces. With teams defending so deep and in so many numbers the only way to break many of them down, is a good ball or shot from outside the penalty box and a bit of luck.
Exactly. Whether 25 passes and then a good ball in, or 2 passes and a good ball in, the result is the same.
the total opposite, hardly any teams operate with the "modern" style. far too many spend the entire game crossing the ball into the box or shooting at every second chance they get, passing football is only good for the game.
For that one minute plus, Holland’s possession is 100 % 😂😂😂
The team most of us never saw but we're grateful with for existing
Rudd Gullit was one of the best of his time.
not fast and strong enough imho
@@magrittedeau what? Gullit was a beast, one of the strongest and powerful player of his time.
@@magrittedeau lol stop watching football, Idiot!
@@magrittedeauGullit was elite.
The truth is, many international teams up to a point, adopted this way of playing. This is partly why England often looked so lost playing decent teams, even some half decent teams - because they were adopting, to a certain extent, this way of playing. It took England decades to get up to speed. We have only really seen it over the last 7-8 years. Watch some of England games with Scholes, Gerrad and Lampard - they would often lose the ball.
Para mí aunque Holanda no tenga mundiales ganados, es claramente una de las selecciones más grandes del mundo, siempre son candidatos a ganar todo y son una máquina de producir grandes futbolistas, seguro algún día se les va a dar el ganar un mundial, saludos desde Argentina!
Creo que es un país demasiado pequeño para ganar la Copa del Mundo. Las reglas siempre cambian para favorecer a los equipos más grandes. El Mundial tiene más partidos que nunca y creo que hay más sustituciones que nunca. Todo eso favorece a los países más grandes con equipos más profundos.
@@Jose-sy1je Yes, The Netherlands is the 68th biggest country worldwide, but at the OLIMPICS we're on # 7 leaving many big countries behind us, like Germany, Spain, Italy, Brazil, Argentina, etc. and just ONE place behing the UK! Just saying!
@@peterdevalk7929 That depends on how much sports are funded also. East Germany was second in the medal rankings in 1988 (before the US) and West Germany were 4th. Now Germany as a unified country are 10th bc they don't fund it sufficiently. As a small country the Netherlands have always been really good. I'm actually very surprised by a small and poor country like Serbia. They almost beat the US at basketball. They dominate in water polo, have had the greatest tennis played in the world, best basketball player in the world and several other great athletes
Video title: “Total Football”
A Yankee: “tHaT’s, SoCCeR,NFL iTz ThE reAl FoOtBaLL”
As a Yank I know that soccer is football in the UK.
@@adriansalazar1497 not only in UK, the world except amreeka, calls it football
@@adriansalazar1497 The whole world call it Football except America who living in his own "world"
@@poopsieaxel3916 The English called it soccer from the 1870s to the early 1950s. Only recently did the entire world adopt the term football. So don't say that America lives in it's own world by calling the sport soccer. It was originally named soccer.
@@adriansalazar1497 maybe in English, every other non-native english speaking country has had an equivalent for football in their language.
Tiki taka is an evolutionary tactic but Total football is a revolutionary.
Rod Gullit is everywhere, defense, center, building the attack, wing, assisting and recieving
that's because this was in 1988, so the rule of the goal keeper can't pick the ball from other player by a direct pass was still not invented.
It was necessary
I like the fact that Total Football is about making the opposition tired but nobody is even pressing from the opposing team except for 2 to 3 players per pass. Rest of the team be like "Bro, I don't like this. We better get the fuck back."
Holanda es una selección que me gustaría verla levantar la copa del mundo se lo merecen
Не важно сколько ты катаешь мяч, главное сколько ты мячей забиваешь в ворота соперника.
This is literally what I do in FIFA matches, all to tire the opposing players.
Possession rat
@@faeezcfc952 eh!?
Faeez cfc cry
Well, if you are confused about why at the beginning of the video the goalkeeper catches a player's pass using his hand and it's legal, because the background of the video is during the 1988 Euros, while the rules only came out after Denmark won the euro in 1992 when Schmeichel and several Danish defenders made repeated catch passes (a time-wasting technique).
You can see that Pep Guardiola has watched this video over and over again :-)
I think he forgot about the video now😅..
It is Total Football because you see players changing positions, for example Ruud Gullit. And Rinus Michels (Founder of Total Football) was coach at that time.
players playing multiple positions say if a midfielder was to get in your territory you would switch positions
No Pressing!It's retro football style..No comparison with the toughness of 2020 football
This was 88. Holland 74 was the best national team of all time.
That didn't win anything..
Brazil 1970 is widly recognized as the best national team of all time.
@@Giorgio_Cerrini Holland 74 crushed Brazil 74 with 2-0
@@garagegymbros2198 So what? Brazil 74 has nothing to do with Brazil 70.
Aku ingin menonton pertandingan sepakbola zaman dulu tahun 1990an dengan resolusi 1080p, itu mustahil.
When people ask me why I support Netherlands national team, I say nothing. I just show them this video.
They were a very good team and the total football worked,that’s what Ajax played they won The Champions League in the 90s the following year they played Juventus as reigning holders Juventus kicked the living daylights out of them and won that was total football out the window.
That Juve team was juiced to the max. Ajax was so much better than them. Robbed.
0:06
“Wait, that’s illegal!”
Only if you don't realise you are watching a game played in 1988.
Philosophy: TOTAL FOOTBALL
Coach: TOTAL FOOTBALL
Strategy & Tactic :
EXTREME HIGH PRESSURE✅️
POSSESSION GAME✅️
QUICK COUNTER✅️
HIGH PRESSURE✅️
LONG BALL COUNTER✅️
LONG BALL✅️
OVERLOAD✅️
OUT WIDE✅️
FLEXIBLE✅️
FLUID✅️
Long time ago when it was allowed for the goalkeeper to take the ball back by hand from the own player😆
coinmaster1000 coinmaster1000 ikr
If today's rules apply, they would apply at that time.
The action died with the goalkeeper grabbing the ball 😂
That ladies and gents is how u play football
Ronald Rajadurai No! This is how I can fall asleep watching this vid!
@@bertrandd.5611 that because you're dumb. I fall asleep everytime I see Neymar's flops and dives.
i love the background music. it sounds far better than trendy headaching electric beat(twe tue tiu tiu)...
wonderful
Well as a Dutchman myself, all the endless passing around could be tiring to watch. But when the result is a goal, you can't complain.
Total football is not about only passing. It"s when all players can take over the role of any other player in a team
Total football = Deprive the opponent of the ball.
This Dutch game can be seen today in Barcelona and Man city
Not really, it doenst even come close to todays game, but it is still good for learning about football.
the constant re-positioning of the players is so good. also every pass is executed with precision, no need to waste time on controlling the ball
this is impressive. and the vid is so 80's! lol
Kaban bekecek tahon berapi lob
The difference between Spain and the Netherlands is that the Dutch are not afraid of shooting missiles from long ranges, and attack more often. When Spain plays, it would be like 4 attempts on target with 1 goal. The Dutch would be like 20-30 attempts with 2-3 goals. In general, the Dutch always look far more threatening even though they've had lesser success.
I wish I coached soccer when the idea of passing and moving was a revolutionary concept
This is smart, precise, and incisive football. You do this in the World Cup, everyone cheers. You do this in FIFA, your opponent calls you trash and a bunch of random slurs.
Even with this horrible resolution, you can tell where Ruud Gullit is all the way through. He's the orange with the big black dot.
Commentary: Little black dot. Little black dot. Blonde dot. Little black dot. Big black dot. Blonde dot. Big black dot...and so forth.
Total football is about taking positions of your teammates. If a defender has the ball and he is able to attack, he can go for it. This means a midfielder or even attacker takes the position of the defender. The team is constantly moving, thus difficult to mark and you're making the best of each situation. Tika taka is constantly one touch triangle play, high up pitch pressure, like barca. In this vid, holland's basically using both techniques :)
0:06 wait a minute, that's illegal
Legal back then
legal until 1992
@@AncientCS i knew
ted lasso brought me here
Barcelona 2008-2010 time traveled! :P
But can they do that on a cold rainy night in Stoke?
68/68 Pelé couldn’t do it on a cold rainy night in Stoke
Seeing this was on a cold rainy night in north-west London they probably could've.
The best thing about the goal is that it was done to England
By passing it around so much the opposition eventually nod off and that's the technique in a nut shell.
That's why I love Holland 😙❤
It's perfect. The hardest is how Gullit controls the ball from Ronald Koeman, between two England defenders. Then he sends it back to Van Aerle (maybe) to make a crossed pass into the England penalty area for Kieft to score.
De pé em pé! Muita maestria! Salve a eterna Laranja Mecânica!
This is called Time Machine. Saw the future of football. Most successful teams today play with this tactics.
you know it's real footie when 3M it's the sponsor.
Here after the last episode of Ted Lasso ❤😂😂
...Golden Times... when there was no pressing... *haha* : )
No pressing high up the pitch no pressing in midfield just when defending. Just positioning and passing of the ball. Good to watch so that you learn some basics of positional game otherwise useless for todays game.
@@fortnajt Yeah, that's a good point.
@@fortnajt You need to remember that high pressing wouldn't have worked here with the back pass rule being what it was back then. A player who is being pressed and has no option to pass around, would easily slip the ball back to the keeper and the high press would be dead there and then.
Some nonsense here
Football is the same now as then the back pas rule changed nothing
Many people underate football in 70s and 80s. But after watching their highlights, i can say that football was more technical and competitive. Its only that current technology, and heavy investment in modern football has made it look outstanding compared to how it was played 3 to 4 centuries ago
うわぁ!!バックパスもキーパーがキャッチできる時なんだ!!
思った!!!取ってよかったんだねww
Jab Lh
以前はバックパスもキーパーはキャッチすることができたようです。
They were doing this 25 years earlier too.England just kept getting it wide then hoofing it in the box the second they can reach it.
The fact that they never won the world cup just shows that even total football has its flaws. Thus football management should be flexible and requires much study
C'est sa le vrai football ❤️
Ronald Koeman knows what he's doing and its promising
Laughing so hard at the virgins who are commenting “what’s new” or “this is not total football”
This Dutch side revolutionized football 30+ years back and played such beautiful football that the term total football was made
Because of this you wouldn’t have the great Barca team Pep had or the tiki taka football you see today
You can laugh as much as you want but you are the stupid, ignorant virgin who doesn't know what he is talking about. Total football is much older than 30 years old. Maybe it was popularised by the Dutch around 50 (not 30) years ago, the dumb fuckshit but in reality it goes back much further than that.
MrRhurbarb the total football as we know it is made by the dutch though, there was some kind of total football before that.. I forgot who introduced that, but the Dutch made it the way it is now. The total football before that was far from what it is today.
Of course, the Dutch took the idea of total football to a new level; they popularised the term and made it their own. For me, as much as I would do anything for England to win the world cup, the Dutch deserve it so much. The players, the tactics, the managers they have given our game. Too many to list. Maybe one thing about them though - as great as they are, they are a nation of individuals, sometimes stubborn ones. Often they just can't agree on whose idea is best. That can be a disaster for a team sport.
Never won the world cup though did they...
Another shit-eater. Go fuck yourself bitchboy.
11 yrs ago, thankyou UA-cam for this masterclass
Basic of tiki taka
Gula Jawa
Don’t bring tiki taka here! This is the total football invented by the Dutch!
@@Momo-jz9ju it shares a lot of the same principles tho
@@Momo-jz9ju Do you realize that Barça principles are based off Dutch's mostly because of Cruyff right ?
@@Momo-jz9ju Maybe because the Influence of Cruyff He is a Dutch right ? Probably the Founder of Tiki Taka.
Coming from Ted Lasso?
Sadly, the Dutch failed to qualify for WC 2018.
The Sad One they will return
and so they made a return and a half
Holland put his opponent to sleep and then woke them up with a bucket of ice water.
Sit deep, defend narrow on the pitch. Take the ball in your own half, and then counter. Problem solved.
Sit deep defend narrow wait for the cross watch it get headed into the net. Class
You know how old it is when back passes to the goalkeeper were allowed.
ALL THAT FARTING ABOUT AND IT ENDS WITH A SIMPLE BALL INTO THE BOX AND NUTTED IN. A LONG WINDED WAY TO SCORE A GOAL.
Only the combination of Rinus mitchel, johan cruijf and the golden generation of netherlands national team can did it, because nobody able to do total football except this combination
The guy with long hair is their midfield maestro
The Dutch often manage to fuck things up last minute despite often having the superior team, they haven't got the winning mentality which the Spainish have.
ObtuseSam um Spain had a far superior to that of the Netherlands in 2010. The Netherlands roster lately has actually been quite poor, but they've still managed to perform well at the last two WCs
Not true. The thing is we've always been wanting to win by beautiful and attractive play. That can make you vulnerable against strong opponents. We almost did it in 98. In 2010 we made it to the final and almost won it, but the play was very defensive and destructive. I prefer the attacking total football.
ElNaranjoMuziek If Arjen Robben had taken his chances, especially the 2 1v1s he had, Holland would have and even should have ended that game in the first half alone! Chances upon chances went begging. The Spanish defenders were having a nightmare of a game, but the Dutch attackers, especially Robben, were totally shocking in their finishing! And in football you would always pay if you don't take your chances.
Tbh they never had the players spain had, at least in the last 15 years.
drunk1kangaroo The main factor was their midfeild Xavi, Iniesta and Busquets.
Xavi for me is the best midfeilder and build up player of all time.
Watch how involved in all of it Gullit is though and how he’s the one trying to make breakthrough with the riskier passes.
Who’s here after Ted Lasso?
No, i’m not
I was waiting for "ITS THE FINAL COUNTDOWN!!!!!"
Total football does NOT mean passing the ball a lot. It means players are free to interchange their positions on the field.
Why holanda dont play like that today?
+Carlos Codling Because they don't have those players.
Good question. Let us go to the academy level. In the earlier stages (for eg.) let us consider when Dennis bergkamp was in ajax youth. There Johann Cruijff , and all other coaches told players to play however they liked to, play total football, therefore the right back would play as an attacker as well. That was total football. The problem now is if you notice , there was a period in Dutch youth leagues where the focus shifted from the creative stuff to taking penalties. If you notice there was a time around 2008-2011 I guess? Where every youth game had to finish with a penalty shootout
Anyways to put it more specific , since the game has become so technical, the coaches try to knock technical and tactical sense into young players, they can't play in any other way, therefore creativity becomes less, a normal youth ajax rb won't play the same as an ajax youth rb in late 1980's .
Though the revolution started by Johann cruijff is taking place almost perfectly and ajax still are developing youth right now, like Justin kluivert, de ligt , Kasper dolberg, Andre onana.
Spain and other countries adopted total football but the dutch themselves forgot to play their way in a way.
Hope I have answered your question.
This team had Gullit, Koeman, Rijkaard, Van Basten; world class players who won stuff.
Now we have Bas Dost.
Swapneel Kulkarni Thank you so much!!
One reason Holland or anyone else wont' play like this anymore is it is easily countered by adopting man marking and flooding the midfield with players.
A lot of those passes were going back rather than forward, something that many fans complain about with todays teams, especially Man Utd. So basically it's only 'total football' when a goal is the end product.
Football was so slow back in the dayd
Brazil perform that total football before Netherlands , with much more efectivily in the world Cup 1970. Search on UA-cam If you doubt me. Well, but that was quite a goal thou
John J. Rambo hungary played total football in 50s
Super Kid i'm not sure of that...
But anyway, If they did ... Didn't work as well too
John J. Rambo it worked very well search on UA-cam
Super Kid no It didn't work... They never won a world Cup either
John J. Rambo they didn't win world cup they were favourite to win world cup in 1954 but in final Germany won 3.2 it considered as miracle of bern
Re the long thread started by argsgsgs about goalie rules I see it as valid in this particular scenario. The subject of this very clip is about the total ball that the Dutch team introduced in the days of Cruyff and Neeskens. And that is displayed so well by this '88 team. The Germans literally do not even touch the ball for a good while. And for a minute there I found myself thinking that they were right; letting the Dutch basically run around midfield. That's until the Orange scored. About the goalie rules I have to say that Lee Wee Tak's post schooled me a bit. I knew that goalies had adopted new habits but I was not aware of new set of actual rules.
This is not total football.
It's total tiki taka football. Lol
I didn't notice that, I just saw possesion football.
duhawma
Tiki taka is derived from total football >> Cruyff >> FC Barcelona
David McMullan
Posession is just a part of total football
yeah looks like it to me, what's your argument against it?
It was a revolution for the time, but to me it shows how far football has come. Just look at that space they're being given! That is insane. It's like watching the stone age; is everyone really that impressed by a 25 pass goal?! Welcome to 2020- now watch some Chelsea under Conte, or Guardiola's teams. Though they were fantastic at the time, football has moved so far beyond this level.
Look how deep in the opposition's half the centerbacks are. They're virtually midfielders
boring football 😴
Here's a fun thing to try to understand how good this play is. Look at one players position throughout the video, then look at another's. The overlaps the movement and more made this so good. So annoying they never won a world cup.