Despite being one of the best-supported clubs in Turkey, life hasn’t been easy for Adana Demirspor.
Over the past 25 years, they’ve had a host of managers (no less than 48, to be precise), unpaid players, nine promotion play-off losses in 14 seasons, fights between players and staff, and even an owner’s tragic suicide.
Adana D.S. is currently joint-top with Besiktas after nine games in their second successive season back in the top flight since 1995. Former Fiorentina and Milan coach Vincenzo Montella is at the helm.
In this tactical analysis, we’ll examine Montella’s tactics, key players, and attacking statistics.
Vincenzo Montella Tactics & Formations
Any analysis of Vincenzo Montella’s coaching style will show that he is not keen on restricting his players to fixed formations, preferring instead to experiment with his line-ups.
However, Vincenzo Montella’s tactics this season relied chiefly on a 4-2-3-1 formation.
During both spells at Fiorentina, Montella initially used a 4-3-3 formation and 4-5-1 formation before achieving better success with a 3-5-2 formation, 3-4-3 formation, and 3-5-1-1 formation.
Relying primarily on a back three, he was praised for making his teams notoriously difficult to break down and enjoyed overcoming some of Serie A‘s biggest sides.
The Italian Manager finished fourth with Fiorentina four seasons in a row.
But Vincenzo Montella believes more in fluid philosophy than rigid tactics, and in an interview with La Gazzetta Dello Sport, once said: “I don’t believe in formations. Instead, I look at strategies, and those can change. I believe in a philosophy as it is key to have one.”
Vincenzo Montella attacking Style Of Play
Vincenzo Montella loves a possession-based attacking style of play, which heavily relies on attacking midfielders who contribute both goals and assists.
Midfielders David Pizarro, Juan Cuadrado, Alberto Aquilani, Adem Ljajic, and Borja Valero were crucial members of his squad during his first spell at Fiorentina. They contributed a hefty 61 goals and assists in the 2012/13 seasonand 55 the following season, even without Ljajic, who had departed for Roma.
At Adana, Vincenzo Montella has his team stretch the pitch horizontally and vertically.
He encourages them to move the ball quickly with a fluid one-touch passing style, which can result in swift transitions and deadly counterattacks.
Here, in their recent 3-0 away win over Antalyaspor, Vincenzo Montella’s side took only 13 seconds to move the ball from their left-back position to the back of the opposition’s net, with 11 touches (including the shot) between five players.
This time, in the 3-2 home win over Trabzonspor, it takes just 12 seconds for Adana to go from the edge of their own box, where keeper Ertac Ozbir rushes out to collect the ball, to regain the lead thanks to Badou Ndiaye‘s neat finish over the opposition keeper.
There are 10 touches between six players, including the three touches made by the goalkeeper to control the ball and lay it off to his midfield.
Two players in the centre of the pitch only need one touch to advance play.
In an even more efficient counterattack in the 3-0 home win against Sivasspor, we see Adana transition from defence in a matter of moments, as left-back Kevin Rodrigues intercepts a pass at the edge of his own box before Henry Onyekuru scores at the other end 12 seconds later.
The ball goes from the D of their box to Younes Belhanda in midfield, over to David Akintola on the left wing, before being crossed to Onyekuru at the far post, passing through four players using a total of only eight touches.
Vincenzo Montella Key Players At Adana Demirspor
Despite previously having high-profile strikers such as Loic Remy and Mario Balotelli
—the latter scoring 19 goals in the 2021/22 season and being named in the league’s best eleven before his very public bust-up with Montella and subsequent move to Sion—this season, Adana is flying high without depending on a main striker.
Glancing at the goalscoring stats alone will tell you this, as Moroccan midfielder Belhanda is their top scorer with 4 goals.
By comparison, former Nottingham Forest and Middlesbrough striker Britt Assombalonga only has 2 goals to his name, the same as defender Kevin Rodrigues and winger Henry Onyekuru.
This isn’t a new approach from Montella.
During his second spell with Fiorentina, Montella used wingers Franck Ribery and Federico Chiesa as de facto strikers to significant effect. The two had a more free role and moved into the striker position when necessary.
In what was dubbed a 3-5-2-0 or a 3-7-0 formation, Montella made the headlines by having his ‘forward wingers’ play wide and cut inside or drop deep to help progress attacks before moving into the space usually occupied by a number 9.
This tactic rejuvenated an ageing Ribery, who was 36 at the time and deemed surplus to requirements at Bayern Munich the previous year.
It also helped develop the then-21-year-old Chiesa into a more well-rounded attacking threat.
At Adana, Younes Belhanda is one player who has fully embraced Montella’s one-touch style perfectly.
A new addition from Galatasaray, the 31-year-old displays his exemplary vision and technique by effortlessly picking out teammates or feeding the ball into space for the strikers and pacey wingers to run into.
Either dropping deep to help the midfield transition to attack or playing as a second striker behind Assombalonga, Belhanda is making the best of his free role and has been a consistent threat to the opposition.
Below, we can see a collection of both short and long one-touch passes into space from both deep and advanced positions that swiftly move the ball into more attacking areas.
Despite being the club’s top scorer, Belhanda is yet to make an assist, which is a bit of an anomaly considering he’s created 21 chances for his teammates, including 5 big chances and has an expected assist rate of 1.9 per game.
This, combined with an xG of 2.8, means he is easily the biggest attacking threat in his squad and will undoubtedly be one of Montella’s main targets this season.
Adana Demirspor 2022/2023 Impressive Stats
Last season, Adana Demirspor finished ninth in the league, which is undoubtedly impressive for their first season back in the top flight, especially when they didn’t win any of their first four games.
But considering they lost 5 of their last 6 games in a disappointing collapse
—3 of which were from teams that finished below them—and only managed a win in their previous match,a 7-0 thrashing of already relegated Goztepe, they could have finished as high as third and landed a place in the Europa League ahead of Konyaspor.
This season, Montella has them looking more threatening as a unit and has achieved consistency from the start.
Winning 75% of their home games, they opened their season with a 3-2 away win at Giresunspor before taking Sivasspor apart 3-0 at home the following match.
Their third game saw them almost come back from losing 3-0 away at Fenerbahce.
They scored two goals in 10 minutes in the second half before the home side put the nail in the coffin with an 83rd-minute thunderbolt from former Leeds winger Ezgjan Alioski.
A 1-0 win over Ümraniyespor in their fourth game meant that Adana had scored 9 goals in their first four games.
By the seventh game of the season, they had scored 16 before their scoring streak ended with a 0-0 draw with Galatasaray.
Adana Demirspor scored an impressive 14 of their 17 goals from open play (82%), with only two goals from set pieces and another from the penalty spot.
Only one of their 17 league goals has come from within the 6-yard box, and nearly half of them have been shots outside the box, usually from a central area (63%).
The Turkish team
is above the league average in points per game (2 compared to a 1.37 average) and goals scored (1.89 compared to a 1.32 average) and commitsan impressive 17.5 shots per match.
Conclusion
The future looks bright for Adana D.S. with Vincenzo Montella at the helm.
The tactics working wonders with the current team should only get better if he can bring in players who fit into his vision in the coming transfer windows.
The transalpine coach may have to crack down on squad discipline, as Adana have already hit last year’s red card total in just nine games (three so far).
However, Vincenzo Montella’s passion could make the Adana Demirspor players follow his example.
They must also improve their discipline away from home if they want to qualify for a European place.
Adana Demirspor only won two away games and conceded an average of 1.6 goals, 0.2 up on the league average; three of those came in the last 10 minutes of the match.
Still, the ‘Aeroplanino’ definitely has them playing attractive football, and his confidence in his players’ ability to play with attacking freedom is evident in both the results and the performances.
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