TACTICS EXPOSED: How Mo Salah bamboozled Man City with genius ‘back-pedal trick’ as Arne Slot perfectly outwitted Pep Guardiola

 

 

 

Mohamed Salah celebrating a goal.

Mo Salah’s magic saw Liverpool cruise to victory over Man CityCredit: PA

And there was magic all over the pitch from Arne Slot’s men.

But how did Mo Salah bamboozle City with a genius back-pedal trick?

And which midfielder carried out Liverpool’s team’s instructions perfectly?

SunSport’s tactical expert Dean Scoggins reveals all on our brilliant Tactics Exposed show…

 

Mohamed Salah's 2024-2025 Premier League stats: minutes played, goals, assists, goals + assists, total shots, shot conversion rate, and chances created.

Mo Salah has enjoyed a stunning season so far

ONE MAN WENT TO MO

MO SALAH is tactically brilliant. The first thing is this back-pedal thing he does. It sounds easy, but it’s the timing of it and when he does it.

When Josko Gvardiol, the Man City left-back, pushes up the field, Salah waits for that to happen when he’s in a space close to Nathan Ake, the left centre-back.

When he sees the ball go into a certain area, he back-pedals towards the touchline. He takes a few steps back.

It means two things. He’s got the space in front to receive the ball to feet, and also Gvardiol is blindsided. He’s behind him and Ake’s stuck.

 

Illustration of a soccer game showing a pass from Salah to Szoboszlai.

Salah’s clever positioning meant City struggled to pick him up

Illustration of a soccer formation graphic showing Salah's position.

He exploited the space around Gvardiol and Ake

With the disallowed goal where Jones scored, Salah’s wide and Ryan Gravenberch plays a difficult pass.

Saslah does the exact thing where he back-pedals into space, then as Gravenberch is about to play him the ball, Salah goes, “Not me, I don’t want it. Turn and play it in behind.”

The City defence all come one way and it opens up that running channel for Szoboszlai. You can see those two vertical runners from midfield and in attack the two wide men dragging the defence out.

You see Salah’s unbelievable tactical brain to see a situation unfold in front of him and his role in it. We’re talking Lionel Messi levels here, and that’s not an exaggeration.

 

 

BLOCKERS IN THE SLOT

THIS is straight off the training ground for the first goal.

Liverpool are going to take a free corner to the front post, and they’ve got a man running off the front to play the ball around the corner.

What’s important here is Andy Robertson is a blocker at the front who stops Kevin De Bruyne getting the ball.

There’s also three other blockers on the edge, and City are not marking Salah.

Diagram of a soccer play showing Salah attacking blockers.

Liverpool used clever blockers at set-pieces

Illustration of a soccer play showing Salah's movement toward the goal.

This freed up space for Salah to make an impact

Liverpool identified City sit just outside the six-yard box, so there’s a huge open space to the edge of the penalty area.

Blockers stop the City players coming out, the ball is flicked round the corner, Salah is in loads of space.

After the goal, it also created indecision from City so the rest of Liverpool’s set-pieces were very dangerous.

City fell for it hook, line and sinker. A bit lucky with the deflection, but you earn your luck.

SZO-BOSSING IT

SZOBOSLAI was the best player on the pitch other than Salah.

He’s the player who carries out the manager’s duties for him.

The midfielder breaks from a third-man run. The ball gets played back into Salah’s feet.

He pops it back to Trent Alexander-Arnold and they know the ball’s going over the top.

Szoboszlai runs into that space for the trick. He’s offside and Ake’s left in there. The focus is on Szoboszlai.

Diagram of a soccer offside call.

Szoboszlai tricked City’s defence with his runs

Diagram of a soccer play showing Salah and Szoboszlai's positions.

The ace made sure he was not offside, allowing Salah to sneak in behind

This is like a decoy runner in order for Salah to get in, a ghost run.

Then the offside player joins in again. He’s in an offside position, but he’s not offside because he’s not touching the ball, he’s not impacting the play.

But what he’s doing is impacting a defender’s ability to defend Salah. He goes into that space, Gvardiol turns his back and Ake comes across.

They all think it’s offside and slow down, but as the ball’s in the air, Salah then runs.

Salah’s onside and takes the ball, Szoboszlai peels off, gets into the space and Salah gives him the ball — goal.

It’s a new phase of play, Salah’s not offside, City all drop off. There’s a big space in front and Jones also blocks Khusanov. Just brilliant.

IT’S 4-4-2 AGAIN

OLD school stuff. A big reason Liverpool are top is Arne Slot can adapt his formation to play against whatever he’s facing.

This was 4-4-2 out of possession, so no striker. Salah on the right, Diaz on the left.

But with no striker they played Jones and Szboszlai as vertical runners, the two up front.

Illustration of Liverpool's 4-4-2 formation with Arne Slot as manager.

Liverpool’s versatility saw them switch to a 4-4-2 shape

Illustration of Liverpool's 4-4-2 football formation with Arne Slot as manager.

They remained solid despite players changing positions

Gravenberch and Mac Allister could then separate with Jones and Szoboszlai coming into the two.

And it meant the attacking players then were the wingers. So four defensive players keeping it compact in the middle, with Diaz and Salah the outballs.

It was lovely from Slot, Liverpool were so comfy out of possession and were actually more dangerous because they move out of their positions and then go.

VAN DIJK STOPS CITY ATTACK

YOU could see Van Dijk and Slot communicating early on.

They know what they’re doing. There was a message from the bench, and it was as simple as: Virgil, you go.

Illustration of Phil Foden's 59 touches on the pitch during a Man City vs Liverpool match.

Phil Foden was kept far away from Liverpool’s goal by Virgil van Dijk

Van Dijk doesn’t normally do that. He marshals that back line and stays in it. But this time he was told to go out and engage Phil Foden.

He was told: Don’t be frightened to go out and do it. Konate is going to cover the space for Omar Marmoush to run in behind.