Why underdogs are doing well

THIS 48-team FIFA World Cup has produced some intriguing match-ups and several impressive performances by lower-ranked sides against the world’s top teams.

Cape Verde, Curacao, Ghana and South Africa — ranked 64th, 81st, 65th and 54th respectively — have taken points from Spain (3rd), Ecuador (29th), England (4th) and South Korea (28th) so far.

Are these early tournament surprises a matter of luck, or clever planning and execution? A deeper delve into what happened in the games that produced those unexpected results reveals a number of common patterns.

Cape Verde’s 0-0 draw against Spain was perhaps the biggest upset of the tournament so far and it was also perhaps the most tactically impressive.

The third-smallest nation in World Cup history stifled Spain through their 4-5-1 defensive shape. Key to their success was the fact gaps between their midfield line and defensive line were very small.

Against such a challenge, high-possession sides look to pass the ball backwards, hoping to entice the opposition to step up the pitch.

When Spain passed it back, expecting the midfielders to engage and create space between them and the defenders, Cape Verde didn’t take the bait, instead keeping their shape compact.

The Spain defenders then carried the ball forward looking to trigger a reaction but the Cape Verde players, again, held their shape until late.

Spain, as a result, found it difficult to find players inside the block. Their remaining solutions were therefore either around Cape Verde or over the top of them.

This exact pattern was seen in Ghana’s defensive set-up against England too.

England under Tuchel have placed an even greater emphasis on dropping deep to entice pressure before quickly attacking the space that opens up.

Ghana prepared for this by setting up in a compact formation. Jordan Ayew took a position higher up the pitch to man mark Elliot Anderson but the rest of the side, like Cape Verde, set up in two lines just outside of their penalty areas, giving up no space between the lines.

Both sides’ refusal to apply pressure when the opposition attempted to tease them out is best illustrated by a statistic that looks to quantify how intensely a team presses.

“PPDA” stands for “opposition passes allowed per defensive action”. The higher the number, the less a team has been able to interrupt opposition spells of play.

In Cape Verde’s draw to Spain, their average PPDA was 51.2 to Spain’s 5.9.

In the first 15 minutes of Ghana’s match against England, their PPDA was 62.

Both underdog sides were passive and deliberately so. Interestingly, both Ghana and Cape Verde did increase the amount they pressed as the game went on. This could partly be explained by teams, such as Ghana, looking to take greater initiative and risk, hoping to snatch the game at the end.

To understand why some underdogs have done well, it makes sense to analyse where others have, in contrast, been exploited.

Saudi Arabia’s loss to Spain best highlighted a key flaw seen across many sides who “park the bus”.

On the face of things, five defenders suggest a team should be better equipped to defend – but the opposite was true.

Saudi Arabia in their back five lacked clarity and were drawn to the player on the ball too often. — BBC Sport.

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