MORE SPACE = FURTHER SCAN
In the build-up, you’re always going to be marked. That’s normal. But the intensity of that mark changes — sometimes it’s tight, aggressive, physical. Other times, they’ll back off and give you a little space, almost inviting you to turn. And you’re doing a great job recognizing that and turning when you can. That’s elite.
But here’s the next layer: more space equals further scanning.
That’s the principle. When you have time, don’t rush it. You don’t need to release the ball that fast every time. If the press drops and gives you room, use that time to scan further. Lift your head, see beyond the first line, beyond the midfield. You’ve got the quality to break the game open with one pass — but that only happens if you see it early.
Now, in this sequence, you were unlucky — your winger and striker were offside, so the options were limited. But I didn’t see that head lift, that deeper scan. That’s what you need when space opens up. Use that space as time. You could’ve spotted the lane between the lines or even used your center-back as a third man to break through that pocket.
And when that pass is on — play it quicker. Not in decision, but in execution. Hit it harder, cleaner, sharper. The tempo of the ball is what breaks pressure, not just the choice.
So remember this:
tight mark = protect and move it fast.
space = lift, scan, and punish.
That’s how you control rhythm — not just by keeping the ball, but by sensing how much time you truly have.