Wednesday, 13 January 10, 01:45 PM · Comments (1)
Hodgson could be described as a student of the game. His playing career was undistinguished to say the least as he failed to break through into the first team at Crystal Palace and found himself in non-league football. Unlike many managers who were experienced at the top level of the game as players, Hodgson had studied and learned coaching techniques and became assistant coach at Maidstone United at a very young age. At just 28 years old, Hodgson was given the job as Head Coach of Halmstads in Sweden after fellow Englishman, Bob Houghton, who was manager of Malmo at the time, persuaded Halmstads to appoint the unknown Englishman. It was a tremendous risk considering Halmstads had risked being relegated in 1975 but the gamble paid off when in one of most famous seasons in Swedish football, Hodgson led Halmstads to the Swedish league title in his first full season in charge in 1976.
The title in itself was a remarkable achievement, but what Hodgson and his friend Houghton had also done had changed the style of play in Sweden forever. Swedish teams up until the arrival of Houghton and Hodgson had played a Germanic style, accustomed to the Germany national team and the Bayern Munich side at the time. Generally free flowing, attacking football, man marking and a 4-3-3 formation, it suited German sides very well, but the revolution in Swedish football led by the young 28 year old Hodgson and the equally young Houghton changed all that. They introduced the ‘English-style,’ where by they stuck to a rigid 4-4-2, with long balls, high pressing and zonal defending. It was a very defensive mindset which was at first opposed by many in Sweden, a camp led by Lars Arnesen. Results however quickly changed people’s minds as Houghton-Hodgson style football brought championship after championship in Swedish football.
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Read the full article here: LINK
Read the full article here: LINK