There's been a lot of chat about this over the years. When a team has a strong squad and can bring on quality players from the bench to change a game. Or recently, when Pinnochio talked about Spurs being able to play 3 at the back, as another tactical option. Or more prosaically, when what you're doing and how you play, doesn't always yield a result.
So it's a broad - perhaps even meaningless - phrase for being able to "change things". We talked about it plenty this season, and perhaps it's more relevant than ever, given that we have such an obviously ingrained and well-implemented style of football under Klopp.
Benteke went because he couldn't play how Klopp wants. Sturridge can't get a game for the same reason.
So when we struggle to impose our game on the opposition - United, Burnley, Southampton - the talk always turns to how we can make in-game changes and improvements. The Plan B.
But what, genuinely is it? as you know, I'm a fan of statistics and facts and relevant data. So I'm a bit wary of terms like "Plan B" wildly bandied about, like it's a proveable, accepted method in football.
I get the basic gist, but can it actually be quantified? Arsenal scraped a lucky draw against United with a goal from sub Giroud, who scored a header that no other player in the squad could have scored. Is that what it means?
And Liverpool introduced the mercurial, unpredictable talents of Rosenthal into the team during the successful title run-in in 1990, and he added goals and created uncertainty in the opposition?
Are those examples of Plan B?
On Saturday, many people were complaining about the lack of substitutions, pleading for Klopp to make changes. ie Sturridge.
But bringing on a proper striker and the best finisher at the club doesn't strike me as a Plan B. If he isn't Plan A, then why is he Plan B? He doesn't add amazing height or a very different way of playing. He's not a hugely different option is he? He's just a different Plan A.
So do we actually have one? Do we need one? Or should we just accept that we aren't going to win every game, and should trust in the system and personnel we have, and fuck Plan B altogether?
So it's a broad - perhaps even meaningless - phrase for being able to "change things". We talked about it plenty this season, and perhaps it's more relevant than ever, given that we have such an obviously ingrained and well-implemented style of football under Klopp.
Benteke went because he couldn't play how Klopp wants. Sturridge can't get a game for the same reason.
So when we struggle to impose our game on the opposition - United, Burnley, Southampton - the talk always turns to how we can make in-game changes and improvements. The Plan B.
But what, genuinely is it? as you know, I'm a fan of statistics and facts and relevant data. So I'm a bit wary of terms like "Plan B" wildly bandied about, like it's a proveable, accepted method in football.
I get the basic gist, but can it actually be quantified? Arsenal scraped a lucky draw against United with a goal from sub Giroud, who scored a header that no other player in the squad could have scored. Is that what it means?
And Liverpool introduced the mercurial, unpredictable talents of Rosenthal into the team during the successful title run-in in 1990, and he added goals and created uncertainty in the opposition?
Are those examples of Plan B?
On Saturday, many people were complaining about the lack of substitutions, pleading for Klopp to make changes. ie Sturridge.
But bringing on a proper striker and the best finisher at the club doesn't strike me as a Plan B. If he isn't Plan A, then why is he Plan B? He doesn't add amazing height or a very different way of playing. He's not a hugely different option is he? He's just a different Plan A.
So do we actually have one? Do we need one? Or should we just accept that we aren't going to win every game, and should trust in the system and personnel we have, and fuck Plan B altogether?