Derivative defensive strategies Highly defensive structures with little attacking intent – which are colloquially often referred to as "
anti-football" or "
parking the bus", and which have been employed at times by managers such as
Jose Mourinho and
Diego Simeone – are often arbitrarily and incorrectly labelled as
Catenaccio by pundits, managers, and players, but this deviates from the original design of the system; while
catenaccio was similarly an organised system that involved tactical discipline and deep, heavy, and patient defending off – or even behind – the ball, it also made use of now obsolete man-to-man marking, a sweeper, who was tasked with protecting the back-line and also starting plays after winning back possession, as well as employing sudden counter-attacks to score goals.
Italian football Although
Catenaccio has still come to be associated with the Italy national side and Italian club teams, due to its historic association with Italian football, it is actually used quite infrequently by
Serie A and Italy national teams in contemporary football, who instead currently prefer to apply balanced tactics and formations, mostly using the 5–3–2 or 3–5–2 system. For example, under manager
Cesare Prandelli, the
Italy national team also initially used the 3–5–2 formation, which had been popularised by Juventus manager
Antonio Conte throughout the
previous Serie A season following his success in the league; although Prandelli used a ball–playing sweeper, he also used attacking wing-backs and a more offensive–minded approach with Italy. In their first two clashes of
UEFA Euro 2012 Group C, the system resulted in two 1–1 draws against Spain and
Croatia. He subsequently switched to a stylish attacking possession-based system using their 'standard' 4–4–2 diamond formation for the knockout stages; the switch proved to be effective, as the team went on to reach the
final, where they suffered defeat to a similarly more offensive-minded
Spain side, who used a possession–based strategy based on passing known as
tiki-taka. Rob Smyth of
The Guardian was critical of Spain's striker–less formation and particular brand of
tiki-taka at UEFA Euro 2012, believing that the lack of emphasis on the offensive aspect of the game led to fewer goals, and that the team's seemingly endless passing and preoccupation with ball–possession was in fact boring, dubbing it "Tiki-takanaccio", a reference to the defensive–minded
catenaccio tactical system, despite the fact that
tiki-taka had ironically originated from the more offensive minded Dutch
total football strategy. Prandelli did make use of a more organised and defensive
3–4–3 formation against Spain during the
2013 FIFA Confederations Cup semi-final, attempting to stifle Spain's possession game by reducing spaces, and subsequently hitting them on the counter-attack; the system proved to be more effective, as Italy created several opportunities and were only eliminated on penalties following a goalless draw. Several of Italy's previous coaches, such as
Cesare Maldini and
Giovanni Trapattoni, used elements of
catenaccio to a greater extent at international level, and both failed to go far in the tournaments in which they took part; under Maldini, Italy lost on penalties to hosts
France in the
1998 FIFA World Cup quarter-finals, following a 0–0 draw, while Trapattoni lost early in the second round of the
2002 FIFA World Cup to co-hosts
South Korea on a golden goal, and subsequently suffered a first-round elimination at
UEFA Euro 2004. Other Italian managers have often deviated from the
catenaccio system, despite still employing aspects of the strategy into their gameplay, and maintaining a strong defensive unit. While
Dino Zoff's 5–2–1–2 system initially largely differed from the more defensive-minded approach of his predecessors who were in charge of the Italy national side, by introducing younger players and adopting a more attractive and offensive-minded approach, he also made use of a sweeper, a tight back-line, and put
Catenaccio to good use for Italy in the semi-final of
UEFA Euro 2000 against co-hosts
Netherlands, when the team went down to ten men; despite coming under criticism in the media for his defensive playing style during the match, following a penalty shoot-out victory after a 0–0 draw, he secured a place in the
final. In the final, Italy only lost on the
golden goal rule to France. Previously,
Azeglio Vicini, on the other hand, had led Italy to the semi-finals of both
UEFA Euro 1988 and the
1990 FIFA World Cup, on home soil, thanks to a more attractive, offensive-minded possession based system, which was combined with a solid back-line and elements of the Italian
zona mista ("mixed zone" in Italian) approach, or ''gioco all'italiana
, which was a cross between zonal marking and man-marking systems, such as catenaccio''. Despite their more aggressive attacking approach under Vicini during the latter tournament, Italy initially struggled in the first round, before recovering their form in the knock-out stages, and produced small wins in five hard-fought games against defensive sides, in which they scored little but risked even less, totalling only seven goals for and none against leading up to the semi-finals of the competition. Italy would then lose a tight semi-final on penalties following a 1–1 draw with
Argentina, due in no small part to a more defensive strategy from
Carlos Bilardo, who then went on to lose the
final 1–0 to a much more offensive-minded
Germany side led by manager
Franz Beckenbauer. Italy then claimed the bronze medal match with a 2–1 victory over
England. Vicini's successor as the Italy national side's manager,
Arrigo Sacchi, also attempted to introduce his more attacking–minded tactical philosophy, which had been highly successful with Milan, to the Italy national team; his tactics, which were inspired by Dutch
total football, made use of an aggressive high-
pressing system, which used a
4–4–2 formation, an attractive, fast, attacking, and possession-based playing style, and which also used innovative elements such as zonal marking and a high defensive line playing the
offside trap, which largely deviated from previous systems in Italian football, despite still maintaining defensive solidity. Italy initially struggled to replicate the system successfully, and encountered mixed results. Under Sacchi, Italy reached the final of the
1994 FIFA World Cup after a slow start, only to lose on penalties following a 0–0 draw with a defensive–minded
Brazilian side, but later also suffered a first-round exit at
Euro 1996. Previously, at the
1978 FIFA World Cup,
Enzo Bearzot's Italian side also often adopted an attractive, offensive-minded possession game based on passing, creativity, movement, attacking flair, and technique, due to the individual skill of his players; the front three would also often change positions with one another, in order to disorient the opposing defenders. Italy finished the tournament in fourth place, a result they replicated two years later at
UEFA Euro 1980 on home soil. At the
1982 FIFA World Cup, he instead adopted a more flexible and balanced tactical approach, which was based on the
zona mista system, and which used a fluid 4–3–3 formation, with
Gaetano Scirea as a sweeper, who held both defensive and creative duties. While the team were organised and highly effective defensively, they were also capable of getting forward and scoring from quick counter-attacks, or keeping possession when necessary. The system proved to be highly effective as Italy went on to win the title. Bearzot's Italy side were also known for their solidity, aggression, and defensive strength, possessing a number of hard–tackling players in their team, such as midfielder
Marco Tardelli, and defenders
Claudio Gentile and
Giuseppe Bergomi. Gentile, who served as the team's
stopper, or man-marking centre-back, gained a degree of infamy in the media for his highly physical man-marking of
Diego Maradona in Italy's second-round match against Argentina; although controversial, the strategy proved to be effective as Gentile essentially nullified the Argentine playmaker's impact on the game, with Italy winning the match 2–1. Similarly, although Italy successfully used a more offensive-minded approach under manager
Marcello Lippi during the
2006 FIFA World Cup, which saw a record ten of the team's 23 players find the back of the net, with the side scoring 12 goals in total as they went on to claim the title, the team's organised back-line only conceded two goals, neither of which came in open play. Notwithstanding their more attacking minded playing style throughout the tournament, when Italy was reduced to ten men in the 50th minute of the 2nd round match against
Australia, following
Marco Materazzi's red card, coach Lippi changed the Italians' formation to a defensive orientation which caused the British newspaper
The Guardian to note that "the timidity of Italy's approach had made it seem that Helenio Herrera, the high priest of
Catenaccio, had taken possession of the soul of Marcello Lippi." The ten-man team was playing with a 4–3–2 scheme, just a midfielder away from the team's regular 4–4–2 system. In a tightly-contested match, Italy went on to keep a clean sheet and earned a 1–0 victory through a controversial injury-time penalty. During his tenure with the Italy national team, Conte returned to Italy's traditional tactical roots, adopting a more organised, defensive-minded, counter-attacking approach, due to the perceived lack of talent in the side at the time, as well as injuries to key players. He used a fluid 3–5–2 formation at
UEFA Euro 2016, in which the wide midfielders or wingbacks effectively functioned as wingers in a 3–3–4 formation when attacking, and as fullbacks in a 5–3–2 formation when defending behind the ball. Conte's tactics proved to be effective as Italy reached the quarter-finals, only losing out to Germany on penalties. Despite the team's defensive solidity, he refuted claims in the media that the team's style of play was based on
catenaccio, in particular following Italy's offensive displays in their 2–0 victory over defending champions Spain in the round of 16. During Italy's victorious
UEFA Euro 2020 campaign,
Roberto Mancini – who once had a reputation for being a more defensive-minded and pragmatic manager – instead built on the work of Maurizio Viscidi at youth level, as well as
Maurizio Sarri,
Roberto De Zerbi and
Gian Piero Gasperini in Serie A, using a 4–3–3 formation and an attractive, attacking style based on fluid passing in possession – built around the gameplay of the midfield trio of
Marco Verratti,
Jorginho and
Nicolò Barella – and energetic pressing and counterpressing out of possession. En route to winning the title, Mancini's side broke the record for most goals scored by an Italian side during a major international tournament.
Other examples Catenaccio in its purer form has had its share of success stories in recent years. German coach
Otto Rehhagel used a similarly defensive approach for his
Greece side in
UEFA Euro 2004, with the team defending deeply behind the ball, and putting pressure on their opponents, while
Traianos Dellas operated as a sweeper behind the back-line. Under Rehhagel, Greece surprisingly went on to win the tournament, despite Greece being considered as underdogs prior to the competition. Despite strong emphasis on defence, only one Greek game went into extra time, which the Greeks won with a
Golden goal by Traianos Dellas. Trapattoni himself also successfully employed aspects of the system in securing a
Portuguese Liga title with
Benfica in 2005 – the club's first in 11 years – and had also successfully used elements of the strategy in his ''gioco all'italiana
or zona mista'' tactical system with several Italian clubs throughout his career, which blended aspects of zonal marking from Dutch total football with aspects of man-marking found in Italian catenaccio. In contrast to previous editions of the tournament, during the
2018 FIFA World Cup, several teams found success against opponents who dominated possession by adopting a more defensive style and instead maintaining a deep, disciplined, and narrow defensive line, while also looking to score on counter-attacks. In addition to recent success with intricate passing and quick counter attacks,
Croatia has found success with what is termed in the media as "the bunker" (
bunkerica in Croatian) style tactical approach. This approach is characterized by nearly every player behind the ball, killing the game through tactical fouling, time-wasting and playing for the result the team needs as opposed to a victory. This approach is only typically employed against very successful teams and often in away matches. ==Legacy==