Bad Bob wrote:bigmick wrote:Rather than constantly mis-representing what anti-rotationers say, why aren't the pro's asking sensible questions about our current run? We are rotating and winning? Why do we get this old nonsense about "but you can't play the same team in every single game" or "So are you saying if Torres played then we definately would have won?". Why aren't they talking about the late goals we keep scoring? Why aren't they highlighting and banging on about our defensive record despite rotating the full-backs? So defensive have people become about their own stance and the possibility that after another season of rotation Rafa-style that we will be again double digit points behind the Champions, that they have lost sight of what the debate is about.
This is an interesting point, mate. And, actually, I was going to post a theory the other day about rotation keeping us fresh through the hectic festive season, when the fixtures come fast and furious. We have always seemed to have a decent set of results throughout this period under Rafa so it seemed to be one area where rotation looked to be a boon to us. Of course, then I looked at how the Mancs have done in December over the last few years (quite well) and the whole thing fell apart.

(Of course, I didn't look to see how heavily they rotated in that time but lets assume that it was less than us).
I offer this by way of saying that, while I love our newfound ability to come up with late winners, I'm not definitively sure that it's down to rotation. After all, we've rotated for 3 years now and haven't enjoyed these late winners nearly as frequently as we have this season. My guess is that it has a lot more to do with having that bloke Torres to turn to in a pinch now.
I do think the defensive solidity we show despite rotating fullbacks this season (and CBs in season's past) does suggest that the tactic can work. But, I'm not one to say that rotation is
the reason why we play so well defensively.
And there's the difference between the two brigades, IMO. Whereas anti-rotationers think that rotation is one of the primary reasons for poor results, pro-rotationers see it as merely one of a number of factors. On the other side of the coin, very few of us pro-types see rotation as the exclusive or even main basis for any success we've had. At most, I think a lot of us think it has a potentially mild positive effect during heavy periods of the schedule or during the run-in. For most of us, I suspect, both bad and good results are the product of many, many factors--one of which being rotation.
Put frankly, I'm not convinced that rotation has ever won or lost us a game in and of itself--nor do I think it has been the major factor behind any particular result. It's no doubt contributed to any result we've had under Rafa but to what degree in proportion to other salient factors I'll never know. So, my aim in these debates--besides working out my own views and having some fun with fellow footy fans--is not to champion rotation per se. Rather, it is to temper the all-the-eggs-in-one-basket approach of the anti-rotationists. What that means is that I'll often have much more to say in questioning the rotational explanation for a bad result than in offering a rotational explanation myself for a good result.