Chelsea boss Graham Potter has explained his approach to team selection.
While everyone is waiting to see what the ploy will be for today's big Premier League match against Manchester United, Potter has been explaining some of this thinking on the way he asks his players to interact and engage the opposition on the pitch.
"The most important thing is you have the support of the players," he said, "and then everybody has to be true to themselves and play to what they think is their strengths and weaknesses.
"I have not got to this point by playing 4-3-3 every week so it will be strange if I did that once I arrive here, but at the same time, something consistent has to happen all the time in terms of what it looks like. Consistency of selection is difficult, the schedule makes it pretty much impossible, but how the game looks or how we want to play should look the same regardless of personnel or the system, that is the challenge.
Potter has explained that part of his philosophy is not to see formation as the end goal.
"How the team is playing, the team needs to look consistent regardless of the formation, and then it is about the personnel - how you want to attack the opponent, how you want to defend against them, and then other things will be considered, but hopefully there are things that look the same even though there are shape changes."
On whether with all things being equal, Potter would have one preferred formation, he continued: "You have to get to know the players and over time, you have a clearer picture of what suits the majority, but sometimes a few of the majority might not be available and then the decision you have to make is do I put these guys that don't really fit into this system into it, or do I give them a chance to perform to their attributes, which might mean a tactical switch.
"My career has meant I have had to use resources as well as I can. We didn't have the power to just go 4-3-3 all the time."

