To break down a team coached by Domenico Tedesco, we have to look for the "seams" in his tactical discipline. Fenerbahçe are currently excellent at defending set pieces generally, but there is a specific physical profile we can exploit: their height and defensive passivity in the second phase.
While they have giants like Milan Škriniar, players like Ferdi Kadıoğlu (or his successor at LB) and their attacking midfielders are notably weaker in the air.
Here is our "Istanbul Special" corner routine:
📐 Routine: "The Serbian Decoy"
Target: Nikola Milenković (6'5") is the Premier League's most frequent target for a reason—everyone expects him to be the one to score. We’re going to use that gravity to free up Murillo.
1. The Setup
Kicker: Morgan Gibbs-White (In-swinger from the left, Out-swinger from the right). We need pace and whip.
The Decoys: Milenković and Igor Jesus start on the goalkeeper, essentially "sandwiching" Ederson to stop him from coming off his line to punch.
The Shadow: Murillo starts outside the box or at the very back of the pack, looking disinterested.
- The Movement (The "Cluster")
As Gibbs-White begins his run-up:
The Screen: Sangaré and Morato move to the front post to block the "zonal" defenders.
The Sprint: Milenković makes a violent, loud run toward the near post. This will drag Škriniar and their biggest markers with him because they are terrified of his 5-goal record this season.
The Ghost: Murillo sprints toward the penalty spot or the back post (the "blind side").
- The Delivery
Gibbs-White aims for the central "Dead Zone" (6–8 yards out).
If the ball is high, Milenković is still a beast and might win it anyway.
The Secret Sauce: We want the ball to be slightly over-hit. Because Milenković has cleared the "tall" defenders out of the center, Murillo will be left 1v1 against a smaller winger (like Asensio or a wing-back).
- The Second Phase (The "Milenković Recycle")
Research shows that 3 out of 4 of Milenković’s goals come from "recycled" play. If the ball is cleared:
We keep Ola Aina on the edge of the box. He doesn't shoot; he immediately lofts the ball back toward the far post.
Milenković, who is already deep in the box, turns and uses his 72% aerial win rate to nod it back across the face of the goal for a tap-in.
Why this works against Fenerbahçe:
Tedesco’s teams are very "ball-oriented." If Milenković makes a big move toward the near post, their entire defensive line will shift instinctively toward the ball. By isolating Murillo on their far-side winger, we create a mismatch they aren't prepared for.