Some good bits from Curtis.
"It's trying to be dominant on the ball and recognising we want to play out from the back," Davies told Hull Live, after admitting his delight at seeing Rosenior secure the City job. "We'll try and play from the goalkeeping into the two centre-half. Then it's recognising that when we need to abort, where can we play the pass, where is the space?
"Where can we find a certain player? Rather than just say we're going to lump it and hope someone wins the header - if you've got a dominant centre-half, that's not going to work - we liked to keep the ball and dominate teams that way.
"What we found when teams pressed it would sometimes work in our favour, and if they weren't organised because some teams overdid it and went in all guns blazing, and there were those teams who sat off then all of a sudden you're sat in the opposition half and you're dominating the ball.
"Either way, it's about dominating the ball but within that structure. Everyone knows where everyone should be. So if I'm the centre-half, I know where the number 10 should drop in this situation.
"If I'm the left winger then I know where I need to move to make the space for the centre midfielder to get in, it's all cogs that work in one movement."
"It comes after training - of course, it's not done overnight - it will become automatic. We were in a solid structure where you can almost play passes blind, also if we break down, we've got people in positions to win the ball back to counter-press and sustain an attack, especially if teams are going to press onto you.
"If teams do what I call the headless chicken and just go, then you know there's going to be a lot of space somewhere and that's what we worked on, exploiting and sucking a team onto us, and then when they've gone for their press, where's the space now and then exploiting that space.
"It's something I really enjoyed doing and playing. Rosie says he's going to take responsibility for that. As players, you have to judge the risk versus reward, but Liam wants players to be brave and take risks, that's what's going to make the style work.
"If players don't take risks, go safe and start kicking the ball long then it won't. Ultimately, it's trusting in him and the way he wants to do things - the attacking players will get great success in it.
"You've got players that take things on board really quickly and some that have unbelievable talent but struggle to take it on board because things just come quite naturally to them ion what they do, so sometimes giving instructions isn't easy to take, so what Liam does is ultimately dumbs it down and walks through it that often on a training pitch so everybody knows their roles.
"He will tweak it slightly differently for different setups if you're playing against a five at the back or two up top, the mainstay will always be that we're going to try and play and dominate the ball."
"What I will say about Rosie is even though he's a young manager, he's been planning for this for years. This has been ten years in the making," Davies continued.
"I'm not saying at 29 he knew that he wanted to play this style and have the blueprint for it, but over the years he's definitely had (a plan) of this is how I'm going to do it and these are the people I'm going to get.
"Now he's arrived at being a manager, he trusts a way of playing and hopefully he'll get the best out of it. It's not an overnight thing where people will think it's a young manager wanting to play modern football but doesn't actually know how to win a game of football.
"I guarantee you it's not a thing where he thinks I'm going to do this because I should, this is something he's thought about for years and has fine-tuned it."
"Rightly or wrongly, we played it last year at Derby with Wayne at the helm but Rosie was the lead coach on it all. We had relative success with it with the squad we had," he said.
"I know we ended up going down with the points deduction and stuff like that, but we were able to go toe-to-toe with the likes of Bournemouth, the Fulhams and West Brom, Sheffield United.
"I think our record against the top six was better than against the bottom six, you're going to be able to go toe-to-toe with some of the big teams, and with all due respect, the Championship this year is nowhere near as strong as it was last year.
"I think it's anyone's, this year. I'm not saying get carried away by any means, but if you do put a run together the league is so tight that if you can win three in a row you can find yourselves going from near the bottom to just outside the playoffs and that's the kind of guidance every team in the league should be taking.
"With Rosie's fresh pair of eyes, he'll be looking at it that way, too."
