Graham Potter’s background is actually impressive. He clearly has a system that he continues to adapt to get results at Brighton. Imagine if the mighty Manchester United went with a man that has the right fundamentals to nurture a system that harnesses the vast resources at the club? The press would promptly predict relegation struggles.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Potter
With support from the Professional Footballers' Association, Potter graduated from the Open Universityin December 2005 with a degree in Social Sciences. He worked as a football development manager for the University of Hull and as technical director for the Ghana women's team at the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup. He became assistant coach for the England Universities Squad, before joining Leeds Metropolitan University in a similar role; while at Leeds, he completed a master's in leadership and emotional intelligence.
Potter describes his teams as "tactically flexible, attacking, [and] possession-based".[76] At Östersund, he deployed a flexible 3–5–2 formation centred on ball possession.[78][79] Former Celticand Barcelona player Henrik Larsson commented on Potter's pattern of play, stating he "played all different kinds of systems, starting off a match one way, and then halfway through they started playing a different system, and then they ended up with a third system. And all the players knew exactly what they were doing."[80]
At Swansea, Potter used ten different formations and his team completed the most passes per 90 minutes in the Championship.[81]
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graham_Potter
With support from the Professional Footballers' Association, Potter graduated from the Open Universityin December 2005 with a degree in Social Sciences. He worked as a football development manager for the University of Hull and as technical director for the Ghana women's team at the 2007 FIFA Women's World Cup. He became assistant coach for the England Universities Squad, before joining Leeds Metropolitan University in a similar role; while at Leeds, he completed a master's in leadership and emotional intelligence.
Potter describes his teams as "tactically flexible, attacking, [and] possession-based".[76] At Östersund, he deployed a flexible 3–5–2 formation centred on ball possession.[78][79] Former Celticand Barcelona player Henrik Larsson commented on Potter's pattern of play, stating he "played all different kinds of systems, starting off a match one way, and then halfway through they started playing a different system, and then they ended up with a third system. And all the players knew exactly what they were doing."[80]
At Swansea, Potter used ten different formations and his team completed the most passes per 90 minutes in the Championship.[81]

