    Your first  tactical moves  comes in the team selection and  the training
choises you  have made  prior to the match. Your substitutions in  particular
should allow  tactical  changes during the game by changing the  shape of the
team.
    During the game you should keep an eye on the opposition's own tactics as
they raise and lower the pace of the game. The question is whether you simply
respond by raising and  lowering your own pace or absorb their  pressure with
a defensive shift of player  positioning so that you  can hit them  with your
own attacking pressure when they relax a little.
   You must watch the fatigue position of both teams as fatigued players make
many more mistakes than fresh ones. Don't allow your players to  become tired
(when the involvement  graph overlaps the fatigue graph) if you can  possibly
help it.  Fatigued  players can  pick up niggling  injuries as  well as being 
likely to make that fatal error in the last minutes of the match.
   If you push  a player forward or  pull him back once he will  move by half
a position. To  change a striker into a midfield player move him  back twice.
To create an 'overlapping' fullback move him forward once.
    There are enormous combinations of tactical/pace/substitution moves!
