In the capricious climate of today's Premier League, pragmatism will only ever get you so far.
Jose Mourinho is learning that the hard way.
On Sunday, his Tottenham side suffered another setback in their title tilt as Wolves denied them all three points in the dying embers.
Mourinho's men had taken the ascendancy in the opening minute through Tanguy Ndombele but failed to build on their auspicious start, instead opting to sit back on their lead.
And it ended up costing them just as that defensive approach had done a few weeks earlier at Crystal Palace.
Mourinho blamed his players after this latest disappointment, accusing them of lacking ambition.
'I am frustrated with the result, we had control of the game, we had 89 minutes to score more goals and we didn't,' Mourinho said. 'It's not just about not scoring but also not being dangerous and ambitious and for me that's the problem.
'I know the way I prepare the team, I know what I ask from the players. I know what I told them at half time and I say no more than that. I give credit to Wolves but we did not have that ambition or desire to go for more.'
Mourinho hit the nail on the head there so why do Tottenham keep shutting up shop?
You only have to look at the state of the country to understand how uneconomical that approach is.
When they could be adventurous and daring, too often Tottenham have taken the cautious and careful route.
In too many games this season that Tottenham have been dominating, they have rested on their laurels rather than turn the screw. They've become a team who looks to conserve instead of improve.
Only three Premier League sides have dropped more points than Tottenham have from winning positions (eight) so far this season while in their last seven games they have mustered just 22 second-half shots.
That tells you the story of how Tottenham have tried to manage games in recent weeks: negatively.
Tottenham keep getting themselves in promising positions to only then take their foot off the gas and crumble. It's been a reoccurring theme throughout their season.
At the end of last month, Spurs were top of the Premier League table but are now fifth, winless in four and six points off leaders Liverpool.
Mourinho can point the finger at his players for that, but at the very least he should be sharing the responsibility.
As a manager, he has never been one to take risks and is still very much seen as an advocate for anti-football because of his hard-on-the-eye style.
Others will even stretch to say in another time he must have been a bus driver because he's proven to be so good at parking them.
Invariably, it is now in Tottenham's make-up to play the same way as historically Mourinho-managed teams.
When he took over at Spurs, Mourinho vowed that he was a changed man but you can't teach an old dog new tricks and as a tactician he still seems to be reverting back to old formulas.
Mourinho has enjoyed tremendous success by looking at things pragmatically in his career but this season's Premier League is untamed and unpredictable.
If recent results told him anything, it is that he must be bolder and more aggressive in his methods if he has genuine ambitions of challenging for the title.
Daniel Levy brought Mourinho on board to take Tottenham to the next level and compete for silverware, but right now it is his incessant safety-first mentality that is preventing them from doing just that.
RockyB
254
I think the author of this article is unti-Mourinho. Even the statistics attached here suggests that Liverpool have droped the same number of points on the same period, but no one speaks about Klopp. Which ever method José is using has made him the most feared coach in the premier league. He has over-achieved using the same method. Its true some games needs a bit of luck (just like the game against Liverpool), but tectically he is the best in the EPL. Please give him a break and focus on other failing coaches like Arteta, Lampard, Pep and even Ole. We are hungry for such stories, we have heard enough of Mourinho and his bus. Its becoming boring.