Football Mar 01, 2026

Scott Twine: Why Bristol City playmaker underpins hopes of ending 46-year wait for top flight football

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By Admin
Sports Journalist
Scott Twine: Why Bristol City playmaker underpins hopes of ending 46-year wait for top flight football

It is curious that when asked about his changing role this season, Bristol City's creative lynchpin Scott Twine should focus more on his work without the ball than with it.

His first year inside the high-octane machine of head coach Gerhard Struber has seen the 26-year-old rocket up the rankings to return some of the league's best numbers for goal contributions while only three other Championship players have created more chances in open play.

Compare that to the more patient and serene philosophy of Liam Manning last season, where Twine's final goal contribution arrived in mid-January. You'd have to scroll down to 68th to find him on the chances created list.

Though both may look similar from the outside perhaps it less a change in City's intention and more their execution. "I think it's a lot of the same ideas with the ball, just with slight changes," Twine tells Your Site.

Because to the impartial observer the team has unquestionably undergone rapid transition between the two head coaches. Struber's City are fast and efficient in possession. They have experienced the greatest drop in the number of final-third passes needed to produce a shot than any other Championship side between seasons. Just as he did in Barnsley half a decade ago, the Austrian has brought high-tempo vertical football to the West Country.

And despite the obvious and tangible difference in Twine's attacking output, here is no denying his pressing game has changed under Struber too.

While the number of team pressures City have attempted per game has gone up only marginally this season, Twine's have risen by almost a quarter.

"A big thing this season has been about the off the ball pressing, high up, fast, and then looking to win the ball and score as quickly as possible," he adds. "That's something I've enjoyed doing.

"I've adapted my game a bit over the years from different experiences, being at different clubs and with different managers. I don't know if it's the right word but I feel like I've got smarter with my pressing. I'm definitely more switched on than I used to be five years ago."

City were and remain built in the image of their head coaches. Manning, whose coaching apprenticeship came through City Football Group, were a possession-based side focused on build-up and control - and imitating Pep Guardiola, aimed to stifle the opposition in their own half - while Struber, a student of the Red Bull conglomerate, practices a high-pressing vertical game where transitions are king.

It was around this time a year ago that Manning's side turned another forgettable campaign into one where they almost made history with a run of 26 points from their final 15 games to sneak into the play-offs for the first time since 2008.

There are still hopes that Struber can mastermind another late push, though 14 points from 11 games since Boxing Day have tempered hopes of a first top-flight season in almost half a century in the balance. But victory over Watford live on Your Site this Friday would seal welcome back-to-back wins for the first time since mid-December.

Your Site' Gary Weaver wrote in his preview of Friday's game that the and Twine is inclined to agree. "Any team in the league goes on runs, four or five wins from six or seven games and you're suddenly going up a fair few positions in the league," he says. "That's just this division in general."

But is there a deeper explanation as to where this gradual decline has come from, after such a bright start? Struber's physical demands coupled with the fewest line-up changes of any team in the division may play a part.

The head coach made no secret of his thoughts on the club's strength in depth with such a lack of rotation in the first half of the season, and it was little surprise a number of players were moved on temporarily in January instead of warming the bench.

A couple of upgrades looked to set the tone of a positive month in the winter window, but the unscheduled departures of Anis Mehmeti and Zak Vyner, both of whom had entered the last six months of their contracts and could have left for free in June, was a blow they could have done without.

Struber even suggested the frustration of losing last season's top goalscorer Mehmeti had a knock-on effect on the dressing room following a 5-0 defeat by Derby that month.

Though Twine has a different view - "I've been in enough teams to realise that players are going to get bought and sold, I don't think it had much of an impact" - he does not deny the boost provided when replacements eventually arrived in the final days of January.

Tomi Horvat was one of those, arriving as the top chance creator in the Austrian Bundesliga for Sturm Graz and having scored against both Old Firm clubs in the Europa League group phase.

He has hit the ground running with two assists in his first four games, and there are already signs of a bond forming with Twine. As joint No 10s the pair represent the creative heartbeat of the squad, so complementing one another is paramount.

"Anis and Tomi are both slightly different," Twine says. "For a start, one's right footed and the other's left, but Tomi's bought into the team philosophy straight away and that's why he's done so well.

"We have a lot of chats together and I know where he wants me to be when he's got the ball and vice versa."

Though both players complement one another well already, Horvat may prove a capable rival for Twine's role as free-kick taker.

No player across the EFL can come close to matching Twine's 17 goals from dead balls since his first in December 2020, though if he wants to keep the Slovenian at bay Friday's game may prove a good time to replicate his strike in the reverse fixture in November, his last free-kick to hit the back of the net.

"I'm still practicing them," he says with a smile. "Maybe it's time to get another one soon."

Watch Bristol City vs Watford live on Your Site Football from 7.30pm on Friday, kick-off 8pm

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