A player who excels at free kicks, corners, and penalties. They're the designated taker because they consistently deliver quality. Dead ball specialists matter because set pieces account for roughly 30% of goals. Beckham, Juninho, and Trent Alexander-Arnold are known for this skill. Teams scout specifically for players who can provide quality from dead balls.
Beckham was the ultimate dead ball specialist. His free kicks curled impossibly, his corners found heads, and his penalties were clinical. United and England built set piece strategies around his right foot.
Robbie
Feb 10, 2026
Running to drag defenders away and create space for a teammate, knowing you won't get the ball. It takes intelligence to spot where you can open gaps and unselfishness to do the hard work without the reward. Strikers who make good decoy runs are loved by teammates even if the stats don't show it. Firmino at Liverpool was a master at this - modest goal tallies but constantly creating room for others.
Roberto Firmino's selfless decoy runs were crucial to Liverpool's attacking system - he would drag centre-backs out of position, creating the channels for Salah and Mané to exploit, contributing far more than his modest goal tallies suggested.
Robbie
Jan 16, 2026
The imaginary line connecting the back defenders, which determines the offside position for attackers. A flat line is easier to hold but harder to adjust; a staggered line offers cover but can create gaps. The defensive line moves up and down as a unit - holding the line is essential for the offside trap. Calling the line, stepping up, and dropping together requires constant communication.
Arsenal's high defensive line under Arteta requires perfect synchronization. One defender stepping out of line at the wrong moment, and the attacker is onside. The communication between Gabriel, Saliba, and Ramsdale has to be constant.
Robbie
Jan 26, 2026
The moment a team loses the ball and has to shift from attacking to defending. The first few seconds are critical - either you press immediately to win it back, or you sprint back to reorganize. Teams that handle defensive transitions badly get picked apart on the counter. It's tracked analytically now and coaches drill it constantly.
Real Madrid's 2022 Champions League comebacks often started with poor defensive transitions - they'd concede, look vulnerable, then their individual quality would bail them out. Other teams would've collapsed from the same situations.
Robbie
Jan 21, 2026
Getting the ball forward quickly rather than building slowly. Not quite "hoofball" but prioritizing vertical passes over sideways ones. Direct teams try to get into dangerous areas fast, often bypassing midfield. It can be a deliberate tactical choice or a sign that a team can't keep the ball. Some direct play is about exploiting space quickly; some is just desperation.
Leicester's title-winning season was built on direct play. They'd win the ball and immediately look to get Vardy in behind with long passes over the top, skipping the midfield buildup entirely.
Robbie
Jan 15, 2026