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A mocking nickname for teams that score most of their goals from corners, free kicks, and throw-ins rather than open play. It implies they can't break teams down through actual football and have to rely on set pieces to get results. Sometimes it's fair criticism, sometimes it's just backlash from fans whose team just lost to a header from a corner.

Arsenal got called Set Piece FC during the 2024-25 and 2025-26 seasons. They changed the tactics of the Premier League with loads of goals from corners and free kicks. We saw too much of their set piece coach celebrating. Rival fans taunted them, Arsenal fans took the points.

The Set Piece Coach
The Set Piece Coach Jan 17, 2026
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Deliberately allowing the ball to go to a certain player or area, then springing a coordinated press the moment it arrives. You let them think they have an out, then shut it down. Usually involves directing play toward the sideline or a weaker player, where pressing is more effective because their options are limited. A pressing trap requires everyone to know the plan and commit at the right moment.
Liverpool under Klopp would let teams play to the full-back near the corner flag, then spring the trap - three players would converge instantly, the full-back had nowhere to go, and Liverpool would win the ball in a dangerous position.
Robbie Jan 17, 2026
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Looking behind you before receiving the ball to see where defenders and teammates are. The best midfielders do it constantly, multiple times before the ball arrives. It lets them know whether to turn, lay it off, or switch play. Players who don't check their shoulder get caught on the ball or miss options. Xavi was famous for how often he scanned the pitch.
Analysis showed Xavi would check his shoulder up to 40 times per game - more than almost any other player. That constant awareness of his surroundings is why his passing was always one step ahead.
Robbie Jan 17, 2026
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A pass from the byline back into the penalty area, usually toward the edge of the six-yard box. The crosser gets to the end line and pulls it back to an arriving teammate. Cutbacks are high-percentage chances because the ball is traveling away from the goalkeeper, making it easier to finish. Modern teams create cutbacks constantly because the xG from them is excellent.
City's goals often come from cutbacks. The winger gets to the byline, the defense is scrambling, and a simple pass across the six-yard box finds someone with an open goal. It's not flashy, but it's clinical.
Robbie Jan 17, 2026
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Another name for an inverted full-back - a full-back who moves inside into midfield rather than staying wide. "False" because they're not playing as a traditional full-back. The term gets used interchangeably with inverted full-back, though some coaches distinguish between the two based on exactly where the player ends up (how deep, how central).
Oleksandr Zinchenko at Arsenal plays as a false full-back - nominally left-back, he moves inside to become an auxiliary midfielder, overloading the center of the pitch while Saka and Martinelli provide all the width.
Robbie Jan 17, 2026
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