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11 definitions starting with "R"

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Crossing your kicking leg behind your standing leg to hit the ball. Usually done when you're on your weaker side but want to use your stronger foot anyway. It looks flashy but can be practical for crosses and shots. The name comes from Argentine player Ricardo Infante, who did it in 1948 then skipped training ("hacerse la rabona" means to skip school in Spanish). Di María, Quaresma, and Lamela have all made it their signature.
Erik Lamela scored an outrageous rabona goal for Tottenham against Arsenal in the North London Derby in 2021, spinning and wrapping his left foot behind his right to curl the ball into the top corner.
Robbie Jan 25, 2026
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Roll the ball up the back of your standing leg and flick it over your head, over the defender, and collect it on the other side. The ball arcs like a rainbow. High-risk, high-reward, and often considered showboating if you do it when you don't need to. When it works, it humiliates the defender. Neymar does it regularly and has drawn angry reactions from opponents who didn't appreciate being embarrassed.
Neymar's rainbow flick for Santos against Atlético Mineiro in 2011 went viral - he lifted the ball over the defender's head, collected it, and continued toward goal, prompting an angry reaction from the humiliated opponent that resulted in a red card.
Robbie Feb 1, 2026
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When a reply gets more likes than the original post, usually because someone's being mocked or corrected. In football Twitter, getting ratioed means you posted a bad take and the responses are more popular than your opinion. Can also be used as a verb - "ratio this" - to invite people to prove a point wrong by liking the response.
When a Twitter account posted that Bruno Fernandes was better than Kevin De Bruyne, the replies disagreeing got ten times more likes than the original tweet - a classic ratio that became evidence the opinion was unpopular.
Robbie Jan 20, 2026
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Sprinting back to help defensively after being caught up the pitch. Full-backs who've pushed forward, midfielders who've joined an attack, strikers who lose the ball - they all need to make recovery runs. The best players do it without thinking, even when tired. Recovery runs prevent counters and show commitment. Players who don't make them become defensive liabilities.
Sadio Mané's recovery runs at Liverpool were incredible. He'd lose the ball high up the pitch and then sprint 60 yards to make a tackle in his own half. It's that work rate that made Klopp's system function.
Robbie Jan 23, 2026
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Playing the ball backward or sideways to keep it rather than forcing a forward pass. When the initial attack breaks down, good teams recycle to the back, reset, and try again rather than losing the ball. Critics see it as negative; supporters say it's patient. Guardiola teams recycle constantly, waiting for the right moment to play forward. The balance between recycling and risk is a tactical choice.
Barcelona under Guardiola would recycle possession for minutes at a time, passing between Piqué, Busquets, and Xavi, waiting for a gap to appear. When it did, they'd strike. Until then, they kept the ball.
Robbie Jan 21, 2026
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