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Position 27 definitions
The wide defender who protects the flank and overlaps to help the attack. The role has changed massively. Old-school full-backs defended first; modern ones are expected to get forward and create. Some tuck inside into midfield like Cancelo, others stay wide and cross like Alexander-Arnold. You need stamina to get up and down for 90 minutes.
Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson redefined full-back play at Liverpool, combining for 35 assists in the 2018-19 season while providing defensive solidity, making them arguably the most productive full-back pairing in football history.
Robbie Jan 25, 2026
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A wide attacker who beats defenders one-on-one and either crosses or cuts inside. Traditional wingers like Beckham and Giggs stayed out wide and whipped balls in. Modern inverted wingers like Robben and Mahrez drift inside onto their stronger foot to shoot. Either way, you need pace, dribbling, and enough stamina to track back. Most now are expected to do multiple jobs depending on whether the team has the ball or not.
Arjen Robben's signature move became legendary - receiving the ball on the right wing, cutting inside onto his left foot, and curling shots into the far corner. Despite defenders knowing it was coming, they couldn't stop it.
Robbie Jan 25, 2026
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Also called "libero" (Italian for "free"). A defender who sits behind the back line to mop up balls that get through. Unlike other defenders, the sweeper had license to carry the ball forward and start attacks. Beckenbauer, Baresi, and Sammer were famous for combining defensive work with creative passing from deep. The role has mostly vanished because modern teams play high lines and use the offside trap.
Franz Beckenbauer revolutionized the sweeper role for Germany and Bayern Munich in the 1970s, not just defending but orchestrating attacks from deep and even scoring crucial goals, including in the 1974 World Cup.
Robbie Jan 24, 2026
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Argentine term for the classic number 10, roughly meaning "hook" or "connection." Plays centrally behind the strikers, linking midfield to attack through vision and passing rather than running. The enganche gets creative freedom but doesn't track back much, which makes the role rare now that everyone has to press. Riquelme was the perfect example - all touch, all passing, zero interest in defending.
Juan Román Riquelme was the quintessential enganche - at Boca Juniors and Villarreal, he would dictate games with his sublime touch, unhurried elegance, and killer through balls, despite minimal defensive contribution or physical presence.
Robbie Jan 23, 2026
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The creative midfielder who runs the game, creates chances, and controls tempo. Classic number 10s like Maradona and Zidane played between midfield and attack. Deep-lying playmakers like Pirlo and Xavi do similar things from further back. Pure playmakers are rarer now because teams spread creative duties around instead of relying on one player. But the role still gets romanticized as football at its most artistic.
Zinedine Zidane's performance in the 2006 World Cup at age 34 showcased pure playmaking artistry - he controlled matches with elegant touches, defense-splitting passes, and technical brilliance, dragging France to the final almost single-handedly.
Robbie Jan 19, 2026
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