Tag
Skill
Skill
37 definitions
Letting the ball run through your legs or past you to a teammate behind, fooling the defender. Instead of controlling or shooting, you show you're going to play the ball, then leave it. The defender buys the fake and is now out of position. Dummies require awareness that someone's behind you and trust that they know what you're doing. When they come off, they look effortless.
Bergkamp's dummy against Argentina in 1998 is legendary. He let Orie's pass run through him, fooling the defender, then controlled it on the other side and scored. The whole stadium thought he was going to control it one way.
Robbie
Feb 10, 2026
Diving forward and flicking the ball with your heels behind you, legs bent like a scorpion's tail. The opposite of a bicycle kick, which goes backwards. Extremely rare because the situation has to be exactly right and it's incredibly hard to pull off. When it goes in as a goal, it wins every award going. Giroud's against Crystal Palace in 2017 won the FIFA Puskás Award.
Olivier Giroud's scorpion kick goal for Arsenal against Crystal Palace in 2017 won the FIFA Puskás Award - Alexis Sánchez's cross came behind him, and Giroud improvised a diving back-heel flick that arced into the goal, defying physics and belief.
Robbie
Feb 8, 2026
Striking the ball with the end of your boot rather than your laces or instep. Coaches used to tell kids never to do it because it's inaccurate, but sometimes it's the only way to get a shot off quickly. When a defender is about to block or the ball is bouncing awkwardly, a toe poke can surprise the keeper because the shot comes out faster than expected.
Inzaghi was a master of the toe poke. Half his goals came from stabbing at the ball before defenders could react, like his winner against Liverpool in the 2007 Champions League final.
Robbie
Feb 8, 2026
Striking the ball with the outside of your foot to bend it in an unexpected direction. Ricardo Quaresma made the trivela famous as his signature move in Portugal. It's tricky to pull off but useful for curving passes or shots around defenders when the inside of your foot won't give you the right angle. Modrić and Cancelo use it regularly now.
Ricardo Quaresma's trivela cross in the 2016 European Championship against Croatia perfectly exemplified the technique - the ball curled wickedly from the right wing, finding Nani for a headed goal.
Robbie
Feb 8, 2026
Throwing yourself backwards in the air and kicking the ball over your head while cycling your legs. Also called an overhead kick or scissors kick. It's difficult, risky, and when it comes off, nothing looks better. Most commonly used for shots but defenders sometimes clear the ball this way too. Pelé, Hugo Sánchez, and Ronaldo have all scored famous ones.
Cristiano Ronaldo's bicycle kick for Real Madrid against Juventus in the 2018 Champions League quarter-final was so spectacular that Juventus fans gave him a standing ovation, a rare tribute for an opposing player.
Robbie
Feb 7, 2026
Getting under the ball with a short backswing to lift it over someone, usually a goalkeeper who's come off their line. You need a soft touch and good judgment of distance. When it works, you look brilliant. When it doesn't, you look like you should have just passed.
Lionel Messi's chip over Manuel Neuer in the 2015 Champions League semi-final was pure genius - rounding the goalkeeper and chipping from a tight angle into an empty net, sealing Barcelona's place in the final.
Robbie
Feb 7, 2026
A pass that puts your teammate in danger of getting clattered. Usually a slow ball that arrives right as a defender's closing in at full speed. Called a hospital ball because the recipient might end up there. Careless passing under pressure creates them. Good teammates don't play hospital balls; bad ones get their midfielders injured.
Playing a hospital ball in midfield can end careers - a slow pass across the pitch invites a full-speed challenge, and the receiving player has no time to protect themselves before they get wiped out.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026
A pass played between or behind defenders for a teammate to run onto. The weight has to be perfect - too soft and the keeper gets there, too hard and it runs away. The runner and passer need to read each other's minds. Xavi, Iniesta, and De Bruyne are famous for finding gaps that don't seem to exist.
Kevin De Bruyne's through ball to Sergio Agüero against Liverpool in 2019 exemplified perfection - weighted precisely between two defenders, timed perfectly for Agüero's run, resulting in a tap-in finish.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026
The foot that stays planted while you kick with the other. Where you place your standing foot affects the direction and power of your shot or pass. Too far from the ball and you lean back, skying it. Too close and you can't get a clean swing. Coaches drill standing foot placement into youth players because it's the foundation of good technique.
When pundits say a striker "got his body over the ball," they usually mean his standing foot was positioned correctly - planted close to the ball so he could lean forward and keep the shot down rather than blazing it over.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026
A player's less dominant foot. Most players have a strong foot they prefer and a weak foot they avoid. Truly two-footed players are rare - they can shoot, pass, and control with either foot equally well. Defenders exploit players with weak weak-foots by forcing them onto it. Coaches rate weak foot ability on a scale; players work on it but some never get comfortable.
Santi Cazorla was genuinely two-footed - he could take corners with either foot, and opponents couldn't predict which way he'd go. Most players have a clear preference; Cazorla didn't seem to care.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026