🚨🚨 I can assure with 100% guarantee that the Sorloth operation will not materialise.
The whole transfer saga regarding him is a bluff.
Stay calm for Bastoni/Alvarez news
🚨 JUST IN: The option of Barcelona activating Rashford’s buy-out clause is getting colder, with the club evaluating alternatives. @MatteMoretto#Transfers ❄️⚠️
@barcareportx This highline is useless with Martin and cubarsi two ball playing CB that are so slow and can't recover balls fast. Take inigo he had so many clutch tackle moments in defence last season when the offside trap was broken. To solve this we need a fast paced defender with strong phy
🚨🆕 | Why Everyone is Wrong about Barcelona’s High Line:
• There’s a familiar pattern every time Barcelona concedes a goal — the ball is played behind, runners coming from deep and the defence is caught high.
• Almost immediately, everyone calls Barcelona’s high line the problem.
• But the moment the ball is played behind, the real damage has already been done.
• The high line has become a scapegoat.
• It doesn’t exist on its own, but is a structural philosophy of clever spacing, positioning and work rate.
• Failing to perform in any of the three causes Barcelona’s high line to suffer.
• It starts with Barcelona losing the ball in possession or in transition.
• The opponent plays the ball behind, defenders step up for the offside trap.
• Opposition players make deeper runs, break the trap, and get through on goal.
• At this moment, the high line gets the blame, but it is just a piece of the chain.
• The real problems lie in the press and positioning of the team.
• If a player on the ball is under pressure, their options get limited and passes become rushed.
• When pressure disappears, opponents can easily bypass the structure.
• A high line requires clever and precise movement and positioning.
• Even one player breaking the chain can cause the entire structure to fall apart.
• Loss of compactness creates spaces the opposition can exploit.
• Dropping deeper is not the solution
• It changes the system completely — no quick recoveries, no quick transitions.
• It invites pressure and takes away control of the game.
• The real solution is improving intensity, positioning, and coordination.
Barcelona’s high line is not the problem — execution is.
No system is perfect. Barcelona hasn’t figured it all out yet. But this is how they want to play.
And that’s the point.
Share your opinions below 👇
@BouafifNour Martin n cubarsi would work better in a typical possession mid block based formation instead of direct highline. Just tell me how many times have we caught opponent defenders offside compared to last year, he forces shit and stubborn to make change that won't win u a ucl.
@BouafifNour That didn't happen when we conceded the same cross to look man, that didn't happen when we were 3-2 up against inter. What i don't get is why flick is forcing his highline when he doesn't have the suited CB profile for it. Martin and cubarsi both are slow but good ball playing.
I feel like a lot of fans have just defaulted to blaming the high line and saying Flick didn’t adjust it in big games, but what does ‘adjusting the high line’ actually mean?
It doesn’t mean abandoning it completely and sitting deep for 90 minutes. It means varying your approach, dropping into a mid-block at times and pressing again based on triggers.
And that’s exactly what Barça did after the second goal. As you can see in this picture which was the very start of Atleti's attack before their goal, the team was already in a mid-block with a deeper line and no constant press. Then Atleti get a throw-in, Lookman has a heavy touch and plays it backwards, that’s a clear pressing trigger, so the team steps up.
That’s not poor management, that’s textbook modern football. If you completely drop off, you hand control and momentum to Atleti and allow them to play freely.
Flick did adjust, and he did it logically. But when you miss 2-3 easy chances to kill the tie away from home, football punishes you. That's not a system failure, that's the reality of elite competition.
The season is basically over: La Liga and Super Cup won, Copa del Rey semi-final exit, and UCL quarter-final exit.
On a scale of 1–10, how would you realistically rate it?
🚨🚨🌕| JUST IN; In the latest visit by Hansi Flick’s agent, FC Barcelona reached a verbal 𝐀𝐆𝐑𝐄𝐄𝐌𝐄𝐍𝐓 to renew his contract until 2028!
[@CatalunyaRadio] 💣💙❤️✅
🚨🚨 Hansi Flick and Barça have reached a verbal agreement to extend Flick's contract for an additional year.
His current contract expires in 2027.
— Catalunya Radio
@BouafifNour We will never win a ucl with flick, flick game plan is always that every player must lock and follow his attacking plan never adapting. This is why Madrid is king of this competition because even when things go back they can grind a result out
UCL eliminations are honestly the worst feeling in football. First, the shock hits you, that the dream is over, and your team won’t be winning the UCL this year. Then the next day, it sinks in even more… there’s nothing left to be excited about this season.
Especially when we’re not really fighting for anything else. The league is sealed and the Super Cup is already won, which is good to be fair, but the Copa del Rey is gone, and now the UCL too.
Our season is basically over in April… nothing left to look forward in this sport to until the World Cup. Agh, this is horrible…
@ReshadFCB Watch as we see reports casado doesn't want to leave, ferran wants to stay at Barca, Ter stegen wants to stay, fati want to stay this incompetent dickporta can't kick out bums
This summer cannot go wrong.
Some names must be on the exit ramp, some names the club *must* bring in, some positions the club *needs* to invest in no matter what.
None of that “we will just stick with XYZ because he doesn’t want to leave.”
@ReshadFCB This trash ass dickporta campaign is all about complaining to referee never about taking ownership on how he let inigo leave for free and not get a reinforcement. Not how he plans to buy worldclass cb and striker for flick. Never responsibility always blaming