Sabitlenmiş Tweet

The Evolution of Wing football.
In the past wingers usually hug the touchline, beat the full-back, and whip in a cross to the box. They stayed glued to the flank, stretching defences and serving the strikers. Notable examples are Ryan Giggs, Luis Figo, Finidi George e.t.c. or someone like David Beckham with precision deliveries. Back then, the game was more about getting to the byline and cross to the No.9.
However, as tactics became more fluid and full-backs pushed higher, the space on the wings tightened. Which led to introduction of the inverted winger, where right-footers moved to the left and left-footers moved to the right.
The objective changed: instead of staying wide, the inverted winger usually cut inside, attack the half-space, shoot or slide in a killer pass. Sometimes they cut inside and deliver an in-swinger to the box.
This was perfected by someone like Arjen Robben who interestingly transitioned from a traditional winger on the left, to an inverted winger on the right.
The role evolved further in modern era, as wingers became primary goal threats, not just creators. For instance, Cristiano Ronaldo transitioned from a traditional wide player into a goal machine cutting in from the left. While, Lionel Messi redefined the right flank, drifting centrally to orchestrate and score.
These days, players like Mohammed Salah, Vinicius, Lamine Yamal, e.t.c. embody the hybrid, part winger, part striker, part playmaker role.
The winger is no longer just a supplier or creator, but is now a finisher.
From making wide runs down the flank, to cutting inside and bending in-swingers — the role hasn’t disappeared. It has simply evolved.
English














