Striker

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This article is about football (soccer) players. For other uses, see striker (disambiguation).

Strikers, also known as forwards and attackers, and formerly inside forwards, are the players on a team in football in the row nearest to the opposing team's goal, who are therefore principally responsible for scoring goals.

Modern team formations usually include one to three strikers; two is most common. Coaches typically field one striker who plays over the shoulder of the last defender (close to the opposing team's goal), and another attacking forward who plays somewhat deeper and assists in making goals as well as scoring.

The former is usually a large striker, typically known as a target man, who is used to win long balls or receive passes and "hold up" the ball as team-mates advance, to help team-mates score by providing a pass ('through ball' into the box), or to score himself; the latter variation usually requiring quicker pace. Less frequently, some strikers operate on the wings of the field and work their way goalward.

This very advanced position and its limited defensive responsibilities mean strikers normally score more goals than other players; accordingly, strikers are often among the best-known and most expensive players in their teams.

The centre forward, or an "out-and-out" striker, is normally the principal goal-scorer of a football team. Centre forwards act predominantly as "targets" or the focal point of an attack; it is the duty of the midfield to supply and to assist them to score.

Some centre forwards are goal poachers who work in and around the penalty area to snatch goals and who are sometimes referred to proverbially as a "fox in the box". These strikers are known for their positional sense and excellent reflexes. Other forwards may rely on their pace to latch on balls from outside the six-yard area. Other players rely on their excellent dribbling ability to pierce through opposition defences.

Another group of centre forwards are known as "target men" and are usually of above-average height, with good heading ability. They hold the ball up and bring other players into the game, scoring from crosses, often with the head, and use their body strength to shield the ball while turning to score. Centre forwards with exceptionally towering figures and accurate heading abilities also make great "target men".

Some other notable "target-man" centre forwards include Peter Crouch, Didier Drogba, Luca Toni, Fernando Morientes, Jan Koller and Miroslav Klose. Leading 'fox-in-the-box' players include Robbie Fowler, David Trezeguet, Martín Palermo, Roy Makaay, Filippo Inzaghi, Hernán Crespo, Andriy Shevchenko, and David Villa, where as strikers such as Alessandro Del Piero, Wayne Rooney and Francesco Totti usually rely on their own technical skills to score goals. Strikers like Michael Owen, Obafemi Martins, Samuel Eto'o, Nicholas Anelka, Thierry Henry, and Fernando Torres use their pace to latch on to through balls.

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[edit] Second striker

Deep-lying forwards have a long history in the game, but the terminology to describe them has varied over the years. Originally such players were termed inside forwards, or deep-lying centre forwards. More recently, two more variations of this old type of player have developed: the second or support or auxiliary striker and, in what is arguably a distinct position unto its own, being neither midfield nor attack the Number 10, or playmaker, an advanced as opposed to a deep-lying playmaker.

The second striker position is a loosely-defined and often misapplied one somewhere between the out-and-out striker, whether he be a target-man or more of a poacher, and the Number 10 or trequartista, while possibly showing some of the characteristics of both. In fact a coined term, the "nine-and-a-half" has been an attempt to define the position. Conceivably, a Number 10 can alternate as a second-striker provided that he is also a prolific goalscorer, otherwise a striker (such as Del Piero or Raul) who can both score and create opportunities for a less versatile centre forward is more suited. This has been true of a natural trequartista like Roberto Baggio who seldom played in a team formation which permitted him the creative license to play as a number 10 and so he adapted himself to the second-striker role. A second- or support-striker does not tend to get as involved in the orchestration of attacks, nor bring as many other players into play as the Number 10 since they do not have the range of vision, nor the burden of responsibility that the latter, around whom the team's game is built, possess. Acoordingly, neither do they have as much responsibility for inventing the game.

Notable examples include Ronaldinho, Lionel Messi, Kaká, Del Piero, Carlos Tevez, Wayne Rooney and Francesco Totti. Influential "Number 10s" in history include Pele, Diego Maradona, Ferenc Puskas, Zinedine Zidane, Dennis Bergkamp, Johan Cruyff, Rivaldo, and Zico.

[edit] Winger

Main article: Midfielder#Winger

A winger is an attacking player who is stationed in a wide position near the touchlines. They can be classified as forwards, considering their origin as the old "outside-forward" position, and continue to be termed as such in Latin and Dutch footballing cultures. However, in the Anglo-Saxon world, they are usually counted as part of the midfield, a trend which is increasingly being altered as coaches absorb influences from other footballing philosophies.

It is a winger's duty to beat opposing fullbacks, deliver cut-backs or crosses from wide positions and, to a lesser extent, to beat defenders and score from close range They are usually some of the quickest players in the team and usually have good dribbling skills as well. In their Dutch, Spanish and Portuguese usage, the defensive duties of the winger have been usually confined to pressing the opposition fullbacks when they have the ball. Otherwise, a winger will drop closer to the midfield to make himself available, should his team win back the ball. In British and other northern European styles of football, the wide-midfielder is expected to track back all the way to his own corner flag should his full-back require help, as well as tucking into the midfield when the more central players are trying to pressure the opposition for the ball, a huge responsibility for attack-orientated players, and particularly those like Joaquin (winger/wide midfielder) or Leo Messi (winger/second-striker) that lack the phyiscal attributes of a wing-back or of a more orthodox midfield player. As these players grow older and lose their natural pace, they are frequently redeployed as Number 10s between the midfield and the forward line, where their innate ball control and improved reading of the game in the final third can serve to improve their teams' attacking options in tight spaces. An example is Internazionale use of veteran Luis Figo behind one or two other attackers.

In recent years there has been a trend of playing 'unorthodox' wingers - wide men stationed on the 'wrong' side of the pitch, in order to enable them to cut inside and shoot on their stronger foot. One example of this is the tactical use of Robin van Persie by Netherlands coach Marco van Basten at the 2006 World Cup; the Netherlands played with a front three of Arjen Robben wide left, target-man Ruud van Nistelrooy in the middle and the left-footed van Persie wide right. Such deployment usually leads to players being referred to as playing 'from the right' rather than 'on the right'. Similarly, Newcastle United manager Sam Allardyce, who favours a front three, started the 2007-08 season with right-footed James Milner playing from the left, Mark Viduka as a centre forward and left-footed Obafemi Martins from the right, whilst at Manchester United it is common for right-footed Cristiano Ronaldo and left-footed Ryan Giggs to switch sides continually throughout a match.

Notable orthodox right-wingers currently playing include Joaquín, Shaun Wright-Phillips, David Odonkor, Miguel Ángel Angulo, Mauro Camoranesi and Jermaine Pennant. Orthodox left-wingers include Ryan Giggs, Florent Malouda, Arjen Robben, Damien Duff, Vicente Rodríguez, Yuri Zhirkov, Martin Petrov and David Silva.

'Unorthodox' right-wingers (left-footed) include Lionel Messi, Shunsuke Nakamura. Unorthodox left-wingers (right-footed) include Robinho, Franck Ribéry (who plays on the left for Bayern Munich but usually on the right for France) and Joe Cole. Players who can play from either side include Simão Sabrosa, Ricardo Quaresma, Robinho, Sidney Govou, Cristiano Ronaldo, Arjen Robben, Marat Izmailov, Joe Cole and Ronaldinho.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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