Tactical Trends #1: The inverted full-back is no longer a Pep thing

Every era of football borrows one trick from the league above and turns it into a baseline. In 2026, that trick is the inverted full-back. Tactical Trends #1 kicks off our biweekly series with the move that has gone from clever to compulsory.

What we mean - in 60 seconds

An inverted full-back tucks into central midfield in the build-up phase, turning a back four into a back three with two extra bodies behind the ball and a midfield diamond ahead of it. It frees the wide forward to stay high, gives the goalkeeper an extra short option, and changes the angle the opposition has to press.

Who is doing it best in 2025-26

Where it still breaks

The inversion fails in three repeating contexts: against compact 4-4-2 mid-blocks that simply do not press the back three; against a striker who jumps the inverter's passing lane on the first action; and on pitches where the side-to-side pass speed is too slow to outrun a coordinated press. The bottom-half teams in Serie A, Bundesliga, and La Liga have all begun to drill these counter-presses.

The signal to watch

The next stage will not be more inversions - it will be more delayed inversions, triggered after the second pass instead of the first. Watch the right-side full-backs of Arsenal and Real Madrid for the cleanest version of this evolution.

The series

Tactical Trends drops every other Tuesday. Next up in Tactical Trends #2: the slow death of the regista, and what is replacing the deep playmaker in elite Europe.