In Tactical Trends #1 we ended on a tease: the regista is going quietly. Three seasons later he is almost gone, and the way he disappeared tells you a lot about how the modern game thinks about midfield.
What we mean by regista
The deep playmaker - Pirlo, Xabi Alonso, Busquets, Jorginho on his good days. A single passer sitting in front of the back line, knitting the build-up by reading the field one beat ahead of everyone else. Static base, vertical brain.
What killed him
Three forces, in order of impact:
- The inverted full-back. Once a full-back can step into midfield, you do not need a player whose only job is to receive between the lines. The pass that used to come from the regista now comes from the inverter, with one extra body forward.
- Goalkeepers as the first builder. A modern keeper plays 80 percent of the regista's passes from a position the opposition cannot press cleanly. The regista becomes redundant as a connector and is exposed as a pure passing risk.
- The 5-second press standard. Elite presses now expect the ball to be won inside five seconds. A player who needs space and time to be effective cannot live in that economy.
What replaced him
Four hybrid roles share the workload that the regista used to carry alone:
- The passing centre-back - half of Brighton's build-up runs through the keeper-to-CB-to-inverter triangle.
- The inverted full-back - new connector, runs three lines deep.
- The box-crashing 8 - takes the regista's old vertical pass and turns it into a vertical run.
- The roaming false-9 - drops to receive the line-breaking ball that used to start at the regista's feet.
The two clubs still resisting
Atletico Madrid and Aston Villa still play with a recognisable deep playmaker. Both do it because their structure is built around long, controlled possessions where the regista has time. Both have paid for it in big games. Whether they survive 2026-27 with the role intact is one of the season's quiet questions.
What to watch this weekend
Pause the screen any time Manchester City, Bayern, or Real Madrid build out from the back. Count how many distinct players touch the ball before the first long pass. In 2018 the count was usually three. In 2026 it is six.
Coming next
Tactical Trends #3: the return of the second striker, and why two-up-top is suddenly an elite option again. Every other Tuesday.