Skip to main content

Welcome

The Football Dictionary

Your comprehensive guide to football and soccer terminology, slang, and phrases used by fans and players worldwide.

Featured
Running outside and past a teammate who has the ball, usually a full-back going around a winger. Creates a 2v1 against the defender, who has to choose between following the runner or staying with the ball. Even if the pass doesn't come, the threat of it stretches the defence and opens space to cut inside. One of the most basic attacking moves, taught from youth level, and still works at the top.
Andy Robertson's overlapping runs at Liverpool became a signature move - his tireless surges past Sadio Mané down the left flank created countless chances through whipped crosses and pulled defenders out of position.
Robbie Jan 18, 2026
0 0
Trending

A way of rating overhead kicks by comparing them to Trevor Sinclair's famous effort for QPR against Barnsley in the 1997 FA Cup. Sinclair's volley was hit from outside the box, and flew into the back of the net. It's the gold standard. So when someone pulls off a bicycle kick, you place it on the Sinclair Spectrum to judge how good it actually was. Popularised by Max Rushden on the Guardian's Football Weekly podcast.

Nice overhead kick from Alejandro Garnacho but where does it sit on the Sinclair Spectrum? It's no Sinclair but it's up there.

The Gaffer
The Gaffer Feb 16, 2026
0 0

When a lower league or underdog team knocks out a much bigger club, usually in a cup competition, particularly synonymous with the FA Cup. The smaller team has nothing to lose, give absolutely everything for 90 minutes, and the favourites often look like they can't be bothered. Home advantage at a tight, hostile ground helps too.

Do you remember Mickey Thomas' screamer against Arsenal in '92? What a giant killing.

The Gaffer
The Gaffer Feb 14, 2026
0 0

Latest

A way of rating overhead kicks by comparing them to Trevor Sinclair's famous effort for QPR against Barnsley in the 1997 FA Cup. Sinclair's volley was hit from outside the box, and flew into the back of the net. It's the gold standard. So when someone pulls off a bicycle kick, you place it on the Sinclair Spectrum to judge how good it actually was. Popularised by Max Rushden on the Guardian's Football Weekly podcast.

Nice overhead kick from Alejandro Garnacho but where does it sit on the Sinclair Spectrum? It's no Sinclair but it's up there.

The Gaffer
The Gaffer Feb 16, 2026
0 0

When a lower league or underdog team knocks out a much bigger club, usually in a cup competition, particularly synonymous with the FA Cup. The smaller team has nothing to lose, give absolutely everything for 90 minutes, and the favourites often look like they can't be bothered. Home advantage at a tight, hostile ground helps too.

Do you remember Mickey Thomas' screamer against Arsenal in '92? What a giant killing.

The Gaffer
The Gaffer Feb 14, 2026
0 0

Used to describe Tottenham Hotspur's tendency to collapse. If a team is in a strong position and finds a way to throw it away, that would be Spursy. Things like bottling a title race, a late defensive error, or a general inability to get over the line in big moments. Other clubs choke too, but Spurs somehow made it part of their identity.

Spurs were 2-0 up at half time against Chelsea and still lost 4-2. Absolutely Spursy.

The Gaffer
The Gaffer Feb 11, 2026
0 0

A player who's completely focused and performing at their peak. When someone's locked in, they're not making mistakes, they're dominant, and they're unplayable. The opposite of a player who's distracted or going through the motions.

Rodri is not messing about here, he's locked in

The Gaffer
The Gaffer Feb 11, 2026
0 0

The player whose job is to score. There are different types of Striker: poachers who live in the six-yard box (e.g. Inzaghi), complete forwards who do everything (e.g. Henry), target men who hold the ball up (e.g. Drogba), pressing forwards who hunt defenders (e.g. Firmino). The role has evolved a bit, and modern strikers are now often expected to press, link play, and create for others, not just finish.

Ronaldo Nazário (R9) was the complete striker - he had pace, excellent technique, and was a clinical finisher.

The Gaffer
The Gaffer Feb 10, 2026
0 0