Are jersey number-position names just a useless piece of jargon at this point?
In other words, does it make the game a little harder to understand for newbies without adding anything but a trivial piece of soccer history to the discussion for those who know it? Does it just add to a false understanding of the game?
Here's an example: even calling someone a #10 in a 4-2-3-1 and a #10 in a 4-4-2 diamond is confusing. You had better have some second striker qualities in the first one, where they aren't especially necessary in the second one.
Another: what's a #6 in a 4-2-3-1? It's nobody, really. The '2' have to have a specific mix of skills suited to that spot in a 4-2-3-1, they don't have to be the ultimate head-hunting '#6' from days of yore.
A third: Why call the 2 sides of the diamond in a 4-4-2 diamond '#8s'? Don't they need to be part '#8's' and part wings, at least if you're trying to score?
Why call a wing a #7 or #11? What does it add to the conversation?
How have you said anything more about how that player is going to play wing in that formation? If you want useless jargon, why not just say "gniw" and when people ask what a "gniw" is, just tell them it means "wing"?
In other words, does it make the game a little harder to understand for newbies without adding anything but a trivial piece of soccer history to the discussion for those who know it? Does it just add to a false understanding of the game?
Here's an example: even calling someone a #10 in a 4-2-3-1 and a #10 in a 4-4-2 diamond is confusing. You had better have some second striker qualities in the first one, where they aren't especially necessary in the second one.
Another: what's a #6 in a 4-2-3-1? It's nobody, really. The '2' have to have a specific mix of skills suited to that spot in a 4-2-3-1, they don't have to be the ultimate head-hunting '#6' from days of yore.
A third: Why call the 2 sides of the diamond in a 4-4-2 diamond '#8s'? Don't they need to be part '#8's' and part wings, at least if you're trying to score?
Why call a wing a #7 or #11? What does it add to the conversation?
How have you said anything more about how that player is going to play wing in that formation? If you want useless jargon, why not just say "gniw" and when people ask what a "gniw" is, just tell them it means "wing"?
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