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Analytics & Stats

The Right Back Reimagined: 25 Profiles of Form, Role and Reliability

Twenty-five profiles that reassess the modern right back: roles, form, injuries and impact. Insights

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The right back has been recast in recent seasons, becoming one of football’s most adaptable and influential positions. This piece profiles 25 players who illustrate how the role now blends defensive responsibility, attacking invention and positional versatility.

Noussair Mazraoui provided defensive dependability and useful versatility for Manchester United during difficult spells under Ruben Amorim. João Cancelo combined extraordinary ball skills and unpredictability in possession with clear defensive limitations; his career has included spells at Manchester City, Bayern Munich and Barcelona, a move to Al Hilal in Saudi Arabia and an unexpected return to Barcelona in January.

Nahuel Molina offers steady attacking output for Argentina and Atlético Madrid, bringing World Cup and Copa América experience to his club role. Diogo Dalot is defined by effort and tireless running for Manchester United since 2018, capable of being a disruptive presence when at his best.

Ben White has repaid Arsenal’s investment by offering flexibility at right back and centre back and improving those around him. Nordi Mukiele has quickly adapted at Sunderland after joining from Bayer Leverkusen, combining defensive solidity, adventurous possession play and long throws.

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Ola Aina rebuilt his career in Italy before returning to England with Nottingham Forest, where he balances attack and defence for the Tricky Trees. At Borussia Dortmund, the Norway international on set pieces said, “It’s not all that difficult,” reflecting a simple but effective approach to chance creation; across the first 20 games of the 2025–26 Bundesliga campaign he produced 11 assists.

Conor Bradley rose through a loan at Bolton to Liverpool, now replacing Trent Alexander-Arnold but needing to manage injuries. Pedro Porro offers exceptional distribution for Tottenham Hotspur while remaining inconsistent defensively; Thomas Frank rated him above every other Spurs player he worked with according to The Times.

Tino Livramento returned from a career-threatening knee injury to justify Newcastle’s £32 million signing with pace and adaptability. Zeki Çelik has shifted between centre back and wingback at Roma under different managers, while Konrad Laimer transitioned from midfield to right back at Bayern Munich and helped the club win the Bundesliga in 2024–25.

Daniel Muñoz has become a key wingback for Crystal Palace and helped them win the FA Cup in 2024–25. Dani Carvajal remains one of the most decorated defenders, though his 2024–25 season was curtailed by an ACL tear. Marcos Llorente and Matheus Nunes show how midfield traits can flourish at right back; Guardiola said in November 2025 that “he can become one of the best [right backs],” when discussing Nunes.

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Jeremie Frimpong, Giovanni Di Lorenzo, Denzel Dumfries, Jules Kounde, Jurriën Timber and Trent Alexander-Arnold each demonstrate different blends of attacking threat, adaptability and defensive trade-offs. After a strong debut season in Spain, one Spanish daily declared: “David Beckham Returned to the Bernabéu.” These profiles underline how the modern right back now shapes games as much with passing and movement as with tackles and marking.

Analytics & Stats

Opta Model: City Move Top as Title Race Tightens

City have leapfrogged Arsenal; Opta predicts Arsenal 80.75 pts, Man City 79.17 and tight title odds.

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Manchester City sit top of the Premier League for the first time since August after leapfrogging Arsenal, ending the Gunners’ spell at the summit. Both sides are level on 70 points and a +37 goal difference, but City have scored 66 goals to Arsenal’s 63, which places the Citizens ahead on goals scored.

City’s midweek victory also confirmed Burnley’s relegation to the Championship. That leaves the drop battle focused on Leeds United, Nottingham Forest, West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur. Leeds snatched a point against Bournemouth on Wednesday evening as they move toward safety.

Opta’s supercomputer has updated its final-table projections following City’s win. The model still favours Arsenal to win the title, predicting the Gunners will finish on 80.75 points with a 66.38% title probability. Manchester City are forecast to finish on 79.17 points with a 33.62% chance. The projected gap of 1.58 points underlines how small any margin for error now is for both contenders.

The model’s view of European qualification is similarly decisive. Aston Villa and Manchester United are expected to finish with about 66 points each and both have better than 98% odds of qualifying for the Champions League. Liverpool are predicted to join them with roughly 62.83 expected points and a 91.04% chance. Brighton & Hove Albion retain a slim 6.42% chance to reach the Champions League, while Bournemouth are projected to finish around 54.63 points and appear likely to settle for a Conference League place.

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Chelsea are slated to finish ninth on 53.83 expected points. That projection follows a run of five consecutive league defeats and the club’s decision to part company with Liam Rosenior.

At the bottom, Leeds are all but safe with a 0.21% relegation chance on 45.68 projected points. Nottingham Forest sit close behind with a 4.27% chance. West Ham and Tottenham remain in the real contest for survival, with the model assigning relegation probabilities of 38.58% and 56.93% respectively. Opta’s projection has Burnley and Wolves confirmed as relegated in its final table.

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Analytics & Stats

Rosenior’s Rebuke and Chelsea’s Gathering Crisis

Rosenior criticised a stale Chelsea side; recruitment strategy and finances now under scrutiny. more

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Chelsea arrive at a rare low. The club has now lost five consecutive league games without scoring, a sequence not seen since 1912, and faces the realistic prospect of missing out on European football next season. That possibility comes as the club contends with what the article describes as the highest annual losses in history.

After Tuesday’s defeat the manager did not mince words. “Unacceptable in every aspect of the game,” he told Sky Sports. “I keep coming out and defending the players, that was indefensible, that performance tonight.

“The manner of the goals we conceded, the duels that we lost. Something has to change drastically right here, right now.

“We need to look in the mirror. I need to look in the mirror. But I can’t keep coming out here and defending some of the things that we’re seeing. The general attitude, spirit was lacking—determination from three or four of the starting 11. That’s nowhere near enough for this club. I can’t come out and lie. I tell the truth. That was an unacceptable performance at every level.”

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Suggestions that the manager has lost the dressing room have swirled and he conceded there may be truth in those claims. “It looks that way, I won’t lie,” he said. “That was unacceptable. [But] I don’t feel there’s a disconnect between me and the players. We work very closely with them in training, in individual meetings, team meetings. We are giving everything to the players. There is a lack of spirit, a lack of belief that can create that perspective that makes it look a certain way. I can’t argue with that at the moment because the run we’re on is unacceptable and that performance definitely was as well.”

Center back Trevoh Chalobah defended the players’ effort. “I think the boys were running their socks off,” he disputed. “If you look in the dressing room, everyone is tired. It’s nothing to do with effort. We gave it our all. We got beat today. We ran today.

“The stats are stats. The boys are tired.”

The numbers paint a worrying picture: in each of Chelsea’s 34 Premier League games this season they have covered less ground than opponents, averaging 106.1km per game and sitting bottom of the division. Recruitment choices and a prolonged pursuit of a Brighton-style model are also under scrutiny after more than £287.85 million was spent on transfers from that club and £1.5 billion has been invested in the playing squad. With the transfer window shut and a six-year manager contract in place, the club faces difficult decisions on and off the pitch.

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Analytics & Stats

Opta Model Signals Chaotic Relegation Race After Spurs and Hammers Slip

Opta model rates Wolves and Burnley certain relegation; Spurs face steep odds with five games left .

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The latest round of Premier League fixtures confirmed the first team to be relegated to the Championship. Wolves have now dropped, a reality underlined by the weekend results.

Tottenham Hotspur impressed against Brighton & Hove Albion but succumbed to a 95th-minute equalizer that left them sitting 18th in the standings. Fortunately for Roberto De Zerbi’s side, West Ham United failed to take advantage on Monday. A 0–0 draw against Crystal Palace was enough to demote Wolves but it did little to ease West Ham’s relegation fears.

Nuno Espírito Santo’s Hammers are two points clear with five games to play, while even Nottingham Forest’s five-point cushion is not secure at this late stage of the season.

With five fixtures remaining, the Opta supercomputer offers a stark view of the bottom five. Wolves and Burnley are assigned a 100.00% chance of relegation. Tottenham occupy 18th on 31 points and are given a 58.33% likelihood of dropping, with an expected points total of 36.88. West Ham sit on 33 points with an expected 38.54 and a 36.90% relegation chance. Nottingham Forest sit 16th on 36 points, expected to reach 42.00 and shown a 4.38% chance of relegation.

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Burnley face an unenviable test against title-chasing Manchester City on Wednesday. Scott Parker’s side must avoid defeat to postpone their relegation. A loss would guarantee a spot in the Championship next season and even an unlikely draw would effectively seal it, given Burnley’s poor goal difference.

Spurs currently sit two points behind West Ham and are not predicted to close that gap over their remaining fixtures. A trip to bottom side Wolves next weekend offers Spurs a clear chance to boost morale, and a meeting with 15th-placed Leeds United looks winnable. Tricky games against Aston Villa, Chelsea and Everton remain potential pitfalls.

West Ham’s remaining schedule runs through Everton, Brentford, Arsenal and Newcastle United, before a final-day meeting with Leeds. Their form — two wins and a pair of draws from their last five games — is the principal factor keeping survival realistic; a similar return over the final five matches would likely secure safety.

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