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The Holding Role: 25 Defensive Midfielders Who Redefined the Game

Ranking 25 defensive midfielders: their roles, defining traits and lasting influence on modern play.

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Defensive midfield is a position built on subtleties. Tackles, interceptions, simple retention and tempo control rarely attract headlines, yet these tasks are essential. This piece profiles 25 players who shaped that role, from early pioneers to modern architects.

Dunga applied European discipline, physicality and pragmatism to Brazil’s midfield. He endured criticism after the 1990 World Cup but as captain helped drive Brazil to World Cup glory in 1994. A fierce tackler and outstanding interceptor, he reshaped how Brazil used the holding role and influenced later midfielders such as Gilberto Silva and Casemiro.

Joshua Kimmich pairs defensive shielding with unusually high attacking output. A winner of countless Bundesliga titles and a Champions League with Bayern Munich, he has recorded over 200 combined goals and assists for club and country.

Javier Mascherano moved from Liverpool to Barcelona and became Pep Guardiola’s trusted option. Known as “El Jefecito” (“The Little Chief”), he filled both midfield and centre back roles and started in Champions League finals in 2011 and 2015, with Barcelona victorious on both occasions.

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Graeme Souness is remembered for fearlessness on and off the pitch. Even as a manager he made headlines by planting a massive Galatasaray flag in the centre circle of rival Fenerbahçe’s ground after winning the Turkish Cup. As a player he enjoyed a seven-year spell at Liverpool, winning five First Division titles and three European Cups.

Zito captained Santos through a dominant era, won nine league titles and back-to-back Copa Libertadores, and scored in the 1962 World Cup final as Brazil retained the trophy.

Pep Guardiola in midfield helped Barcelona win four consecutive La Liga titles and the club’s first European Cup in 1992. His positional awareness and anticipation now underpin his coaching philosophy.

Casemiro’s peak at Real Madrid produced five Champions League titles and three La Liga crowns. He combined tough tackling with accurate passing and goal threat from midfield.

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On leadership and organisation, Obdulio Varela starred in Uruguay’s 1950 success, playing in all four matches and lifting 20 major trophies with Peñarol. Didier Deschamps captained France to the 1998 World Cup and later won Champions League trophies with Marseille and Juventus as a player.

On passing and game control, Xabi Alonso earned praise from Steven Gerrard: “The best passer of a ball I’ve ever played with.” His deep deliveries helped Liverpool and Real Madrid and Spain’s era from 2008–12.

Gennaro Gattuso embodied intensity. He once said, “Sometimes maybe good, sometimes maybe…” but on the pitch he was a World Cup winner and two-time Champions League victor known for relentlessness. Edgar Davids, Fernando Redondo, Falcão, Roy Keane, József Bozsik, Rodri, Claude Makélélé, N’Golo Kanté, Patrick Vieira, Sergio Busquets, Frank Rijkaard and others all appear on this list for blending defensive duty with defining personal traits that altered how the game is played.

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Barcelona make contact over Tottenham loanee Luka Vušković

Barcelona have held “initial talks” over Tottenham defender Luka Vušković, who excels at Hamburg…

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Barcelona have opened contact over Tottenham Hotspur defender Luka Vušković after a breakout loan season at Hamburg. Sky Germany report that Barça have held “initial talks” with the 19-year-old as the Catalan club assess reinforcements for a centre back position that will need bolstering at the end of the campaign.

Vušković signed with Spurs in 2023 but only teamed up with the club last summer, impressing during preseason before being shipped out to the Bundesliga. His spell at Hamburg has been an undisputed triumph: 23 appearances, four goals and a highlight strike that won Bundesliga Goal of the Month for December.

The Croatia international has won Bundesliga Rookie of the Month on three occasions and was named the division’s Player of the Season for the first half of the campaign. Those accolades track with his underlying numbers. He has won 67.5% of his individual duels, 75.2% of aerial battles and has been dribbled past just 0.19 times per 90.

Those defensive metrics combine with attacking contributions and on-the-ball ability that have made Vušković one of the most watched young centre backs in Europe this season. If Tottenham were to face the financial and roster consequences of relegation, clubs monitoring the situation could see an opportunity to pursue promising assets at a reduced cost.

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At Barcelona, squad circumstances have increased the urgency for a central defender. An injury to Andreas Christensen and a contract situation that is unlikely to be renewed leaves manager Hansi Flick with Pau Cubarsí, Ronald Araújo and Eric García as the club’s orthodox options. Even Gerard Martín has been used as an emergency alternative.

Barcelona’s interest in a young, ball-playing centre back aligns with the profile Vušković has demonstrated at Hamburg. Whether initial contact progresses to a formal bid will depend on developments over the closing weeks of the season and Tottenham’s wider status.

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Arsenal

Man Utd’s $150 Million Offer for Valverde as Barcelona Eye an Arsenal Forward

Man Utd has lodged a $150 million bid for Valverde; Barcelona are pursuing an Arsenal forward. More.

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Man Utd has lodged a $150 million bid for Valverde, according to the latest transfer developments. The size of the offer signals how highly the club values a move for Valverde and how significant a negotiation this could become.

At the same time, Barcelona are understood to be pursuing an Arsenal forward. That interest places the forward among the players attracting attention from top clubs and adds another layer to a transfer market already shaped by high valuations.

Taken together, the two stories underline the intensity of current transfer activity. A $150 million bid for Valverde is a headline figure and will demand a response from Valverde’s current club. Meanwhile, Barcelona’s pursuit of an Arsenal forward suggests movement in attacking recruitment plans on the continent.

Both items raise similar questions: how will selling clubs react to substantial offers, what terms might be required to complete deals, and how will negotiating positions change as talks progress? Those are the central issues that will determine whether either transaction advances beyond speculation.

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For supporters and observers, the raw facts are straightforward. Man Utd has put forward $150 million for Valverde. Barcelona want an Arsenal forward. The consequences of those developments will depend on many factors that remain unresolved at this stage, including willingness to sell, the structure of any agreement, and the timing of potential transfers.

Until further details emerge, the two stories sit as clear indicators of transfer-market ambition. Both the bid for Valverde and Barcelona’s interest in an Arsenal forward are stories to watch as the situation unfolds.

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Barcelona

The 25 Attacking Midfielders Defining Modern Football

25 elite attacking midfielders examined for 2025/26: roles, strengths and standout traits. Insights.

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Attacking midfielders with genuine No.10 instincts remain scarce at the elite level. This survey distils the core reasons a selection of those players matter now: creativity, goalscoring, tactical intelligence and adaptability across competitions and systems.

Charles De Ketelaere arrived at Atalanta in 2023 after a difficult season at AC Milan. Gasperini’s setup revived him: he scored 14 league goals and provided 11 assists in his debut campaign while playing a central role in Atalanta’s Europa League triumph. In 2024/25 he followed that with 13 goals and 13 assists, standing out for silky footwork, clever movement and elite off-ball positioning.

Xavi Simons rebuilt his trajectory at PSV in 2022, scoring 22 times and earning Player of the Year before PSG triggered a buy-back clause and later loaned him to RB Leipzig. Now a permanent Leipzig player, Simons has become one of the Bundesliga’s most electric attacking forces.

Pedro Gonçalves has been Sporting’s creative metronome since 2020. Up until the end of 2024/25, despite missing significant time through injury, Gonçalves had scored 87 goals and provided 57 assists for the club. His quiet persona and a brief, uneventful spell at Wolves have obscured his sustained output.

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Giorgian de Arrascaeta continues to flourish at Flamengo, winning the 2025 Copa Libertadores. On his level, Filipe Luís said: “The whole world knows and sees that he could perfectly be in Barcelona, Real Madrid, Atlético, Chelsea … he is high above many’s standard,” Luís once gushed. “He makes the difference.”

Bayern’s Lennart Karl, signed from Eintracht Frankfurt’s academy at 14, became the club’s youngest Champions League scorer with a goal against Club Brugge. “I’m aware of it, of course, but I don’t let it influence me,” he shrugged.

Other profiles charted here include established creators and rising stars: Antoine Griezmann, Morgan Gibbs-White, Eberechi Eze (whose FA Cup final winner against Manchester City earned a move to Arsenal), Christoph Baumgartner—“He’s an incredibly important player for us and organizes a lot, both on and off the pitch,” Ole Werner said—and a string of continental talents earning fresh recognition.

This group illustrates how varied the modern No.10 role is: goal threat, orchestrator, press initiator and game finisher. The mix of proven output and emergent potential explains why these midfielders are so highly prized in 2025/26.

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