Article body analysed
Manchester City's Savinho demonstrated the art of traditional wing play as he took on Brentford defender Kristoffer Ajer earlier this month The number of 'traditional' wide players starting in the Premier League is significantly down this season, with the majority of teams deploying inverted wingers and a few starting with wing-backs. Traditional in this sense means a predominantly left-footed player lining up on the left wing or a right-footed player on the right, while an inverted winger would be a left-footed player on the right. Mohamed Salah at Liverpool or Bukayo Saka at Arsenal are prime examples. An average of 11 traditional wingers were used each weekend by this stage last season. That total has now dropped to just 4. 4 this term - a reduction of 60%. Some of that decrease can be attributed to circumstance rather than a complete tactical shift, with new teams and managers entering the division, while the likes of Bournemouth and Everton have tended to buck that trend this season. The Toffees have started the primarily right-footed Iliman Ndiaye on the right on five occasions in order to accommodate Jack Grealish on the left. The Senegalese was usually deployed on the left flank last term. Andoni Iraola has named the left-footed David Brooks on the left and the right-footed Antoine Semenyo on the right on three occasions this term at Bournemouth, although they do tend to switch flanks during matches. In the previous round of Premier League fixtures, only three natural wide players started on the side of the pitch that corresponded to their strongest foot - Manchester City's Savinho, Brighton's Yankuba Minteh and Anthony Elanga at Newcastle. During last season's equivalent round of matches that number was 10. Legendary Manchester United star Ryan Giggs has called for the return of orthodox wing play and believes that modern day football has become 'strangled'. "I hope it comes back, left footer on the left, right footer on the right, " said the 51-year old. "The argument against that is people like [Gareth] Bale, [Arjen] Robben, [Mohamed] Salah, these amazing players, who are playing on the other side and then it is 'how do you play? ', continued Giggs, who was speaking on a 'Player Development the Manchester United way' panel at the Training Ground Guru conference at Old Trafford. "We used to play with two centre-forwards or a number 10 and try to beat the full-back on the outside and get a cross in. Now it is coming inside and linking. "But I hope it comes back. I would like to see two wide men beat players on the outside and get crosses in. " Giggs has not had a management role since standing down as Wales boss in 2022 after domestic abuse charges were levelled against him. He denied the allegations and all charges were dropped after his former partner refused to give evidence at a retrial in 2023. He stood down as director of football at League Two Salford City, the club he used to part own, earlier this year. The former winger is considered one of the greatest players of the Premier League era and no one has provided more assists in the division. "I am a bit biased, " said Giggs. "I was a winger who liked to make things happen and excite the fans. "Sir Alex [Ferguson] used to say 'give the guy who works in the factory something to smile about'. "I liked to pass it forward, to run and try a difficult ball with the outside of my foot knowing the manager wasn't necessarily going to have a go at me. " While the current generation are highly skilled and technical, the criticism is that their individuality has been taken away by micro-management, in an era when every positional change is detailed and coaches are a constant presence on the sidelines telling players where to go. Grealish's experience is often cited as an example - a player who arrived at Manchester City from Aston Villa in 2021 as a British record signing, capable of the kind of magic Giggs possessed, but then had his 'off-the-cuff' style taken away by Pep Guardiola's demand for possession. "You don't like to go back to your time, but it does look a bit strangled with certain quality players, " added Giggs. "There are some, like Josh King at Fulham, and Martin Odegaard, who get me excited as well, so it is not everyone but yes, from when I first started, I think it is a bit more robotic, with the patterns of play and more defensive minded teams. " With conventional wing play seemingly a dying art it appears the inverted winger will be around for a while. Follow your club with BBC Sport Listen to the latest Football Daily podcast Get football news sent straight to your phone Comments can not be loaded To load Comments you need to enable Java Script in your browser 'I'm not in Dubai for money. .. I don't want my kids growing up in England' Women's World Cup: Australia v Bangladesh - live text Premier League: Hincapie returns for Arsenal as Cunha & Fernandes miss Man Utd training John Lennon: From iconic shots to private snaps What connects highwaymen to 'mad Victorian sports'? Day one of the 2025 Grand Sumo Tournament held in London A formulaic look at the fascinating birth of Excel 'I'm not in Dubai for money. .. I don't want my kids growing up in England' Why NFL 'unicorn' is primed for London breakout Why Man Utd's next four games could shape their season How are World Cup favourites shaping up - and who will win? 'Mercedes deals end Verstappen speculation - for now' Ten of retiring Fishlock's best Wales goals. Video Ten of retiring Fishlock's best Wales goals Football, fashion & the rise of the replica shirt The players with points to prove as England reach World Cup In Pictures: Sporting photos of the week Icon, trailblazer & Wales hero - Fishlock's seismic legacy The Australian with a masterplan to get Scotland back to World Cup Beau Greaves - the 'very special' talent who beat Littler Did Man City let De Bruyne leave too soon? All you need to know about 2026 World Cup 'Biggest thing since independence' - Cape Verde celebrates World Cup spot Should F1 TV coverage concentrate on track action? How Bright left her mark on historic Lionesses Three players, 57 goals - who is the best striker? Blowing whistle on racism killed my career - Burrell Captain, player, manager, Mister, number one - Davids at Barnet Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.
