Losing William Saliba doesn’t just remove a centre-back from Arsenal’s XI; it disrupts the entire tactical ecosystem Mikel Arteta has built around his pace, composure and dominance in duels. To fill that void, Arsenal can’t simply “plug in another defender” and hope for the best. They have to rethink their defensive structure, build new compensations in midfield, and rewire their build-up patterns so the system stays robust even without its most important individual defender. Saliba’s role under Arteta goes far beyond conventional defending. He is the anchor of Arsenal’s high line, the player who allows the team to compress the pitch without constantly worrying about balls in behind. His recovery speed buys time and space for an aggressive press, and his calmness on the ball gives the team confidence to play through pressure in the first phase. When he steps out of the line to confront a striker, the rest of the team can squeeze up, knowing he rarely gets rolled or beaten in open duels...
Why Brazil's Campeonato Brasileiro Série A Operates Year-Round: A Deep Dive into Its Unique Structure.
Brazil’s Campeonato Brasileiro Série A doesn’t just “run long” — it sits at the core of a uniquely dense, almost year-round football ecosystem that blends national league play, state championships, and continental competitions into one continuous rhythm. Instead of the clean August–May arc familiar in Europe, Brazilian football lives on a calendar that feels more like a relay race: one competition handing the baton to the next with barely a pause. Understanding why Série A operates the way it does means unpacking geography, history, economics, and culture, and seeing how all of these forces combine to keep the country’s elite clubs in action for most of the year. At its simplest, Série A itself follows a straightforward double round-robin model: 20 clubs, home and away, 38 matches spread across roughly May to December. That structure would look familiar to any Premier League or La Liga fan. But in Brazil, that national league is only one chapter in a longer story. Before the Brasileirã...