1. The Quarterback is the No. 10 Playmaker
In the NFL, the quarterback is the central nervous system. He’s not just throwing the ball; he’s reading the defense, changing the play, and orchestrating the entire offense. He is the hub of creativity and vision. Look at Patrick Mahomes or a prime Tom
Brady—their value isn't just arm strength, it's their processor-like brain seeing things others don't. In soccer, this role belongs to the “Number 10,” or the attacking midfielder. This is your Lionel Messi, Kevin De Bruyne, or a classic Zinedine Zidane. They operate in the space between the midfield and the opponent’s defense, much like a QB in the pocket. Their job is to deliver the killer pass that unlocks a stubborn defense, to see the run before the forward makes it, and to dictate the tempo of the attack. When you see a player receive the ball in a crowded area and, with one touch, thread a perfect pass that leads to a goal, you’re watching soccer’s equivalent of a 40-yard dime dropped perfectly over a cornerback’s shoulder.
2. An Elite Pass Rusher is a World-Class Striker
What does a dominant pass rusher like Myles Garrett or Micah Parsons do? They wreck the game. They are singular forces of athletic destruction whose sole purpose is to hunt the most important person on the other team. They can be quiet for stretches, but you always have to account for them, because one moment of their explosive brilliance can end a drive and change the game. The direct corollary in soccer is the pure goal-scorer, the striker. Think of Erling Haaland or a prime Cristiano Ronaldo. Like a pass rusher, a striker is a specialist in a single, vital outcome: putting the ball in the net. They might not be involved in the intricate build-up play, but they come alive in the penalty box. They are a constant threat, occupying the minds of multiple defenders. Their combination of power, speed, and instinct makes them the ultimate game-changers. One missed assignment, one half-second of lost concentration by the defense, and they will punish you. Both are athletic predators who decide outcomes.
3. The Offensive Line is the Defensive Midfield
No position group in the NFL is more crucial yet less celebrated than the offensive line. They are the anonymous brutes who do the dirty work. Their success isn't measured in flashy stats but in the negative space: the quarterback staying clean, the running back hitting a hole. A great O-line, like the Eagles' unit under Jason Kelce for years, provides the foundation upon which the entire offense is built. Soccer’s version is the defensive midfielder, or the “Number 6.” This player is the shield in front of the defense. Their job is to break up opponent attacks, win tackles, and absorb pressure before it ever reaches the back line. Players like N'Golo Kanté or Casemiro have built legendary careers on this thankless, brilliant work. They patrol the center of the park, intercepting passes and making tackles that are just as important as a key pass. Like a great center, they read the flow of the attack and position themselves to stop it. If the flashy playmakers are the stars, the defensive midfield is the stage they perform on.
4. A Shutdown Cornerback is a Lockdown Center-Back
The legend of “Revis Island,” where Darrelle Revis would single-handedly erase the opponent’s top receiver, is a core part of NFL mythology. A shutdown corner like Revis, Jalen Ramsey, or Sauce Gardner has a simple, incredibly difficult job: take the other team’s best aerial weapon completely out of the game. It’s an individual battle of wits, technique, and athleticism played on a massive field. In soccer, this is the lockdown center-back. While soccer is more of a zonal game, a truly elite central defender like Virgil van Dijk or the legendary Paolo Maldini is tasked with neutralizing the other team’s most dangerous striker. They combine size and strength with an almost psychic ability to read the game, positioning themselves to snuff out danger before it materializes. Their one-on-one defending in space is the equivalent of a cornerback running step-for-step with a receiver down the sideline. When a striker who has been scoring for fun suddenly goes quiet, it’s often because they’ve been marooned on an island created by a world-class center-back.
5. Special Teams are Set Pieces
Special teams in the NFL are a game within the game. They are highly structured, intensely practiced moments that can swing momentum in an instant. A blocked punt, a kick return for a touchdown, or a game-winning field goal are all products of specialized personnel and precise execution. They break the normal flow of offense vs. defense and can decide championships. This is the world of soccer’s set pieces—corner kicks, free kicks, and penalties. These are the sport's version of a designed play. When the game is a chaotic mess, a set piece provides a moment of order and opportunity. A perfectly delivered corner kick is like a play-action pass, designed to create a specific mismatch. A bending free kick over the wall is soccer's version of a 55-yard field goal, a moment of incredible individual skill under immense pressure. Just like in the NFL, teams have specialists—players with an uncanny ability to deliver or finish from these dead-ball situations—and they can be the difference between a frustrating draw and a dramatic victory.















