If Clyne was two footed, he probably wouldn't be a full back. I used to play full back in my illustrious Sunday league career, and it wasn't a position I earned because of my great technical ability.
It is amazing how many of the World's best players were one footed, really one footed. Messi and Maradonna for a start.
If you are a genius with one foot, there is no need to be two footed, but, I would suggest that for a lesser mortal, it is a huge advantage to be 2 footed (or at least not completely useless with the weaker foot). I remember Adam Lallana talking about how he was encouraged to play with both feet (obviously being 2 faced helps as well).
If you are a genius with one foot, there is no need to be two footed, but, I would suggest that for a lesser mortal, it is a huge advantage to be 2 footed (or at least not completely useless with the weaker foot). I remember Adam Lallana talking about how he was encouraged to play with both feet (obviously being 2 faced helps as well).

I was/am very two footed. I actually believe that it held me back at times. I'll give you one example:
As a striker, scoring a goal can be about the slightest marginal advantage. You turn someone, you have a touch to set your angle, you shoot. A one footed player instinctively goes to his stronger side. A genuinely two footed player can be caught thinking about making that decision.
But a genuinely two footed player is less predictable, so you will probably get the extra time you need.
I played full back for a few years and being two ff
I agree, however the disadvantage comes when you are in a situation when it all happens quickly and your unpredictability hasn't given you more time. I used to miss one v ones with keepers more than I should. Coaches (not me) realized that it was because I didn't naturally make an angle to one side and so I was making the keeps job easy by heading straight for him. The number of times I would hit the keeper was frustrating (I do blame Vince Hilaire for that though, as he told me once that I should aim at the keeper as it'd be on target - which incidentally is what Bobby Charlton used to say too).
don't know where that first bit came from... I think it was from a post I started this morning... strange.
Anyway, I started in midfield, moved to left back, then moved upfront, then back in midfield, then in the hole and now on the couch.

If Clyne was two footed, he probably wouldn't be a full back. I used to play full back in my illustrious Sunday league career, and it wasn't a position I earned because of my great technical ability.
This forum software remembers anything you write in the reply box and don't post on the thread. It is both highly convenient and a pain in the arse when you've left the computer alone, come back to switch the thing off [let's say], and then later come back to the very same thread. Anything you then write is merely added to the previous saved writing. Hence your confusion.
On the subject of pitch positions, I played in every position, at one point or another, except goalkeeper. Being only of medium pace, I was quite proud of my ability to get around a full-back, when I played on either wing.
I jinked, as they say.![]()
Clyne started out as a winger. I think one can see why. He has all the pace a winger needs. He just lacks the fine technical skill. But he has a superb tackle on him, so he's one excellent RB.
Gary Neville said something interesting about his position once. He said that RBs [or LBs, of course] are failed players. They either fail at being wingers or CBs. He was a failed CB.

I believe it was Carragher who said that, I think his exact words were "No kid grows up dreaming of being the next Gary Neville" Gary seemed to take offence if I remember correctly![]()