CONNOR

This video explains where breaking lines actually starts.
When people hear the phrase breaking lines, they usually think about the pass. The progressive pass between midfielders. The Rodri or Busquets type of action that splits a defense.
But the reality is much simpler.
You break lines before you even receive the ball.
The first step to breaking lines with the ball is learning how to break lines with your positioning.
When teams defend in a compact block, they defend in layers. A forward pressing line. A midfield line behind them. Then the defensive line.
As a number six, there is one simple rule that changes everything.
If your center backs are not under immediate pressure, you should always position yourself beyond the first line of pressure.
Not next to it.
Not in front of it.
Beyond it. Between the first and second line.
This single detail immediately changes the picture for the defense.
When you receive the ball between lines, the midfield line now has a decision to make.
They either allow you to receive freely and turn.
Or one of them has to step forward to press you.
The moment a midfielder steps forward, the defensive block breaks vertically.
And when the block stretches vertically, passing lanes appear everywhere.
Wide players can step inside.
Strikers can receive between defenders.
Your team suddenly has space to play through the structure.
The key detail is that all of this happens before you even touch the ball.
Now compare that to receiving the ball in front of the first line of pressure.
When that happens, you are essentially occupying the center back space instead of the midfield space.
The striker can now press both you and the center back at the same time.
And the midfield line behind him can stay compact and organized.
Which means you have effectively taken one midfielder out of the game before the play even starts.
This is a common trap for number sixes.
When players want to dictate the game, they often drop too close to the center backs to get on the ball.
But by doing that, they actually make the next action more difficult, not easier.
So here is the real cheat code.
Your positioning determines which defensive line will press you.
If you stay close to the forwards, you activate the first pressing line.
If you position yourself between the first and second line, you activate the midfield line.
And when the midfield line steps forward to press, they must sprint vertically to reach you.
That movement stretches the block, exposes momentum, and opens the exact spaces you need to break the next line.
Now the forward pass becomes easier.
The dribble becomes easier.
The game opens up in front of you.
So the real question for a number six is not just:
How do I break lines with the ball?
The real question is:
Which defensive line do I want to activate?
Because once the midfield line steps out, the structure of the block begins to open.
And that is where the game becomes yours to control.

This video focuses on how midfielders unlock the far side of the field.
The key habit is scanning diagonally before the ball arrives. When you check the far side early, you already know whether the switch is available.
From there the next action becomes simple.
You can switch the play quickly, giving your winger more time before the fullback can close the space.
Or you can punish the isolated fullback by playing the ball in behind.
Both actions come from the same detail.
Seeing the far side before you receive the ball.

This video focuses on how to use ball carrying to control the back line.
After breaking the midfield line, the next step is not to pass early.
It is to keep driving and force a decision from the defense.
The key detail is understanding when the back line breaks and how the defender’s body shape tells you when they are no longer in control.
From there, the focus shifts to the blind side, where even simple passes become dangerous because of the time it takes defenders to turn.
The best midfielders do not rush these moments.
They carry, read, and release at the exact moment the defense is exposed.
That is how you turn progression into end product.

This video breaks down how a number six controls the attack through transition moments.
When possession changes, the opponent is still stretched and unorganized, and that’s the window to punish. This is not about keeping the ball, it’s about playing forward immediately and attacking the most vulnerable space.
The key is your first scan.
You scan the furthest option forward, because that gives you the full picture and allows you to play quickly, often in one or two touches.
If the back line is exposed, you play in behind, in stride, and you commit to it. Even the detail matters, it’s better to overhit than underhit, because hesitation kills the moment.
This is the difference between a six who circulates… and one who breaks the game open in transition.