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Tactics

Third Man Runs — overview

Third Man Runs

A Ballify concept guide — learn what it is, then spot it live.

A third man run is an offensive movement where a player makes an off-ball run to receive a pass after an initial pass has been made between two teammates, exploiting the space created by their interaction. It aims to bypass defensive lines and create numerical advantages in attacking areas.
It's when two players pass the ball between them, and a *third* player bursts into the space that just opened up to receive the next pass.
Third Man Runs — shape
Top teams use it to disorganize compact defenses, create overloads, and penetrate opposition lines by leveraging intelligent off-ball movement and quick ball circulation. This effectively generates dangerous attacking opportunities in the final third.

Two Ways to See It

Data Lens

Data analysis might highlight sequences of play where a specific player shows high "progressive passes received" percentages in advanced areas, often preceded by short, quick passes between two other players. It can also appear in patterns of "event chains" leading to shots where three distinct players are involved in quick succession.

Scout Lens

A scout evaluates a player's spatial intelligence, timing of their runs, and their ability to read the game to anticipate when and where space will open up. They observe the cohesion and understanding between players, noting how effectively decoy runs draw defenders away.

Pep Guardiola's Manchester City, FC Barcelona (under Guardiola), Liverpool, Xavi, Andrés Iniesta, Kevin De Bruyne
Watch for a player making a dynamic run into open space *just as* two teammates complete a short pass between themselves.

Related Coverage

Real coverage from Ballify's intelligence sources, matched to this concept.

Match AnalysisBuild-Up Play

Argentina – Austria: It’s The Messi Show Again For Argentina, Making Back-to-Back Wins In Group J.

Argentina’s identity was on full display through direct attacking play between the lines, creating space for each other to attack with runners. Austria’s exposed defensive approach allowed Lionel Messi to dictate play and punish his opponent. Argentina’s power and intensity in midfield and defence helped to neutralize Austria’s attacking intent. We decided to make this […] The post Argentina – Austria: It’s The Messi Show Again For Argentina, Making Back-to-Back Wins In Group J. first appeared on Between The Posts.

Between The Posts23 Jun 2026 · 3 min
Positional PlayBuild-Up Play

Spain play better when they don't commit everyone to the final third

Spain play better with space. They don’t have to send all ten outfield players into the final third. Spread out and force the opponent to come to them, and then play into the opponent’s low block when you have a lead to protect.

Tactics Journal21 Jun 2026 · 3 min
Match AnalysisPositional Play

Germany – Côte d’Ivoire: Undav’s Double Uppercut Clinches Group E Top Spot (2-1)

The opening period revealed an interesting tactical battle between Germany and Côte d’Ivoire, with the former having an initial advantage. However, it was Côte d’Ivoire who scored the opener, with Yan Diomande yet again appearing central to their attacking threat. The reaction from Germany later in the second half exerted a higher degree of dominance […] The post Germany – Côte d’Ivoire: Undav’s Double Uppercut Clinches Group E Top Spot (2-1) first appeared on Between The Posts.

Between The Posts21 Jun 2026 · 3 min
Player RolesTactical Analysis

Austria split Baumgartner's role, and Jordan showed why it worked

Austria split Baumgartner’s four jobs across Laimer, Sabitzer, Schmid and Posch and beat Jordan 2-1. It worked because all three already run those patterns at Bayern and Dortmund; without existing club-level overlap, redistribution fails.

Tactics Journal21 Jun 2026 · 3 min

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