Football glossary: 25 terms every fan should know
By KickoffHQ Editorial · 27 June 2026
Football has a language of its own. Whether you're new to the game or just unsure what a commentator means, here's a plain-English glossary of the terms you'll hear most.
Scoring and results
- Clean sheet — not conceding any goals in a match.
- Brace — two goals by one player in a game.
- Hat-trick — three goals by one player in a game. A *perfect hat-trick* is one with the right foot, left foot and a header.
- Own goal — accidentally scoring into your own net.
- The treble — winning three major trophies in one season.
On the ball
- Nutmeg — passing the ball through an opponent's legs.
- One-two (give and go) — a quick exchange of passes to beat a defender.
- Through ball — a pass played into space behind the defence.
- Cross — a ball delivered from wide into the penalty area.
- The woodwork — the posts and crossbar; "hit the woodwork" means a shot off the frame.
Positions and roles
- False nine — a centre-forward who drops deep into midfield, dragging defenders out of position.
- Target man — a tall, physical striker who holds the ball up and wins headers.
- Holding midfielder — a defensive midfielder who shields the back line.
- Full-back / wing-back — wide defenders; wing-backs push much further forward.
Tactics and style
- Parking the bus — defending in numbers to protect a result.
- High press — pressuring opponents high up the pitch to win the ball back quickly.
- Counter-attack — breaking forward fast after winning possession.
- Tiki-taka — a possession style built on short, quick passing.
Competition terms
- Aggregate — the combined score over a two-legged tie.
- Derby — a match between local rivals.
- Group of death — a tournament group packed with strong teams.
- Relegation / promotion — dropping to or rising from a lower division.
Match situations
- Stoppage (added) time — minutes added on to make up for delays.
- Set piece — a free kick, corner or throw-in restart.
- Injury-time winner — a goal scored deep in stoppage time to win it.
Now put the vocabulary to use — follow the games live in our match centre and read our other explainers.