Sports
Why the super sub is one of football’s most valuable roles (and why nobody wants to be one)
Ask any forward tagged with the ‘super sub’ label if they take pride in it, and you’ll get the same response.
“I hate it,” says Adam Le Fondre, who scored eight of his 12 Premier League goals after starting as a substitute. “I have always thought I am good enough to impact the game from the start.”
Some see it as football’s most backhanded compliment. For strikers, the select few that did not get pushed back to midfield or defence in youth football, it’s even more of a kick in the teeth. They have gone through their footballing lives as the leading player, only to become known for their contribution from the bench.
But the truth is that super subs are almost always a pivotal part of wider club success.
“Having four good strikers is a fantastic position to be in,” former Premier League manager Harry Redknapp tells The Athletic. “When you’ve got someone on the bench, you can look around and think, ‘Yeah, he can get me a goal’. When you’re sitting there with nothing on the bench and no goalscorers, it’s a very difficult situation.”
At Tottenham Hotspur, arguably the most successful period of his 34-year tenure in football management, Redknapp developed a reputation for stockpiling and rotating top-class strikers. During his spell in north London, Redknapp had Jermain Defoe, Peter Crouch, Darren Bent, and Robbie Keane, all of whom have scored over 100 Premier League goals, as well as Roman Pavlyuchenko.
“I was lucky that I knew the strikers I had well, and they were great guys and professionals,” says Redknapp. “I’d worked with Crouch previously and known Jermain since he was 14. Strikers are desperate to get on the pitch. They’re bursting to score a goal. The lads I had were not sitting there sulking. They want to get on the pitch to prove they should be playing in the first place — almost to stick two fingers up to you for not starting them. That’s what you want.”
Redknapp valued impact substitutes throughout his managerial career (David Cannon/Getty Images)
As if to prove the point, Defoe, Crouch and Pavlyuchenko are three of seven players to have scored a record five winning goals as a substitutes in the Premier League. Of Defoe’s 162 Premier League goals, 24 came from the bench, another competition record. During Redknapp’s tenure, his strikers fired Spurs to the Champions League alongside Gareth Bale and Luka Modric, the first time they had reached Europe’s premier club tournament since 1962.
This season, Jhon Duran has emerged as the Premier League’s standout super sub. The Colombian forward has scored six goals in nine games in all competitions for Aston Villa this season, with his second-half goal from distance in Wednesday’s 1-0 win over Bayern Munich in the Champions League among the best of a spectacular collection.
His goalscoring return would be outstanding for the 20-year-old if he were Unai Emery’s main man in attack, but he has spent just 28 per cent of the available minutes in the Premier League on the pitch and has scored five of the six after beginning the game on the bench.
Duran has only started three times in the Premier League for Villa since moving from Chicago Fire in MLS in 2023 and is not yet seen as a 90-minute player by the Birmingham club. He is direct, confident to take risks, eager to use his powerful shot from distance, and quick enough to exploit the space left when the game opens up in the second half.
Replacing Ollie Watkins, a ferocious presser who sticks to the game plan and tires out defences, the conditions are perfect for “captain chaos” to profit from the England striker’s hard work.
“(For substitutes), a lot of the time it’s about trying to get them to understand their role within that team,” says Sammy Lander, a dedicated substitution coach and consultant who has worked with various club and national teams, including the USMNT. “Aston Villa are a really good example of that. You can easily identify squad roles within their team.
“I work with clubs where we recognise specific quiet periods for existing starters, and that’s when we target appropriate substitutes. Being deliberate with subs is important. Emery is not just turning around to look at a player, sticking him on in attack and hoping for the best. There are processes.
“For a lot of clubs, it’s still an overlooked area of the game where you’ve got an opportunity to bring in new tactics, players and solutions. When I started my role, I did a big questionnaire with managers and staff and found a recurring answer: that substitutes were often done with a gut instinct. I’d be very surprised if Villa are operating on that level. It appears they have much more of a process with Duran, which is why they’re being so successful.”
Duran had another successful intervention against Bayern in midweek (Michael Steele/Getty Images)
Emery backed up that thinking in his post-Bayern press conference. Before the game he spoke to his assistants and players about Duran’s ability to shoot from long range being a potentially effective tactic to exploit Manuel Neuer’s positioning, as the German ‘keeper often comes out far from his line. He also linked it to a goal he scored against Hibernian in the qualifying rounds for last season’s Europa Conference League, where Pau Torres played a similar pass to his assist for Duran against Bayern.
While no forward is ever completely content with limited contributions from the bench, coming on to benefit from tired legs can often be a route to goals. Le Fondre, who made his name as a prolific striker in the EFL, got his Premier League break in 2012-13 with Reading and scored 12 goals in his only season in the top flight. Of that number, eight were scored from the bench, the joint-fifth highest proportion of substitute goals in Premier League history.
Like Duran, he benefited from the hard work of another forward occupying the central defenders before he often came on and made an impact from the bench. In his case, it was the 6ft 2in (188cm) Russian striker Pavel Pogrebnyak.
“When I’m on the bench, I’ll be watching defenders and assessing their tendencies,” says Le Fondre, 37, who now plays for FC United of Manchester in the seventh tier of English football. “If someone’s not having a great game, I’ll know that’ll be the defender I’ll pick on. I’ll watch for spaces to see if I can exploit them when I get on.
“Naturally, if I was coming on, we were either chasing a game or trying to find a winner. With that mindset, the team changes the way it plays. We’re going to take more risks and put the ball into dangerous areas much more, so I’m obviously going to gain off the back of that. Playing on the front foot and being a little more assertive will always help.”
Le Fondre after scoring the second of two late substitute goals against Chelsea in 2013 (Scott Heavey/Getty Images)
A positive team culture is an essential component in ensuring ‘super subs’ do not become frustrated with their diminished role. Manchester United’s treble-winning squad of 1998-99 had Andy Cole, Dwight Yorke, Teddy Sheringham, and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in attack, four international strikers who could have easily found moves elsewhere to become starters. But Alex Ferguson created an environment at Old Trafford where competition was strong, driving each other on.
“The problem is not when you have too many, it’s when you don’t have enough of them,” says Redknapp. ”The competition fires the players up — the best motivation is when you know ‘If I don’t do something soon, the manager will bring me off’.
“Watkins is playing very well, and he’s a top player, but he must be thinking, ‘Hang on. Every time the other fella comes on, he keeps scoring a goal. How much longer will he keep starting me and not bringing him into the starting line-up?’. It pushes whoever’s got possession of that shirt. They know they’re under severe pressure if the subs come off the bench and score to keep their place in the starting line-up.”
Pioneered by Eddie Jones, the former England and Australia rugby union head coach, Duran’s role in the Villa side is best described as a “finisher”. The concept of starters and finishers, which takes inspiration from closer pitchers in baseball, spins the negative connotations around substitutes and uses positive language, highlighting the essential job players from the bench have in winning matches.
Manchester United’s treble-winning side in 1999 has strong competition up front (Alex Livesey /Allsport)
Former England boss Gareth Southgate adopted the language ahead of England reaching the final of Euro 2020, describing Jack Grealish’s impact using those terms. Eberechi Eze, who came off the bench three times in England’s run to the final this summer, had a similar role at Euro 2024.
“It’s not just about the 11,” Eze told Mail Online in the summer. “It’s about the whole team, the culture, the collective. You win the tournament as a collective.
“It’s putting your ego to the side and focusing on what’s important for the team. If you have that type of culture, which we do, you’ve got the best chance. The manager spoke about ‘finishers’. We call them finishers. We know that. The players that come onto the pitch there is a mentality about it; there’s a way to go about it. That role is important. It’s not just about the 11.”
Still, it’s one thing to adopt that role for a short time during a summer tournament for your national team and another to accept it in the long term at the club level. Le Fondre was willing to put his ego aside to contribute from the bench as Reading unsuccessfully tried to stay up in the Premier League, but was back to playing a more primary role again the following season in the Championship.
Villa have a long-term plan to incorporate Duran and Watkins in the starting line-up, but there is awareness that Duran can only be a super sub for so long. He’s a precocious talent with confidence in his ability to back it up, and suitors will try their hand at his signature — as they did in the summer when he was linked heavily with numerous clubs including West Ham and Chelsea.
“(Duran’s) getting more wanted by the week,” says Redknapp. “His performances from the bench are making clubs look at him for when the next window’s coming around. He’s in a good position right now under Emery, but he won’t want to sit around for a year doing what he’s doing. He’s going to want to start.”
(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)
Sports
Not done yet: Khalil Mack agrees to contract extension with Chargers
Khalil Mack will continue to be a nuisance for opposing quarterbacks for at least one more season.
The Chargers edge rusher agreed to a contract extension with the team Saturday, the team announced. The deal is for one season and $18 million guaranteed, according to multiple reports.
In 12 games last season, Mack, 35, had 5½ sacks and 32 tackles, playing a key role alongside Tuli Tuipulotu and Odafe Oweh in spearheading the Chargers’ pass rush and softening the blow of Joey Bosa’s exit from the unit.
Since joining the Chargers via a trade with the Chicago Bears in March 2022, Mack has recorded 36½ sacks and 195 tackles. The three-time All-Pro and nine-time Pro Bowl selection missed five games with a left elbow injury early in the season, but he was still a force on defense for the Chargers — even when his sack totals were at their lowest mark since his 2014 rookie season.
Mack’s greatest season with the Chargers — and arguably his NFL career — came in 2023 when he had a franchise-record 17 sacks and finished tied for second in the league with four strip-sacks. During the Chargers’ Week 4 win over Las Vegas that season, he recorded six sacks.
If Mack’s decision seems familiar, that’s because it is. Last year, he didn’t re-sign with the Chargers until just before the start of free agency as he mulled whether to return or retire. He was persuaded with a one-year, $18-million deal similar to the one he agreed to Saturday.
Mack is a proven Hall of Fame-caliber pass rusher, but he still hasn’t been part of a playoff win. He’s 0-6 in the playoffs and the Chargers’ disheartening loss to the New England Patriots in the wild-card playoffs probably gave him plenty of reasons to think about his future.
With Mack under contract, re-signing Oweh becomes a clear priority for Chargers general manager Joe Hortiz ahead of the free-agent negotiation period beginning Monday.
Oweh had a breakout season in the aftermath of his midseason trade from Baltimore and is considered one of the top defensive players set to be available in free agency. Oweh had 7½ sacks and 28 tackles in 12 games with the Chargers.
With Jesse Minter leaving L.A. to become the head coach of the Ravens, Mack will be working under new defensive coordinator Chris O’Leary next season. If Mack can stay healthy, he’ll likely continue to be a valuable contributor to the Chargers’ pass-rushing threat.
Sports
Kyle Pitts blasts ‘fake emotion’ from NFL players who skipped Rondale Moore’s celebration of life
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Atlanta Falcons star Kyle Pitts called out the former teammates of Rondale Moore, who tragically died last month from a suspected self-inflicted gunshot wound, after he said only a handful of them showed up to his celebration of life services on Friday.
Moore, 25, was found dead in the garage of his Indiana home on Feb. 21. Police said at the time that the former NFL receiver died of a suspected self-inflicted gunshot wound. News of Moore’s death prompted an outpouring of support from around the league and from those who knew Moore.
Atlanta Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts Sr. (8) against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona on Dec. 21, 2025. (Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)
But Pitts, who became close with Moore after he was traded to the Falcons in 2024, called out what he called the “fake emotion” that was displayed in the wake of Moore’s passing.
“Crazy how only about 6 maybe 7 of your teammates in the NFL showed up for you today smfh,” he wrote in a post shared to his Instagram Stories. “All that talk and fake emotion and nobody want to show up to lay you to rest.. Just at a loss of words.
“Be woke on who your ‘brothers’ really are, who really rock with you all areas of life not just in front of cameras or the public,” he continued, adding “Folks just want to throw up a post and not mean it but we ball yb as Kur said, ‘it might hurt a little’ but we ball.”
Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Rondale Moore (4) and Philadelphia Eagles defensive end Brandon Graham (55) in action during the second quarter at Lincoln Financial Field on Dec. 31, 2023. (Bill Streicher/USA TODAY Sports)
Moore was a standout football player in college for Purdue. The Arizona Cardinals selected him in the 2021 NFL Draft. He played three seasons in Arizona from 2021 to 2023. He was traded to the Atlanta Falcons in 2024 but suffered a season-ending injury.
He joined the Minnesota Vikings in March 2025 and suffered a season-ending injury in a preseason game.
Pitts shared an emotional post about Moore on social media after learning of his death.
“This can’t be real dawg,” he wrote after sharing a carousel of photos on Instagram. “I’m really sitting here crying on even what to say or think bruh.”
Atlanta Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts Sr. (8) against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona on Dec. 21, 2025. (Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)
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“We literally was just on the phone yesterday morning. I’m so hurt dawg, I’d never thought I’d be making this type of post let alone it be about you! Rondale, you’re truly aqt peace now watching over us but I wish you didn’t leave us man. I love you dawg and 4 is going to live on forever.”
Fox News Digital’s Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.
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Sports
Lakers know they have something to prove against the Knicks on Sunday
The Lakers 128-117 winwon, Luka Doncic dominated and then the conversation moved forward, because even though a 128-117 win over the slumping Indiana Pacers on Friday counts all the same in the tight Western Conference standings, it doesn’t say as much about the Lakers as what comes next.
Buoyed by four recent wins over struggling teams, the Lakers are still searching for a statement victory to announce themselves as legitimate contenders in the crowded Western Conference. The Lakers (38-25) are comfortably in sixth place in the West, but just 3-11 against teams that are .600 or better.
Two of the wins came in the first two weeks of the season. The losses have been ugly: an average margin of 19.9 points per defeat.
Now with five of their next six games against teams that are .600 or better — starting with Sunday’s 12:30 p.m. contest against the New York Knicks — the Lakers get a chance to prove their potential to make a playoff run.
Lakers guard Austin Reaves drives to the basket as he’s chased by Indiana Pacers guards Quenton Jackson and Aaron Nesmith Friday at Crypto.com Arena.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
“You play teams that are playing winning basketball and [have] winning records, it definitely can build some confidence in the group,” guard Luke Kennard said Friday. “But I know even some of the close games we’ve lost just recently, I know we’ve done some really good things. … We know what we have in the locker room and in this group.”
Even a day and a win later, the Lakers were still ruing Thursday’s road loss in Denver. With a chance to jump to fifth place in the standings, they let the Nuggets (39-25) open the game on an 11-point run. Denver opened up a 14-point lead in the fourth quarter.
But unlike many of their other losses to playoff-contending teams, the Lakers answered Denver’s run. They cut it to one with 2:05 left before the Nuggets held on for the victory.
“That was a game that we’ve broken throughout the year, in games like that,” coach JJ Redick said. “And they made a number of runs that went to double digits and we just kept playing and had a chance. … I’m confident we’re going to find it. How we’re going to find it, that’s where it’s —”
Redick cut off his own thought as he searched for the words.
“You got to figure it out on a daily basis sometimes,” the coach concluded with a tight smile.
Lakers center Jaxson Hayes scores at the rim in front of Indiana Pacers guard Ben Sheppard Friday at Crypto.com Arena.
(Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
The Lakers figured it out Friday behind a dazzling 44-point performance from Doncic, who leads the NBA with 10 40-point games this season. The NBA’s leading scorer didn’t even play during the fourth quarter of the blowout.
Doncic’s brilliance was more than enough against the bottom-feeding Pacers, who, at 15-48, are playing more for lottery position than postseason hopes. But the Knicks (41-23) have won four of their last five games, including convincing wins over San Antonio and Denver. The only recent loss was a three-point defeat to Oklahoma City.
Lakers forward LeBron James is expected to be available for Sunday’s marquee game after injuring his elbow late in the loss to the Nuggets and missing Friday’s game. Centers Deandre Ayton (left knee soreness) and Maxi Kleber (lumbar back strain) are day-to-day.
Led by Jalen Brunson’s 26.2 points and 6.5 assists per game, the Knicks have the NBA’s third-best offense. Conversely, the Lakers are 21st in defensive rating.
The Lakers emphasized the importance of team defense all season, but Marcus Smart is “the only one that consistently is just doing what he’s supposed to do” on defense, Redick said Friday. Sometimes the former defensive player of the year is forced to overcompensate for his teammates’ mistakes.
Doncic’s defensive lapses are magnified, especially with the team’s recent inconsistencies. But Doncic’s oft-criticized defense has provided some bright spots, Redick said.
When he switches onto the ball, Doncic gives up the lowest number of points per possession among the Lakers’ perimeter players, Redick said. He led the Lakers in rebounding Friday with nine boards, all defensive. Doncic had both of the team’s blocks against the Pacers.
“He’s shown that he can contain the basketball,” Redick said of Doncic’s defense. “He’s obviously one of the best wing defensive rebounders in the NBA. He’s able to generate steals and deflections. And, with some prodding, he’s taking charges as well.”
Doncic has drawn 11 charges this season, the most for a single year in his NBA career.
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