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Raymond Mensah

16 hours ago

11 GREATEST BALL-PLAYING CENTRE-BACKS IN FOOTBALL HISTORY [RANKED]

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16 hours ago

11 John Stones 

Career Span: 2011-Present 

 

Many of the names on this list have long since retired, but Manchester City's John Stones represents the modern legacy left by those who came before him. The Barnsley-born defender has risen to improbable heights since breaking into the first-team of his boyhood club, going on to Everton and then City, as well as cementing himself in the England set-up.

All the while, his ability with the ball at his feet has shone through. This was particularly evidenced by the fact that Pep Guardiola opted to move him into midfield for a good portion of City's historic treble-winning campaign in 2022/23, including when he completed all six of his dribbles in the Champions League final against Inter Milan—the most of any player at that stage of the competition since Lionel Messi in 2015.

John Stones' Club Career Stats

Appearances

382

Goals

18

Honours

15

10 Gaetano Scirea 

Career Span: 1972-1988 

 

Gaetano Scirea was an extraordinarily successful footballer. Or, rather, Juventus were extraordinarily successful during the 70s and 80s, in large part thanks to his brilliance. An uncommonly classy defender in an age of rugged defensive tactics, Scirea's sportsmanlike conduct—he was never sent off in his career—was as admirable as his elegance in possession, clever reading of the game and recovery pace on the rare occasions that his intelligent positioning proved insufficient to snuff out opposition attacks.

He is one of just six players—three of whom were his teammates at Juventus—to have won all international club competitions recognised by FIFA and UEFA—not including the relatively newly introduced Conference League—and also picked up seven Serie A titles for good measure.

Gaetano Scirea's Club Career Stats

Appearances

620

Goals

34

Honours

14

9 Leonardo Bonucci 

Career Span: 2005-2024 

 

Leonardo Bonucci is most well-known for his exploits as part of a terrifyingly effective defensive unit at Juventus, alongside Giorgio Chiellini and Andrea Barzagli. The recently retired central defender, who called time on his career in May 2024, brought his expansive style to a defensive unit that was otherwise more rugged in nature, spraying pinpoint long-range passes across the field from the heart of defence.

Like Scirea before him, Bonucci's unique qualities played no small role in establishing Juventus' modern reign of dominance in the 2010s, which saw the defender collect eight league titles—which would have been nine had he not left the Bianconeri to spend the 2017/18 season at AC Milan.

Leonardo Bonucci's Club Career Stats

Appearances

678

Goals

46

Honours

19

8 Gerard Pique 

Career Span: 2004-2022 

 

Gerard Pique is the latest central defender on this list to have played his part in ensuring his team scales the highest heights. In fact, he is one of only four players in history to win the Champions League in successive seasons, having done so with Manchester United and then Barcelona in 2008 and 2009.

Pique paired a commanding physique with an aura of calm on the ball, joining in with build-up play with all the assuredness of a central midfielder while also dominating opponents in the air. Barcelona's trademark passing style required plenty of composure from those in defence and Pique provided that in spades, leading the club to numerous trophies on his watch, including trebles in both 2009 and 2015.

Gerard Pique's Club Career Stats

Appearances

667

Goals

57

Honours

34

3:22 

 
Related 

Virgil van Dijk, Franz Beckenbauer, and Rio Ferdinand all feature...

7 Rio Ferdinand 

Career Span: 1995-2015 

 

Rio Ferdinand is possibly the player who defines the rather nebulous term 'Rolls-Royce defender'. Quibbles about what that phrase actually means aside, it does sum up the former Manchester United legend rather well—a centre-back who possessed a rare combination of power and grace.

 
Related 

Carragher also believes one other current partnership could find themselves added to the discussion in the future.

Ferdinand stood out particularly in England as a unique central defender at the highest level, with his ball-playing style standing in stark contrast to the profile of equally high-profile English defenders of his generation such as John Terry. However, Ferdinand was certainly no slouch as a ball-winner, with his incredible pace and tackling ability in addition to his technical skills marking him out as one of England's best-ever defenders.

Rio Ferdinand's Club Career Stats

Appearances

709

Goals

13

Honours

15

6 Virgil van Dijk 

Career Span: 2011-Present 

 

Virgil van Dijk was, at one stage, a central defender whose myriad qualities and commanding air saw him revered as the best in the world in his position by a margin rarely seen, possessing an aura of invincibility that seemed to affect opposition forwards mentally.

The Dutchman is best known for a patient, considered defending style that, when paired with his exceptional pace and strength, makes him extremely difficult to beat in one-on-one duels. His composure in defensive situations carries through to his ability on the ball.

 
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John Terry, Vincent Kompany, and Jaap Stam all featured as Ferdinand and van Dijk gave their thoughts on the best centre-backs in the Premier League era.

The sight of Van Dijk launching a pinpoint pass from defence into the path of an onrushing Liverpool forward—often Mohamed Salah—is by no means out of the ordinary and was a weapon frequently utilised during Jurgen Klopp's successful reign at Anfield. He even won the UEFA Men's Player of the Year Award—a rare instance of a defender claiming an individual goal ahead of forwards and midfielders.

Virgil van Dijk's Club Career Stats

Appearances

536

Goals

53

Honours

11

5 Alessandro Nesta 

Career Span: 1993-2014 

 

In fifth place is Alessandro Nesta, and he is perhaps the first of the defenders on this list whose name—in certain company—is discussed with an almost deity-esque reverence. The Italian—now head coach of Serie A side Monza—was undoubtedly one of the finest defenders of all time.

His elegance on the ball somehow also extended to his tackling, which he managed to turn into something resembling graceful art at times. Any negative connotations of his defensive ability drawn from that artistic comparison are misplaced, however. Nesta was one of the most physically dominant defenders in football history, capable of man-marking a forward into non-existence and keeping pace with even the speediest striker.

Alessandro Nesta's Club Career Stats

Appearances

624

Goals

13

Honours

17

4 Bobby Moore 

Career Span: 1958-1983 

 

The image of Bobby Moore holding the World Cup trophy aloft in 1966 is the most iconic in the history of the England national team, inspiring a longing for a repeat within the nation that has yet to be sated.

Moore's role in the team as captain entitled him to raise the trophy and thus be etched into footballing folklore. His performance in the final, while overshadowed by Geoff Hurst's hat-trick, encapsulated his enormous class as a ball-playing defender; it is less commonly remembered that Moore actually assisted the first and third of Hurst's goals.

That calmness under pressure and ability to deliver on the biggest stage, coupled with his immense quality both with and without the ball, make him one of the best ball-playing centre-backs ever to play the game.

Bobby Moore's Club Career Stats

Appearances

795

Goals

28

Honours

4

3 Ronald Koeman 

Career Span: 1980-1997 

 

Ronald Koeman is one of the most unique players in football history, redefining the expectations of what it meant to be a central defender. To speak of the Dutchman's ability on the ball alone is to do him a disservice. This is a player who netted over 200 career goals (a scoring rate of roughly one goal every three games) despite spending the majority of his time in defence, in part due to his exceptional quality from set-pieces.

The pinnacle of his career came in 1988, when he helped PSV Eindhoven to a treble before leading the Netherlands to victory in the European Championships that summer—he is one of just five players to win an international trophy the summer after a treble-winning campaign at club level.

Ronald Koeman's Club Career Stats

Appearances

685

Goals

238

Honours

18

 
Related 

From Italian greats like Franco Baresi to modern-day legends such as Virgil Van Dijk, here are the most elegant defenders of all time. 

2 Franco Baresi 

Career Span: 1977-1997 

 

One-club man and AC Milan legend Franco Baresi stands at just 5'9" and yet, he not only forged a successful career as a central defender at the highest level, he became one of the best to ever play in the position.

Despite his small stature for a centre-back, Baresi was surprisingly effective in the air and did not lack pace or physical power. However, it was his elegance and outstanding technical skill that set him apart from his peers, often making forays forward into midfield with the ball and providing an extra passing option, possessing all the qualities of a deep-lying playmaker and a central defender.

In addition, he served as captain of an extremely successful AC Milan team for 15 years, showcasing his leadership qualities alongside his individual excellence as a player.

Franco Baresi's Club Career Stats

Appearances

719

Goals

33

Honours

19

1 Franz Beckenbauer 

Career Span: 1964-1983 

 

The late, great Franz Beckenbauer was a footballer of rare quality. The German is one of just three defenders to have won the Ballon d'Or and the only defender to ever win it twice, joining an elite group of just 10 players in football history with more than one Ballon d'Or to their name.

It takes a special kind of defender to be honoured in that way alongside the great forwards and midfielders of the game and Beckenbauer certainly was, revolutionising the role of a central defender and pioneering a new interpretation of the position.

He possessed all the defensive qualities needed to have been a memorably elite centre-back but, in addition, he was arguably the first player at the highest level to meaningfully impact the attack and wider game in possession from the centre of defence, driving forward with the ball and playing one-twos with teammates—almost like having a playmaking box-to-box defender. Even in the modern age of ball-playing defenders, Beckenbauer stands alone at the top.

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Raymond Mensah

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