Orikoru
Tour Winner
I think most people do understand, largely because those terms endure. Everyone knows a 'number 10' means your central attacking midfielder / withdrawn forward. Everyone knows a number 9 is a goalscoring striker, a false 9 is someone who starts up top but drops off and lets others play off of him.Why do pundits and reporters keep referring to outdated positions such as 'Number 10' or 'Number 6' when describing the best position for certain players? Squad number have been in the PL for 30 years so most young fans won't have a clue what they are on about.
Granted, I'm not immediately sure what a 6 would be, as that's generally either a centre back or perhaps a defensive midfielder (although the latter was usually number 4 in England I think). In Brazil a traditional number 6 would have actually been the left back, interestingly, and the defensive midfielder would be the 5. So you do have a point, I think it works with some numbers but not others.

