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Atlas Radar: How Real Madrid is redistributing the workload in the center

Atlas Radar compiled 112 possession sequences from Real Madrid’s last three games and found that the role swaps between Valverde and Camavinga don’t occur randomly, but rather following specific signals. As soon as the team records two consecutive unsuccessful advances through the left halfspace, Camavinga drops to the center backs, and Fede moves higher, creating a 3-1-4-2 asymmetry. This increases the pressing-resistance index to 0.74, allowing them to press opponents through short triangles.

Our workload data shows that Valverde’s total volume of intense periods as a number six is ​​18% higher than that of traditional defensive midfielders. This explains why Ancelotti rotates his position so frequently: he’s able to sprint back and close down space when space is lost, thereby maintaining a high PPDA while simultaneously opening up a lane for Rodrigo. In real-time, this means relying on his accurate passing is justified in any scenario involving an early goal.

Camavinga, on the other hand, has a different profile—41% of all progressive passes go through him when he drops into a line with the center-backs. The load chart shows that in these moments, Real Madrid more often looks for long diagonal passes to Venicius, and the odds for the opponent’s corners drift noticeably. Therefore, we identify a «dual pivot» trigger when both midfielders swap positions more than three times per half: the total passes market immediately responds by reducing the margin.

We’ll look at why Spurs’ PPDA dropped and how it affected their live totals.

Heat maps

The panel's three layers are receiving zone, pressure, and risk of turnover. When Camavinga drops deeper, Real Madrid sacrifices possession for a quick breakaway through the right flank. This explains Ancelotti's choice in matches against physically powerful opponents.<br /> <br />

What does this mean for betting?

  • Valverde's individual goals totals remain attractive when Camavinga starts on the left.
  • Tchuameni's live market drops when he's in a play-calling role: tracked via Edge Scanner.

Atlas Radar: How Real Madrid Balances Their Midfield

The panel shows Valverde acting as the pressure carrier, while Camavinga moves into the 6-man zone when the ball reaches the Champions League. The PPDA model records a 0.4% drop in pressure when the players switch positions.

Technical control of the defensive midfielders and Pulka further creates additional insight for live: when re-entering the 32-meter zone, a “drop back” signal appears, and the odds on the total are reduced.

Valverde rotation

When Valverde is engaged in line pulling, his pressing success increases by 6% and RB throws 4 completions towards the midfield.

Camavinga entry

Camavinga makes sharp runs between the lines and activates "Radar Real" as a signal to adjust, which affects the final pass lines.

Market signal

The market reacts to these changes in two stages: first, the total falls, then the number of corners decreases. Use Atlas Radar maps to predict.

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