Everyone knows what the West Ham midfielder can do from a dead ball but virtually nobody seems to know how he does it
The ritual is almost religious in its precision. He bounces the ball twice on the spot. Spins it around in his hands so the Nike swoosh faces upwards. Places it lightly on the ground. Four steps back at a 45-degree angle. A little shuffle to set his feet. A little wipe of the nose on his sleeve. One last look at the target. And then the tiniest pause, the pause that all great art requires. The fractional instant when the picture is already painted, but James Ward-Prowse is the only one who can see it.
The first movement is actually backwards: a little quarter-step, the recoil that will give him the momentum for what follows. And then the explosion: four lightning-fast strides, the last of which ends with the left foot planted tight and the right leg sprung so far back that the calf is touching the hamstring.
More Stories
Katie Taylor v Amanda Serrano rematch, followed by Jake Paul v Mike Tyson – live
McGinn ends Scotland’s drought with Nations League winner against Croatia
England and Spain draw as respect shines through on path to progress