The BB Mailbag: Return of the 4-3-3, Gavi’s comeback, and Barcelona Atlètic prospects
Published on Monday, 16 February 2026 at 8:48 am

Barcelona’s tactical future, the eagerly awaited return of Pablo ‘Gavi’ Martín, and the next wave of talent from Barça Atlètic dominate the latest edition of The BB Mailbag, the club’s new Q-and-A series that puts supporter questions directly to the club’s analysts.
First on the agenda is the evergreen debate over the 4-3-3. Reader quantummoyu suggests that deploying Frenkie de Jong as a lone pivot in that shape—similar to the second-half setup against Celta Vigo—could be revisited whenever Pedri is unavailable, with Dani Olmo dropping slightly deeper to orchestrate play. The idea is tempting: De Jong’s passing range and Olmo’s vision theoretically recreate the midfield artistry that once defined the club.
Yet, while Hansi Flick has flirted with a 4-3-3 variant—using Olmo as a roaming number eight and Fermín López tucking into midfield rather than acting as a second striker—what actually materialises is a front-foot 4-1-4-1. That system worked a treat versus Elche, but it also piles defensive responsibility onto De Jong. The Dutchman, the mailbag notes, is at his most influential when paired in a double pivot, a configuration that has re-energised both him and Pedri in Flick’s preferred 4-2-3-1. With today’s midfielders—Gavi, Fermín, Marc Casadó and teenage revelation Marc Bernal among them—described as “hybrids” who thrive between the lines, the 4-2-3-1 remains the most natural habitat. In short: the romantic 4-3-3 may appear in cameos, but the double-pivot blueprint is here to stay.
Attention then turns to Gavi, whose recovery timeline has supporters on tenterhooks. After two serious injuries in quick succession, the 19-year-old Andalusian is nearing a return, and gavigavi wants to know how large a role he can realistically play between now and June. The answer: expect impact-sub minutes rather than a crash-course reintegration. A fully fit Gavi is viewed as the first reserve for any of the three midfield slots, equally adept as a number eight in the double pivot or as an advanced number ten. Flick’s staff are expected to mirror the caution shown with Marc Bernal—short, managed bursts of 5-10 minutes to rebuild match rhythm and safeguard long-term fitness. The priority is ensuring Gavi enters pre-season at 100 percent, but his mere presence, even in cameos, could tilt tight fixtures Barça’s way.
Finally, reader BarcaDESTiny asks which Barça Atlètic prospects might still taste first-team minutes this season. Three names stand out:
- Tommy Marqués: The winger debuted against Mallorca and earned public praise from Flick for his composure.
- Juan Hernández: An attacking midfielder who has trained with the senior side, though depth on the flanks makes a competitive breakthrough unlikely.
- Jofre Torrents: The left-back impressed during pre-season and in early cup rotations. With Alejandro Balde’s injury history and Gerard Martín’s mid-season shift to centre-back, Torrents is the prime candidate for emergency cover down the left.
The mailbag concludes by reminding supporters that, while silverware remains the priority, integrating home-grown talent remains woven into the club’s identity. Expect Flick to keep one eye on the league table and the other on the B-team training pitches as the campaign enters its decisive stretch.
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Source: barcablaugranes





