James Whitmore

Football Journalist

James Whitmore

James Whitmore is a tactical writer and longform features journalist based in Manchester, England. He has covered European football for over twelve years, with a particular focus on the Premier League and the Champions League, and his work centres on the question that has driven football writing since Brian Glanville first sharpened a pencil: not what happened, but why. Whitmore writes the kind of piece that asks where a full-back was standing, why he was standing there, and what the manager three thousand miles away in Bavaria did the following week to exploit it.

He read History at the University of Leeds, graduating in 2013, where he wrote a dissertation on the structural decline of English club football between 1985 and 1992 that his supervisor described, kindly, as "more readable than it had any right to be." He followed the degree with the FA Level 2 in Coaching Football, completed during a year in which he ran an under-15 side in West Yorkshire and, by his own admission, learned more about pressing triggers from a fourteen-year-old centre-back than from a year of reading Wenger interviews.

His career began at the Yorkshire Evening Post, where he covered Leeds United through their wilderness years in the Championship and developed a sceptical eye for the relationship between ownership, finance, and the men on the pitch. From there he moved to FourFourTwo as a contributing tactical writer between 2017 and 2022, producing the magazine's long-running "Boardroom to Box" tactical columns and a series of monograph-length features on managers including Marcelo Bielsa, Roberto De Zerbi, and the early Mikel Arteta. He has also contributed to The Blizzard, These Football Times, and the BBC Sport longform vertical.

His areas of expertise include Premier League tactical trends, Champions League knockout dynamics, build-up structure and pressing schemes, the back-three resurgence of the 2020s, manager profiling, transfer market structural analysis, and the long-tail consequences of UEFA coefficient reform.

He writes for FootyGazette because, in his words, "British football writing has rarely needed an independent outlet more than it does right now." Off the page, Whitmore is a lifelong Sheffield Wednesday supporter — a fact he discloses in every piece in which it could plausibly matter — and a slow but persistent five-a-side midfielder. He lives in Chorlton with his partner and a rescue greyhound named Cruyff who has, despite the name, never executed a turn of any kind.

You can reach James at [email protected].

Areas of expertise

  • Association Football
  • Football Tactics
  • World Cup 2026
  • Premier League
  • La Liga
  • UEFA Champions League

Contact: [email protected]

World Cup 2026 BC Place Transport: The Station You Can’t Use

BC Place Stadium in Vancouver showing the retractable dome roof, the 2026 World Cup venue

Vancouver has the most integrated transit network of any 2026 World Cup host city. SkyTrain runs from the airport, the ferry terminal and deep into the suburbs. On paper, BC Place looks like the easiest venue to reach in the tournament. The station nearest the front door sits two minutes from the gates. It is … Read more

World Cup 2026 Houston: How to Get to NRG Stadium When Your City Was Built for Cars

NRG Stadium exterior Houston World Cup 2026

Houston does not blush about its relationship with the automobile. The city sprawls across more than 600 square miles — larger than Los Angeles — and its freeway network is among the most extensive per capita of any major American metro. So when FIFA chose NRG Stadium as one of its four air-conditioned World Cup … Read more

World Cup 2026 Air-Conditioned Stadiums: The Climate Lottery Splitting the Tournament

Interior of AT&T Stadium in Arlington with its retractable roof closed

Four of the 16 World Cup 2026 stadiums are sealed, air-conditioned boxes held around 22C while the football is played. The other twelve are open to a North American summer that has already pushed afternoon temperatures into the 30s Celsius across several host cities. That split is not a footnote about fan comfort. It is … Read more

World Cup 2026 Pitch Problems: Why MetLife’s Grass Is Slowing the Game Down

Soccer match on the natural-grass pitch at MetLife Stadium

The most consistent criticism of the 2026 World Cup so far hasn’t come from pundits. It’s come from the players’ feet. After a run of matches at MetLife Stadium, the venue booked for the July 19 final, France and Brazil internationals have openly questioned whether the surface is fit for the tournament’s biggest games. These … Read more