Pau Cubarsi and Gerard Martin’s partnership at a glance
| Key Metric | Details |
| Combined Record | 18 starts: 17 Wins, 1 Draw, 0 Losses. |
| Tactical Profile | Perfect symmetry (Right-foot/Left-foot) with elite ball progression. |
| The “Kaiser” (Cubarsí) | 19 years old; 2,000+ passes completed; defensive mastermind. |
| The “Maldini” (Gerard) | 24 years old; converted full-back; 9th most used player in the squad. |
| Flick’s Vision | Prioritizing high-line speed and homegrown “DNA” over veteran status. |
The 2025/26 season has reached its boiling point, and Hansi Flick has made a Solomonic decision, as we say here in Spain.
Disregarding veteran status or the transfer market, FC Barcelona’s defensive core for the decisive stretch now bears homegrown names and DNA.
The duo of Pau Cubarsi (19) and Gerard Martin (24) has consolidated as the German coach’s ultimate vote of confidence.
A “Lockdown” Duo for Barcelona: The numbers validating Flick’s choice
Statistics don’t lie, and in elite football, trust is earned through results. The Cubarsi-Gerard partnership boasts a devastating record that justifies their starting roles over names like Eric Garcia or Ronald Araujo:
- Maximum Efficiency: In the 18 matches they have started together, Barca have secured 17 wins and only one draw (the hard-fought 1-1 at St James’ Park against Newcastle).
- Defensive Security: The numbers back a central defendisve pairing that is yet to taste defeat.
- Clean Defending: Between them, they have an unusually low number of bookings. Cubarsí’s maturity stands out, having received only 3 yellow cards in nearly 40 official matches.
The Tactical Key: Symmetry and Ball Progression
Flick, the architect of a vertical Barça, required two profiles that don’t just defend the box but act as the first step of the attack. Unlike previous experiments, the Cubarsi-Gerard duo offers perfect symmetry:
Pau Cubarsi (Right-footed): The competition leader in successful passes (surpassing 2,000). His ability to break lines is the team’s engine.
Gerard Martin (Left-footed): His natural profile on the left flank balances the buildup. As a converted full-back, he provides recovery speed superior to a traditional centre-back, which is ideal for Flick’s high defensive line.
What started as a joke among fans and the locker room has become reality: Gerard Martin is now frequently compared to one of the greatest defenders in the history of the sport, Paolo Maldini.
In recent weeks, he even received a signed shirt from the Italian after his girlfriend got in touch with the Rossoneri icon’s son.
From “Stopgap” to Pillar: The Metamorphosis of Gerard Martin
While Cubarsí’s rise no longer surprises anyone, Gerard Martín’s case is a triumph of Flick’s pragmatism. Following Iñigo Martínez’s departure and the physical setbacks that have hampered Eric García late in the season, the German coach saw the “modern center-back” in Gerard, who was playing lower tier football fo Cornella just a few seasons ago.
His ability to create from the back and his physical power have made him the ninth player with the most minutes in the squad. He has evolved from a left-back alternative, to the inseparable partner of the “Kaiser of L’Estanyol”, Cubarsi.
With La Liga and the Champions League on the line, Flick has prioritized emotional stability and continuity. While other defenders like Araújo work to regain peak fitness, the Cubarsi-Martin pairing offers immediate performance and an intuitive understanding of the high-press system.
Barça enters April and May with a backline that speaks the same language, does not tremble under pressure, and – above all – doesn’t know the meaning of defeat when playing together.



