Evolution never stops. As the World Cup showed, 4β2β3β1 has come to replace 4β4β2 as the universal default (18 of the 32 teams played some form of 4β2β3β1 at some stage, with another three fielding a 4β4β2 that perhaps should have become 4β2β3β1) so the system at the very highest level has already begun to mutate. Spain, by the end of the World Cup, had followed what Barcelona did at times last season, what Arsenal seemed to be reaching towards, and set up in a 4β2β1β3.
Now clearly the distinction between 4β2β3β1 and 4β2β1β3 is minimal. It entails nothing more than the central player in the trident pulling a little deeper and the two wide players advancing slightly. In practice, as the wide players look to escape the attentions of full-backs, their depth of position may not alter greatly, but to refer to the system as 4β2β1β2β1 and start introducing a fifth band is probably to begin to confuse the simplicity that gives value to the practice of assigning numerical codes. The shape, if anything, resembles a diamond sitting on a plinth. As I've said before, the designations are of course crude, but they have a use in providing a broad explicatory template.
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The Question: Is 4-2-1-3 the future?
Although little different from 4-2-3-1, it is significant if the central creator plays deeper, for a whole number of reasons
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Spain's striker David Villa David Villa, a more natural forward, can then be played in a wide position. Photograph: Christophe Simon/AFP/Getty Images
Evolution never stops. As the World Cup showed, 4β2β3β1 has come to replace 4β4β2 as the universal default (18 of the 32 teams played some form of 4β2β3β1 at some stage, with another three fielding a 4β4β2 that perhaps should have become 4β2β3β1) so the system at the very highest level has already begun to mutate. Spain, by the end of the World Cup, had followed what Barcelona did at times last season, what Arsenal seemed to be reaching towards, and set up in a 4β2β1β3.
Now clearly the distinction between 4β2β3β1 and 4β2β1β3 is minimal. It entails nothing more than the central player in the trident pulling a little deeper and the two wide players advancing slightly. In practice, as the wide players look to escape the attentions of full-backs, their depth of position may not alter greatly, but to refer to the system as 4β2β1β2β1 and start introducing a fifth band is probably to begin to confuse the simplicity that gives value to the practice of assigning numerical codes. The shape, if anything, resembles a diamond sitting on a plinth. As I've said before, the designations are of course crude, but they have a use in providing a broad explicatory template.
The key differences in the formations
Yet it is significant if that central creator plays deeper, for a whole number of reasons. To begin with, if the playmaker operates close to the holding pair, the team cannot be "broken" into attacking and defensive sections as Holland and Argentina were at the World Cup (which is an advantage for those sides that believe in a possession-based approach). By definition, by being only a short pass away from the creator, the two midfield holders are more involved in the attacking aspect and at least one of them can be encouraged to press forwards at times, as Xabi Alonso did for Spain, and as Seydou Keita does for Barcelona. So immediately the range of attacking options is increased.
There is also an impact on the creator himself. Playing a touch deeper offers him three advantages. He is nearer the two holding players, who can be considered his protectors, which makes it harder physically to intimidate him, while his more withdrawn position means he is farther from the opposing holding midfielders, harder to pick up and thus likely to have more time on the ball (not that Xavi or Cesc FΓ‘bregas really needs more time on the ball; one of the joys of watching Spain or Barcelona recently, or Holland or West Germany of the 70s, is their willingness to give the ball to a man under pressure, trusting his technique to release it and change the angle of attack).
The creator is also more likely to receive the ball facing goal β or at least to have time to turn so he is facing goal β with three team-mates ahead of him (as opposed to one ahead and two alongside) and the potential of others breaking from deep, and so he becomes something more like an old-fashioned playmaker than a second striker who tends to receive the ball with his back to goal. That, in theory, should make the transfer of ball from back to front quicker and thus make a side more penetrative (the example of Chile's 3β3β1β3 at the World Cup suggested that leaving players perpetually high up the pitch helps in terms of pressing and regaining the ball quickly, but can lead to the retention of possession at the expense of penetration). As Juan RomΓ‘n Riquelme points out, a playmaker is only effective if he has players available for whom to make the play.
Which teams have adopted this tactic?
Just as significant, though, is the effect withdrawing the central creator has on the two wide forwards. Rather than having to stay wide to offer a passing option and so as not to intrude on the central player's space, they can drift infield, as Pedro and AndrΓ©s Iniesta did regularly for Spain, and as both and Lionel Messi do for Barcelona. That draws them away from the full-back into more awkward areas, and opens space on the overlap for attacking full-backs, who are liberated by the presence of four essentially defensive central players (two centre-backs and two holding midfielders), plus the creator, who can tuck in if necessary.
If Iniesta is included on the left, Messi on the right and Xavi in the middle, Barcelona effectively have a trident of playmakers, all able to interchange and all operating in positions that drag opponents out of their comfortable lines. Or, a more natural forward can be played in one of the wide positions β David Villa, perhaps, with Zlatan Ibrahimovic as the centre-forward β which offers effectively two playmakers (one of whom, Messi, is devastating as a forward anyway), with a central striker adept with his back to goal, and a forward, one of the best finishers in the world, cutting in from the left, able to take advantage of the space available on the diagonal. And all that with Dani Alves and Maxwell overlapping from full-back.
Although Arsenal seem likely to attempt something similar this season, with FΓ‘bregas in the Xavi role, backed up by Abou Diaby and Alex Song, Andrei Arshavin and Robin van Persie wide, and Marouane Chamakh offering some muscle at centre-forward, it may prove a formation of limited application, purely because the demands on the playmaker are so great: he must combine the ability to see and execute with at least some of the physicality of a central midfielder, even with two protectors. But when a team has a player like that, 4β2β1β3 may be the way to get the best out of him.
A VERY interesting article and one which contains a lot of sense, especially given some of the systems used at the WC.
For me, the key to this is the part about the opposition being unable to break the link between defense and attack, and shows how football evolves, even when we think we have seen pretty much every system.
If we look at last seasons style of play, and then add in Cole on the left, with Maxi on the right, and Gerrard dropping deeper, it's pretty easy to see the benefits of tihs system.
I sometimes long for the old days of the relatively simple 442 - but to be fair, those days are gone, and managers and players alike have to move with the times.
As the article says, the difference is subtle, and for quite a lot of games, Aquilani could be used in one of the 2 "holding" roles (except he wouldn't be holding) and the formation would become 4123, at other times a more rigid/disciplined approach may be the order of the day, and a 4213/4231 would come into play.
442 is quite simply unable to deal with these modern formations, if it's played in the English style with 2 rigid banks of four - there is simply far too much scope for players to get "between the lines" as we saw when England played Germany in the WC.
Gone too with these new (ish) formations is the traditional role of the box to box midfielder - we now live in an age of specialist players who excel at a particular role.
I'm somewhat saddened by this, as one of the joys of watching football, for me, has always been a truly good/great box to box player marauding through the centre - but times change.
What used to be the engine room, is now a tactical battlefield, more like chess than football as I grew up with it.
The question is, is it an improvement?
I believe it is - I love the tactical side of the game, and the way certain players use space as an offensive tool, making decoy runs, or drifting around on the periphery in order to try and pull the opposition out of shape.
Of course many will not agree - but the question is, how would the ever increasing sophistication and coaching methods currently being used be combatted by anything other than doing the same?