Formations Overview
How the 11 players are organised on the pitch — the numbering system and what each shape prioritises.
A formation describes how a team's ten outfield players are positioned on the pitch (the goalkeeper is not counted). It is written as a sequence of numbers from back to front — so 4-3-3 means four defenders, three midfielders, and three forwards. Formations are the tactical skeleton of the game, shaping how a team attacks, defends, and controls space.
How the numbers work
The numbers always read from defence to attack. A 4-3-3 has a back four (two centre-backs, two full-backs), three central midfielders, and three forwards. A 4-2-3-1 adds a fourth row: four defenders, two holding midfielders, three attacking midfielders behind a lone striker. The total always reaches ten — if it doesn't, the notation is incomplete. Some coaches describe a formation differently depending on whether their team has the ball (in possession) vs. without it (out of possession), so the same side might look like a 4-3-3 when attacking but a 4-5-1 when defending.
Common formations at the top level
The 4-3-3 is arguably the most recognisable in world football — it was the foundation of Pep Guardiola's Barcelona and is used by Spain and Brazil at international level. The 4-2-3-1 dominated the 2010s, giving teams defensive solidity through the double pivot while providing creativity behind the striker. The 3-5-2 (or its variant 3-4-3) has staged a comeback: Italy won Euro 2020 using a fluid 4-3-3 that regularly shifted to 3-5-2 out of possession. More recently, high-pressing 4-3-3 and 4-2-2-2 (the 'double nine' system used by Erling Haaland's Manchester City) have influenced how coaches think about spacing and overloads.
Formations at World Cup 2026
The 2026 FIFA World Cup — the first with 48 teams across the USA, Canada, and Mexico — will showcase an even wider variety of tactical approaches. Spain under Luis de la Fuente are likely to deploy a 4-3-3/4-2-3-1 hybrid built around Pedri, Gavi, and Lamine Yamal. Argentina, defending champions, trust their settled 4-3-3 with the freedom Lionel Messi (or his heir apparent Julian Alvarez) demands. England have oscillated between a 4-2-3-1 and a back three. African sides like Morocco demonstrated at Qatar 2022 that a disciplined 4-1-4-1 can frustrate even the most fluid European attacks — expect similar tactical diversity across the 48-team field.
Why formations matter to fans
Understanding formations helps you see the chess match inside the game. Watch which players overlap on the flanks, whether the midfield is compact or spread, and how quickly a team transitions between attack and defence. When a manager makes a substitution and changes shape — say, from 4-3-3 to 5-3-2 to protect a one-goal lead — that tactical decision is often more decisive than any individual moment of skill.
Related Concepts
Two 45-minute halves, stoppage time, and how a soccer match is organised from kickoff to full time.
The Offside RuleWhy attackers must have at least one outfield defender between them and the goal when the ball is played.
SubstitutionsWhen and why managers swap players — the tactical and physical reasons behind every change.
Set Pieces IntroductionFree kicks, corners, throw-ins, and penalties — the dead-ball situations that decide close matches.