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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

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, 4‑2‑3‑1 has come to replace 4‑4‑2 as the universal default (18 of the 32 teams played some form of 4‑2‑3‑1 at some stage, with another three fielding a 4‑4‑2 that perhaps should have become 4‑2‑3‑1) 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 4‑2‑1‑3.

Now clearly the distinction between 4‑2‑3‑1 and 4‑2‑1‑3 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 4‑2‑1‑2‑1 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 Fábregas 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 – or at least to have time to turn so he is facing goal – 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 3‑3‑1‑3 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 Román 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 Andrés 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 – David Villa, perhaps, with Zlatan Ibrahimovic as the centre-forward – 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 Fábregas 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, 4‑2‑1‑3 may be the way to get the best out of him.


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  • MessyTimes MessyTimes

    4 Aug 2010, 10:36AM

    This comment has been removed by a moderator. Replies may also be deleted.
  • GazNo77 GazNo77

    4 Aug 2010, 10:37AM

    Can I be the first poster to get the usual plaudits out of the way, as it'll save space below? JW is: 'fascinating', 'intriguing', 'intelligent', 'a genius'

  • badcompany9 badcompany9

    4 Aug 2010, 10:39AM

    This comment has been removed by a moderator. Replies may also be deleted.
  • Terrierboy Terrierboy

    4 Aug 2010, 10:43AM

    Yes, haha GazNo77, but when there is such a dearth of tactical insight around Jonathan Wilson deserves those plaudits.

    Mr Wilson: I enjoyed you on World Football Phone In on 5Live - any plans to do it again?

  • crustycroquette crustycroquette

    4 Aug 2010, 10:46AM

    You've answered the question yourself over there haven't you Jonathan? Those examples you've used: Arsenal, Barcelona and Spain; they have the means to use such a formation. Not every team does.
    The '1' in the 4-2-1-3, the (relatively) deep-lying playmaker, ought to be someone who can revel in such a role, and the likes of Xavi, Fabregas and Xabi Alonso are quite possibly the best in the world at conjuring something out of impossibly constricted spaces (others like Sneijder, *gasp* Gerrard (of two years ago?), Lampard, Pirlo and Kaka immediately spring to mind) but for it to be considered the future of football formation-wise is a tad far-fetched. What other players could perform the role Cesc/Xavi et al. do? Morten-Gamst Pedersen? David Dunn? Jason Koumas? Pfft.
    Yes, the likes of Barcelona and Arsenal could implement such a system, while City, Real, United, Inter, Chelsea and several other 'big' sides have the financial means to eventually adopt such a style, but the 'smaller' sides, the ones like Blackburn and Bolton and their kin, just can't.

    It can't be considered the 'future' of football, at least for many years to come, when it's become the norm to develop players like this on a more regular basis. I hope this makes some sense.

  • SergeantZim SergeantZim

    4 Aug 2010, 10:47AM

    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

    As Yoda has said to many England managers over the last 900 years:
    "that is why you fail"

  • Brocky74 Brocky74

    4 Aug 2010, 10:55AM

    I think one of the downsides of these formations is that the centre forward can get isolated. I know Torres wasn't at full fitness during the world cup but neither he or David Villa scored when playing as the 1 up front.

  • baronmatt baronmatt

    4 Aug 2010, 11:02AM

    badcompany9

    I think it's actually a little different from 4-3-3, only a little, but nevertheless different. 4-3-3 could essentially mean 3 narrow strikers, one central midfielder and 2 wide midfielders, after all.

    It'll be interesting to see Barca's default formation this season. Torres might just have kept Ibrahimovic in a job thanks to Villa's best performances coming when he was out on the left. To my mind, a front three of Villa-Ibra-Messi is better than Pedro/Iniesta-Villa-Messi, since I'd rather see Iniesta centrally.

    Ultimately, you could almost see Villa as an Henry replacement.

  • zemourinho zemourinho

    4 Aug 2010, 11:02AM

    badcompany9

    No. 4-2-1-3 absolutely has two sitting midfielders so is quite different from 4-3-3 in which wingers defend more and wingbacks attack more.

    That said I suspect formations are a LOT more fluid than we and even football managers make out. I'm not sure formations warrant as many blogs as we devote to them. I welcome any insight on this if anyone has it.

    I don't even know how many formations Chelsea are said to have played last season. Or was that the genius* of their championship?

    *for opposing fans substitute with; shit on a stick/ bored us to death/ long ball tactics.

  • evoclive evoclive

    4 Aug 2010, 11:05AM

    "a diamond sitting on a plinth", nonsense, one has to invoke consideration of at least 9 spatio-temporal dimensions to truly comprehend the intricacies of this innovative tactical development. I for one can't wait - more acid please!

  • matnat matnat

    4 Aug 2010, 11:06AM

    Jonathan,

    Leonardos preferred formation for milan was 4-2-1-3 . The italian press declared this 4-2-fantasista .

    Pirlo and ambrosini were the 2 holding midfielders with seedorf in the hole. Dinho was wide left , pato wide right and boriello in the center.

    At times we`d be spectacular and then we`d revert to our recent geriatric self. I only wish leo had been given more time, the financial backing and confidence from our directors.
    The fact that he managed to rejuvenate not only dinho but also the rest of the milan squad, is a testament to the man management of leo.

  • evoclive evoclive

    4 Aug 2010, 11:12AM

    Coming down now - "is their willingness to give the ball to a man under pressure, trusting his technique to release it and change the angle of attack", you should acknowledge Mick McCarthy saying this during the WC - we know where you get your insights from Wilson!

    Also, did Argentina really play 4-2-3-1, surely more like 4-1-4-1 and with the indiscipline, 4-1-5.

    Incidentally, despite the p-taking Jonathon's a great writer.

  • Theloneraver Theloneraver

    4 Aug 2010, 11:16AM

    I think it was established on another blog that with the movement of players all over the pitch and the interchanging of positions that the only real true football formation is now 1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1

  • VoodooMagicMan VoodooMagicMan

    4 Aug 2010, 11:16AM

    Now clearly the distinction between 4‑2‑3‑1 and 4‑2‑1‑3 is minimal. It entails nothing more than the central player in the trident pulling a little deeper and the two wide players advancing slightly.

    Good grief. You know, Mr Wilson, there is only so much grass to cover on a football field.

    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 4‑2‑1‑2‑1 and start introducing a fifth band is probably to begin to confuse the simplicity that gives value to the practice of assigning numerical codes.

    Which is exactly what you're doing right here

  • matnat matnat

    4 Aug 2010, 11:17AM

    Also the reasons why leo preferred this formation (i think according to the italian media and leo alike) was the fact that he was heavily influenced by the team in which he played in brazil with much success, sao paulo, which was managed by the legendary tele santana.
    He not only won back to back intercontinental cups for sao paulo in the early 90`s but is widely regarded as the inventor of jogo bonito when manager of brazil in 82.

  • eezytiger eezytiger

    4 Aug 2010, 11:18AM

    I tend to think about this by setting the formation up on Championship Manager (01/02 for preference). To repeat the view of Brocky74 above, the forward seems a little isolated unless you can get the "wingers" closer, which makes it more of a 4-3-3 anyway, reliant on exceptionial players

  • JacquesLiverot JacquesLiverot

    4 Aug 2010, 11:21AM

    Not a great fan of this article though i normally am blown away with Jonathan WIlsons tactical insights. Rather than is 4-2-1-3 the future it may as well read; is two brutes and one dainty footed fairy the future. And for natural balance every midfield of 5 whether it be a straight 5 across the middle to staggered 2-3 normally for balance sake have an athlete, a magican and another athlete or a player who can do a bit of both. The relative depth of the magician changes depending on the game situation

  • VoodooMagicMan VoodooMagicMan

    4 Aug 2010, 11:21AM

    I think it was established on another blog that with the movement of players all over the pitch and the interchanging of positions that the only real true football formation is now 1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1

    We also established that verticle formations are a thing of the passed and now Georgian tactical experts are developing horizontal theories. I've heard Owen Coyle has also been working on something similar

  • VoodooMagicMan VoodooMagicMan

    4 Aug 2010, 11:27AM

    Badcompany9

    Non retarded people call it 4-3-3, always have, always will.

    100 recommends.

    Baronmatt

    I think it's actually a little different from 4-3-3, only a little, but nevertheless different. 4-3-3 could essentially mean 3 narrow strikers, one central midfielder and 2 wide midfielders, after all.

    I think you'll find that would mean suicide.
    Never since the days of U-11 football have I witnessed just one centre midfielder.

  • OThilonthehill OThilonthehill

    4 Aug 2010, 11:37AM

    I agree with Jesusdecai: The reason why Spain was quite boring compared to Barcelona was playing with the double pivot.

    Also, Iniesta is much more effective in the central position, there his close control and superb short passes (especially together with Xavi) really make a difference.

    Obviously, in order to play a 4-1-2-3 (with X and I as the "2"), one needs a team with great technique and stamina as well as absolute defensive discipline (in tracking back and pressing). Ibrahimovic fails on the last criterion.

    I can hardly see Arsenal playing that way. First of all, playing Diaby (who does not have much positional discipline) as one of the pivots is insufficient, secondly, they would have to leave out Nasri, who is no winger but an excellent centre-mid.

    I am not sure that Wenger will dare to play the exciting way with a 4-1-2-3 with Nasri and Fabregas centrally, but if Song keeps improving they actually could.

    Similarly, Everton could try playing Rodwell behind Arteta and Fellaini, with Pienaar and Bilyaletdinov flanking. For them, however, a 4-2-3-1 with Fellaini and Rodwell as pivots seems a safer solution.

    Also, it seems as though great teams nowadays try to get by without carrileros (except Essien for Chelsea, obviously). I am curious to see how Jose will use Khedira, especially if he brings in Gerrard (who I always considered to be a sort of über-carrilero) to supplement him.

    All in all, Wilson, I disagree with you. That doesn't happen often.

  • snoopster snoopster

    4 Aug 2010, 11:41AM

    lurkerfor5yrs
    4 Aug 2010, 11:11AM

    The 4-2-1-3 was employed by Benitez at for quite few years now. Wasnt this system supposed to look like shit on the stick?

    It did a bit but then he played a scarily rigid version of it and with the best will in the world, Kuyt ain't Messi and Gerrard ain't Xavi. Then he flogged off the playmaker and replaced him with Lucas and they got worse.

  • Rooto Rooto

    4 Aug 2010, 11:45AM

    The -2-1-3 part looks good when it's:

    Keita - Busquets
    Xavi
    Villa - Ibra - Messi

    It doesn't look like the future when it's:

    Barry - Gerrard
    Rooney
    Downing - Crouch - Wright-Phillips

    As other posters have said, 4213 is the rich man's future. Some of us are still shopping in "442-stretcher"

  • SvensCojones SvensCojones

    4 Aug 2010, 11:53AM

    As you say

    Evolution never stops.

    So surely the question

    Is 4-2-1-3 the future?

    should be HOW LONG will 4-2-1-3 last?

    Not long now until Mike Basset's Christmas Pudding formation comes to the fore.

  • fotobirajesh fotobirajesh

    4 Aug 2010, 11:56AM

    Doesnt Barcelona more play like a 1-2-3

    Toure/Busquests
    Xavi - Iniesta
    Messi - Ibra - Pedro

    and this season it will be

    Busquests
    Xavi - Iniesta
    Messi - Ibra - Villa

    And when Messi also come down to pass around with X and I, it often turns out as
    1 - 3 - 2

  • thegreatstupendo thegreatstupendo

    4 Aug 2010, 11:57AM

    Surely the best exponents of 4-2-1-3 were Mourinho's Inter, with Cambiasso and Zanetti holding, Sneijder creating behind Eto'o, Milito and Pandev.

    Showed that as well as being suited to Barca style possession and pressure based attacking football, it can be adapted to a more 'limited' style.

  • SvensCojones SvensCojones

    4 Aug 2010, 12:03PM

    Rooto

    4 Aug 2010, 11:45AM

    The -2-1-3 part looks good when it's:

    Keita - Busquets
    Xavi
    Villa - Ibra - Messi

    It doesn't look like the future when it's:

    Barry - Gerrard
    Rooney
    Downing - Crouch - Wright-Phillips

    As other posters have said, 4213 is the rich man's future. Some of us are still shopping in "442-stretcher"

    Incredibly easy to snide whilst ignoring a obvious.

    Spain are playing with the same style as they have done for may a year, from their U3s upwards, these players have largely been playing together with that gameplan to back them up

    In international football, the hope is to get a cohesion and understanding together as quickly and efficiently as possible. When done badly we see England - Algeria. Players desperately trying to folllow instruction to the letter but forgetting about the ball. If players are out of form, the team will still have the system to fall back on as did Spain, who's system won rather than the players. At no point did they have to leap out of that comfort zone when met by a team who's style questioned them (i'm not talking a defensive team in Switzerland) a team to challenge them.

    I love international football and the World Cup, believe in its power, (unfortuanately the marketing gurus at FIFA do too) but this World Cup highlighted the massive gulf class between top club football and the worst aspects of international football, lumping people together and hoping for the best.

  • springonions springonions

    4 Aug 2010, 12:04PM

    @lurkerfor5yrs

    The 4-2-1-3 was employed by Benitez at for quite few years now. Wasnt this system supposed to look like shit on the stick?

    Very true, and even though snoopster points out that the quality wasn't quite there, Benitez was still lambasted for playing two holding midfielders - 'what Liverpool team plays two holding midfielders at Anfield' some people would ask. I would say it was very effective with Alonso at the club, and came close to bringing the title.

    Good read.

  • Rob30 Rob30

    4 Aug 2010, 12:09PM

    Those examples you've used: Arsenal, Barcelona and Spain; they have the means to use such a formation. Not every team does.

    In fact, not even every one of those three do, much as I enjoy JW's cavalier comparison of Messi, Iniesta, Xavi and Villa with Chamakh, Song, Diaby and Arshavin.

  • Ronwol Ronwol

    4 Aug 2010, 12:15PM

    theloneraver,I agree and have always said that.These formations are all nonsense.
    Football is a fluid game and players have general positions but its more like water where they find their level.The formations are formed by not only your own team but the other team too as you have to respond to them if they are any good.

  • JesusdeCai JesusdeCai

    4 Aug 2010, 12:26PM

    i still do not know how journalists have not talked yet about the secret of FC Barcelona success. It is the authentic 'Guardiola system'. The key in Barcelona´s game is not the long possesion of the ball but THE HUGE EFFORT THEY MAKE IN ORDER TO GET THE BALL BACK WHEN THEY HAVE LOST IT. They run wild to press and recover the ball, when they have the ball they are resting, when they lose the ball they make an exhausting pressing.

    Guardiola = Pressing to recover the ball.

  • Phrates Phrates

    4 Aug 2010, 12:28PM

    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.

    When they do that, I think they're far closer to operating as a 4-2-3-1 than a 4-2-1-3, because the three playmakers are playing slightly behind the lone striker (Ibrahimovic), starting their runs from deeper. A similar example of such an approach was the United team during the latter part of the 02/03 season, where Solskjaer, Giggs and Scholes switched frequently behind Van Nistelrooy. Of course there the two sitting midfielders were frequently very defensive in their outlook, which as some have highlighted isn't really Barca's style.

  • hojo hojo

    4 Aug 2010, 12:38PM

    I read a report where some foreign trainers were considering revolutionising the team format. There was talk about bringing in "wingers", who would cross the ball to a "centre-forward". He in turn would be supported by two attacking "inside-forwards", who would also have an attacking "wing-half" just behinde them. The whole thing would then be completed by a defensive "wing-half", two "fulkl-backs" and a "centre-half". The only one recogniseable was still the goalkeeper.

    However, I don't think it will ever catch on.

  • blobblobs blobblobs

    4 Aug 2010, 12:44PM

    Barca are definitely 4-1-2-3 and not 4-2-1-3.
    --------Busquets--------
    -----Xavi-----Iniesta-----
    -Messi----Ibra----Villa-

    I'm a United fan and last season Ferguson clearly tried to implement some kind of 4-2-1-3in the big games but the problem is we clearly lack the playmaker in midfield which Ozil would be perfect for.

    ---Fletcher---Scholes---
    -------------Ozil-------------
    Valencia--Rooney--Nani

    or as a second option

    ----Anderson--Carrick-----
    -------------Giggs--------------
    Park--Hernandez--Obertan

  • lurkerfor5yrs lurkerfor5yrs

    4 Aug 2010, 12:51PM

    @springonions

    Very true, and even though snoopster points out that the quality wasn't quite there, Benitez was still lambasted for playing two holding midfielders - 'what Liverpool team plays two holding midfielders at Anfield' some people would ask. I would say it was very effective with Alonso at the club, and came close to bringing the title.

    Good read.

    Couldnt agree more with that. Well, with Alonso on Liverpool played some unforgettable matches in that season. I think now Benitez would have felt vindicated as people started recognising the effectiveness of the system. I believe that Liverpool's were mostly down to off-field issues and loss of form/injuries to the key players.

  • TheWingedCow TheWingedCow

    4 Aug 2010, 12:51PM

    Barça should really not be used as an example here. In fact they were hopeless when they employed a 4-2-1-3 during the first half of Rijkaard's first season. It wasn't till they signed Davids at Christmas, played him as the sole defensive midfielder and move Xavi up ahead to play in the "2" area of a 4-1-2-3 that they started playing well and moving up the table. Since then they have always played a 4-1-2-3 never 4-2-1-3. The one holding midfielder has been either Busquets of Toure. Keita is not a holiding midfielder and plays in the "2" area with Xavi or Iniesta.

  • OThilonthehill OThilonthehill

    4 Aug 2010, 12:52PM

    blobblobs:

    Barca are definitely 4-1-2-3 and not 4-2-1-3.
    --------Busquets--------
    -----Xavi-----Iniesta-----
    -Messi----Ibra----Villa-

    Not definitely. They also play quite a lot of games with Busquets+Keita behind Iniesta-Xavi-Pedro, but this is much less effective, because Xavi and Iniesta are too far away from one another. Maxwell is less skilled than Alves, and hence Iniesta must stay wide to keep width.

  • SonOfTheDesert SonOfTheDesert

    4 Aug 2010, 12:52PM

    jesusdecai:

    Just one thing, FC Barcelona played most of their matches with only one defensive midfielder. Busquets or Touré. It would be 4-1-2-3.

    Agreed, but with reservations. For instance, Busquets plays a more defensive role in the '2' for Spain than Alonso does - but that would leave Spain (and Barcelona) really playing 4-1-1-1-3; that may be technically accurate, but as Mr Wilson states, it rather misses the point of defining tactics numerically. It's a vague approximation of relative positions, rather than an absolute - otherwise all teams would be marked down as 1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1.

  • cable1973 cable1973

    4 Aug 2010, 12:57PM

    The problem Arsenal have with playing two defensive midfielders is that they are not up to the standard of international class DM's.

    Song maybe in the next couple of years, but Diaby constantly gives the ball away and gives away free kicks in dangerous areas. He is not a natural DM.

    If they signed a World Class defensive midfielder it would go a long way to challenging more closely for honours.

    Anthony Annan would be perfect for them.

  • TheWingedCow TheWingedCow

    4 Aug 2010, 1:00PM

    Barça and Spain DO NOT play the same system. They did during Euro 2008 when Senna was the only holding midfielder (Xabi Alsono was a sub) but in the World Cup they pleayed with both Xabi Alonso and Busquest behind Xavi. Barcelona only play one defensive midfielder, Busquets or Xavi or on occasion Keita who is not a holding midfielder and has only played there to fill in on a few occasions.

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