4-1-2-1-2 (2) Narrow formation
Narrow diamond with interior CMs instead of wide midfielders
Shape preview
This read-only board gives you a clean reference shape before you add coaching detail or animate phases.
Strengths and weaknesses
A quick honest read on what this shape gives you and what it asks you to accept.
Strengths
- Balanced against most opposition shapes
- Full-backs and wingers can rotate without losing structure
- Players understand roles quickly, low teaching overhead
Weaknesses
- Midfield occupation depends heavily on the shape's middle line
- Narrow versions concede width; wide versions concede centrally
- Pressing angles need coordination between strikers and 10s
Key roles on the pitch
The positional groups that make this shape work, use them as a roster-building checklist.
Goalkeeper
1 player
- GK
Defensive line
4 players
- LB
- CB
- CB
- RB
Midfield
4 players
- CDM
- CM
- CM
- CAM
Attack
2 players
- ST
- ST
Common variations
Shapes that share the 4-back defensive line, useful comparisons when you want to keep the back line and change the midfield.
Possession-first
4-1-2-1-2
Diamond midfield with a holding mid at the base and attacking mid at the tip
Possession-first
4-1-3-2
Single holding midfielder with a flat three and two strikers
Defensive-solid
4-1-4-1
Holding midfielder screens the defense while four midfielders support a lone striker
Pressing-compact
4-2-1-3
Double pivot with an attacking midfielder and front three
Take the shape into your own workflow
Open the FC Tactix board to adapt this formation, add coaching notes, animate phases, or present the idea with your own branding.