4-2-3-1 vs 4-3-3
See how the double pivot and central 10 differ from a three-midfield structure when you need balance between security and front-line support.
Shape side-by-side
Read-only boards showing player lines, width, and central occupation. Jump into either formation detail to keep reading.
When to pick which
Two different problems, two different shapes, a short guide to the scenario each structure solves best.
4-2-3-1, strengths
- Balanced against most opposition shapes
- Full-backs and wingers can rotate without losing structure
- Players understand roles quickly, low teaching overhead
4-2-3-1, 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
4-3-3, strengths
- Balanced against most opposition shapes
- Full-backs and wingers can rotate without losing structure
- Players understand roles quickly, low teaching overhead
4-3-3, 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
Related comparisons
Nearby matchups when you want to show a different midfield balance or front-line structure.
4-3-3 vs 4-4-2
Compare a wide front-three structure against the classic flat-four midfield to understand width, pressing angles, and midfield occupation.
3-5-2 vs 4-4-2
Use this comparison to highlight wing-back height, central overloads, and the tradeoff between a back three and a flat back four.
4-1-4-1 vs 4-2-3-1
Contrast a single-pivot structure with a double-pivot setup to coach defensive cover, rest defense, and support around the striker.
Coach the difference with your own board
Open the board to animate the rest-defense line, the pressing trigger, or the build-up detail that matters most for your players.