They form a crucial part of the attack mostly but must transition back into defend, similar to a box-to-box midfielder. The critical cogs in a working 3-4-3 formation system are its wingbacks.
![soccer positions numbered soccer positions numbered](https://backyardsidekick.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/4-4-2-Flat-Midfield.jpg)
The 3-4-3 formation is one of the most commonly used structures in the Premier League as it allows teams to spread wide across the pitch. It’s a great formation to experiment with and is great for teams looking to hold a solid defensive line while employing a prolific strike force. Some might argue that the 4-4-2 formation is too linear, but that’s when teams can switch the two-line structure up and play in a diamond configuration, with a defensive midfielder and a classic number 10, or perhaps a line of three midfielders and an attacking midfielder ahead of them. You can then deploy a ball-winning target man who can bully defenders, hold the ball up, and offload to his line-breaking strike partner, who can sneak in-behind defensive lines to put goals away.
![soccer positions numbered soccer positions numbered](https://soccercoachtheory.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Soccer-positions-numbers-1024x853.png)
As a coach, I always prefer playing two forwards instead of one. One downside is that it doesn’t provide teams with generous width, although it does allow teams to play with two strikers. Yet, the 4-4-2 formation creates greater fluidity in midfield, allowing your central ball-winners can read the game to attack and defend when necessary. Although it does require your team to have two pretty hard-working central midfielders that can transition from box-to-box.