Defensive Shape and Discipline

STATUS: DRAFT

Defensive shape isn’t about the formation on paper. It’s about the relationships between players when the opposition has the ball. Your formations guide (with 1-4-4-2, 1-4-3-3, and 1-4-2-3-1 systems) shows different ways to organise these relationships.

The key analytical question isn’t “are we in the right formation?” It’s “are our player relationships creating the defensive outcomes we want?”


Maintaining Defensive Structure

Element Description
Horizontal Compactness Reducing the width available to the opposition by positioning players closer together laterally. This forces play through congested central areas.
Vertical Compactness Reducing the space between defensive lines, making it harder for opposition players to receive between the lines.
Defensive Height How high up the pitch the defensive unit positions itself, affecting both pressing intensity and space to recover.
Ball-Side Loading Concentrating more players on the side of the pitch where the ball is located, whilst maintaining balance.

Individual vs Unit Defending

Individual Defending Tasks

Unit Defending Tasks


Individual Defending Analysis

The UEFA materials show an example of individual defending analysis: tracking 1v1 situations with outcomes of Won Possession, Forced Back/Sideways, Beaten Outside, Beaten Inside, Other.

From one game example: | Outcome | Result | |———|——–| | Won Possession | 20% (4 out of 20 duels) | | Forced Back/Sideways | 35% (7 out of 20 duels) | | Beaten Outside | 15% (3 out of 20 duels) | | Beaten Inside | 15% (3 out of 20 duels) |

This data tells you whether your individual defenders are winning their battles and how opponents are finding success.


Recovery Positioning

Recovery positioning is what separates good defensive units from great ones. It’s not about preventing all attacks, it’s about ensuring that when defensive actions fail, someone else is positioned to help.

The Cover Shadow

Positioning behind a defending teammate to provide support if they’re beaten.

The Recovery Run

Sprinting back to defensive positions after losing the ball in attack.

The Tracking Run

Following opposition players who are making runs behind the defensive line.

The Help Positioning

Moving to provide additional defensive support without leaving your own area vulnerable.


Analysis Focus


Part of the Learn How To Analyse A Match Course - Defensive Phases Analysis (Draft)