Argentina National Football Team Formation
Starting Lineup
Barco · Molina · Pezzella · Romero · Lautaro · Garnacho · J. Álvarez · Dybala · Mac Allister · E. Fernández · MartínezArgentina looks to play a vertical and aggressive brand of football with this 2-5-3 formation. The lineup focuses on controlling the center of the pitch and using high intensity to win the ball back. This system relies on a heavy presence in the middle of the park to drive the team forward and create chances through quick transitions.
Martínez plays between the posts to organize the defensive unit. Ahead of him, Pezzella and Romero form a narrow defensive line of two central defenders. Romero is known for his aggressive tackling and strength in the air, while Pezzella acts as the covering defender to sweep behind the high line. Because there are only two defenders, the unit must stay very compact to avoid being split by long balls.
A five man midfield acts as the engine room for Argentina. Molina and Barco operate as a double pivot to shield the two centre backs. Molina provides energy to cover ground, while Barco helps to recycle possession. E. Fernández and Mac Allister sit in the half spaces to connect the defensive and attacking lines, with Mac Allister using his passing range to find teammates. Dybala plays as an attacking ten behind the striker to find pockets of space and create opportunities.
The attack uses three players across the front to stretch the opposition. Lautaro plays as the lone striker, acting as a pressing centre forward to harass the opponent's back line. Garnacho and J. Álvarez occupy the wide areas as inverted wingers who cut inside to threaten the goal. This movement creates space for the midfielders to arrive late into the box and allows the team to attack in combinations through the middle.
This formation offers significant numerical superiority in the midfield to dominate possession. The wide presence of Garnacho and J. Álvarez allows the team to isolate wide players in one on one situations. Argentina can also use the high positioning of the midfielders to trigger a press and win it back high up the pitch.
Argentina uses this lineup to overwhelm opponents through central control and high pressing. It is a high risk, high reward formation best suited for games where the team needs to dominate the ball and attack relentlessly.