Chile National Football Team Formation
Starting Lineup
lawrence vigoroux · Fabián Hormazábal · Paulo Díaz · Guillermo Maripán · Gabriel Suazo · Vicente Pizarro · Darío Osorio · Rodrigo Echeverría · Lucas Cepeda · Benjamin Brereton · César PérezChile focuses on a compact defensive block and quick transitions using a 5-4-1 formation. This lineup is built to sit deep and soak up pressure before hitting the opposition on the break. The team aims to deny space in the central areas and rely on the direct movement of their forward to cause trouble.
Lawrence Vigoroux guards the goal while a back five provides a dense defensive line. Rodrigo Echeverría acts as the central anchor, sitting behind the two wide centre-backs, Paulo Díaz and Guillermo Maripán. Paulo Díaz uses his strength to win the header and mark the target man, while Guillermo Maripán covers the space behind when the line steps up. Fabián Hormazábal and Gabriel Suazo operate as attacking wing backs, tasked with providing width and tracking back to help the defensive unit.
A narrow four man midfield sits in front of the back five to squeeze the space between the lines. Vicente Pizarro and César Pérez form a double pivot to shield the defence and recycle possession. Vicente Pizarro looks to pass through the lines from deep to start attacks. Lucas Cepeda and Darío Osorio play in the half spaces as wide midfielders, tasked with pressing aggressively to win the ball high and supporting the wings.
The attacking phase revolves around a lone striker, Benjamin Brereton, who acts as a focal point. Benjamin Brereton works to hold up the ball and wait for support from the midfield. The team builds attacks through the wide areas where Gabriel Suazo and Fabián Hormazábal can overlap the wingers. Lucas Cepeda and Darío Osorio look to cut inside to create central overloads, while the goal is often to hit in behind on the transition or deliver a cross into the box for the striker.
Chile offers significant tactical advantages through its defensive compactness and speed of transition. The five man back line makes it very difficult for opponents to find gaps in the middle, forcing them to play wide. By using wing backs like Gabriel Suazo, the team can quickly shift from a defensive block into a wide attacking threat.
This formation is designed to frustrate superior teams by denying them any space in the final third. It is most effective in games where Chile needs to defend a lead or face an opponent with high possession.