Qatar National Football Team Formation
Starting Lineup
M.Barsham · H.Ahmed · T.Salman · B.Khoukhi · P.Miguel · A.Madibo · K.Boudiaf · Edmilson Jr. · A.Al-Ganehi · Almoez Ali · Akram AfifQatar utilizes a 4-2-4 formation that is built to be highly vertical and aggressive. This lineup focuses on quick transitions and heavy pressure in the final third to force errors from the opposition. By spreading the players across the pitch, Qatar aims to strike rapidly once the ball is recovered.
M.Barsham stays between the posts to command his area and organize the back line. The defense operates as a flat back four with T.Salman and H.Ahmed acting as the wide defenders. T.Salman stays deep to provide cover while H.Ahmed can push forward to add width. In the center, B.Khoukhi and P.Miguel form the defensive core, where they must use their aerial strength and positioning to block crosses and intercept through balls. They work together to maintain a compact block when the team drops back.
The midfield operates as a double pivot to provide balance to the aggressive front four. A.Madibo and K.Boudiaf stay central to shield the defense and break up play. They act as the engine room, with A.Madibo looking to intercept passes and K.Boudiaf working to link the defense to the attack. This duo must track back constantly to cover the space left behind by the advancing full backs. Their main job is to win the ball and immediately find the forwards to launch a counter attack.
The attacking unit is extremely potent, utilizing two wide players and two central strikers. Edmilson Jr. and A.Al-Ganehi occupy the wings, with Edmilson Jr. often looking to cut inside to create goal scoring chances. Akram Afif and Almoez Ali lead the line as the two central forwards. Akram Afif uses his dribbling style and movement to pull defenders out of position, while Almoez Ali works to hold up the ball and finish inside the box. This front four is designed to press high and pin the opposition deep.
One major advantage of this formation is the ability to create wide overloads when the full backs overlap with the wingers. Another strength is the immediate threat of the two strikers, which forces the opposition center backs to stay deep and prevents them from stepping up. This setup also allows for high pressing in coordinated waves, as all four attackers can hunt the ball in the opponent half.
This 4-2-4 lineup is a high risk, high reward system centered on rapid attacking transitions. It is best suited for games where the opponent leaves space behind their defensive line.