A means of lining up as natural as playing football itself. Born behind the Iron Curtain to Soviet father, Viktor Maslov, the 4-4-2 would soon find its way to Brazil during the 1950s, providing Pelé et al. a platform to win two World Cups in 1954 and ’58.
England followed suit under Sir Alf Ramsey in ’66 before Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest secured back-to-back European Cups in ’79 and ’80. More recently, Leicester City’s 5,000-1 Premier League winning season had the flat-back-four to thank. A last breath, maybe, but a vigilant, valiant, and valid one at that.
As ever with tactical matters, the prevailing sense after Spain’s win at the 2010 World Cup was that British football continued to lag behind the world. In Spain, a 4-2-3-1 was common by…
