Updated March 2026
Mikel Arteta's Arsenal operates with a positional play system that transforms its shape between defense and attack. The base 4-3-3 morphs into an asymmetric 3-2-4-1 when Arsenal have the ball.
Left-back (Timber/Zinchenko) tucks into midfield when Arsenal have possession, creating a temporary 3-2-4-1. This provides an extra body in central midfield, helping Arsenal dominate possession and progress the ball through the middle third. It also prevents counter-attacks by keeping an extra player centrally.
Saka hugs the touchline on the right while Odegaard drifts into the right half-space. Ben White overlaps outside Saka, creating a 3v2 overload. This triangle generates most of Arsenal's chance creation โ Saka's cutbacks from the byline are a primary source of assists.
Arsenal lead the Premier League in set-piece goals. They use specific zonal-man marking hybrid systems on corners, with designated runners (Gabriel, Saliba) attacking near-post and far-post zones. Nicolas Jover, the set-piece coach, has turned dead balls into a genuine weapon.
Arsenal's pressing triggers include: goalkeeper distribution (full team press), center-back passes to full-backs (trap and press), and slow build-ups. PPDA of ~8.5 indicates aggressive but controlled pressing. Havertz's role as a pressing forward who covers 11km+ per game is essential.