Not Your Average Fullback
Let’s start with what it’s not. A wingback is not simply a traditional fullback. For decades, most soccer teams lined up with a flat back-four defense: two central defenders and two fullbacks on the outside. The fullback’s primary job was to defend the wide areas, stop opposing wingers, and, if they were feeling adventurous, occasionally overlap to support an attack. The wingback, however, is a different beast entirely. They are a hybrid player, born from a tactical shift away from the classic four-person defense. While they operate in the same general area of the pitch—the flanks—their responsibilities are far broader and more aggressive. Think of them less as a defender who sometimes attacks and more as a one-person-wing, responsible for the entire vertical
channel from their own corner flag to the opposition’s.
The Tactical Key: A Back Three
The secret to understanding the wingback lies in the formation they play in. You will almost never see a wingback in a traditional 4-4-2 or 4-3-3 setup. Instead, they are the defining feature of systems that use three center-backs, like a 3-5-2 or a 3-4-3. That third central defender is the crucial piece. It provides extra security at the back, creating a defensive safety net. This coverage “unleashes” the wingbacks. Because there are three defenders behind them to cover the central spaces, wingbacks are licensed to bomb forward and join the attack, often acting as the team's widest forwards. When the team loses the ball, they must sprint back to form a flat line of five defenders, turning the 3-5-2 into a 5-3-2. This constant, high-intensity transition is the core of the role.
The Engine Room of the Team
Physically, the wingback position is arguably the most demanding on the field. It requires a rare combination of sprinter’s speed and marathoner’s stamina. They have to cover more ground than almost anyone else, shuttling up and down the sideline for 90 minutes. They are the team’s engine and its primary source of width. In possession, the wingbacks stretch the field, pulling the opponent’s defense apart to create space for central attackers. They are expected to deliver dangerous crosses, take on defenders one-on-one, and even get into the box to score. Out of possession, they must have the defensive discipline and energy to track back, make tackles, and prevent crosses from their own side of the field. A team with lazy or unfit wingbacks will be exposed and overrun in minutes.
Why the Modern Game is Obsessed
The rise of the wingback is a direct response to the tactical evolution of soccer. Coaches are constantly looking for ways to be defensively solid without sacrificing offensive firepower. The wingback offers the perfect solution. A 3-5-2 formation allows a team to defend with five players, making them very difficult to break down. But in the blink of an eye, as the wingbacks surge forward, that same formation can attack with five, six, or even seven players, creating numerical superiority all over the pitch. Managers like Antonio Conte built championship-winning teams at Chelsea and Inter Milan on the back of this system. Thomas Tuchel won the Champions League with Chelsea using a similar setup. It provides tactical flexibility, defensive stability, and explosive attacking potential, all rolled into one. The wingback is the key that unlocks it all.
The Ultimate Hybrid Athlete
So what does the perfect wingback look like? They are a Swiss Army knife of a player. They need the engine of a cross-country runner, the crossing ability of a classic winger like David Beckham, the one-on-one dribbling skills of an attacker, and the tough-nosed defensive instincts of a traditional fullback. Players like Paris Saint-Germain’s Achraf Hakimi and Bayer Leverkusen’s Jeremie Frimpong are archetypes of the modern attacking wingback—blisteringly fast and devastating in the final third. They embody the evolution of the position from a defensive afterthought to a team's primary creative and physical force.











