Libmonster ID: ID-2725

Reserve players. They sit on the bench while eleven fight on the field. To the fans, they are often "invisible," but any coach knows that modern football is won not by the starting lineup, but by those who are ready to come in at any moment and turn the tide of the match. Forming a reserve team is an art that requires psychological insight, tactical flexibility, and the ability to work with egos. In this article, we will explore how the "dream bench" is created and why the 12th, 13th, and 14th players can sometimes be more important than the stars.

The Evolution of Substitutions: From One to Five

Even in the 1970s, only one substitution was allowed per match. An injury to a leader could bury all hopes. In 1995, the number of substitutions was increased to three. And after the COVID-19 pandemic, FIFA temporarily, and then permanently, introduced five substitutions. This fundamentally changed strategy. Now, a coach can fully refresh the attacking line, introduce fresh defenders, or make a double substitution in the final minutes. "The bench" has become longer, and the role of reserves more significant.

Who Makes the Reserve Team

In modern football, the bench usually includes: a second goalkeeper (in case of injury to the main one), a universal defender (can play on either side), an anchoring midfielder ("clean up" when tired), a creative playmaker (to penetrate the defense), a fast winger (for counterattacks), and a powerful striker (for crosses). But the composition depends on the scenario. If the team is leading, defenders are needed. If they are losing, attacking players are needed.

The Psychology of Being a Reserve: How Not to Go Crazy

Being a reserve is a psychological test. You train like everyone else, but you come out on the field for 15 minutes, and sometimes not at all. Some players fall into depression, others get angry and demand a transfer. The coach's task is to maintain the team's atmosphere. Top clubs practice individual talks, explain roles ("you'll come on at the 70th minute, you'll have freedom"), create competition. Also important is financial motivation: bonuses for successful substitutions.

Tactical Roles of Substitutions

Substitutions are strategic (during the match) and forced (injury). A strategic substitution can pursue goals: refresh the wing (a tired lateral), increase pressure (introduce a second striker), change the scheme (from 4-3-3 to 3-5-2), kill the game (introduce an extra defender). The coach must predict the development of events. Sometimes a substitution is prepared in advance, sometimes spontaneously, after the opponent's goal.

Examples from Great History

Legendary "super-subs" have entered history. David Fairclough ("Aston Villa") and Ole Gunnar Solskjær ("Manchester United") were famous for coming on as substitutes and scoring decisive goals. Solskjær appeared on the field in the 1999 Champions League final and brought victory. Among modern players: Olivier Giroud, regularly coming on as a substitute for the French national team, scored hat-tricks. "Real Madrid" had its own "specialist" — José Callejón. In Russia, remember Artem Dzyuba, who often came on as a substitute and scored important goals.

The Bench as a Competitive Advantage

In tournaments with a tight schedule (World Cup, Euro), a team with a deep bench has a huge advantage. If the French national team has Kamavinga, Tchuamени, Nkunku, and the opponent has players from the second division, the French can "kill" the game in the additional 30 minutes. Therefore, forming reserves is an indicator of the level of the national championship and the work of academies.

Managing the "Discontented"

A star player who is on the bench is a headache. Management must explain to him that he is not "weak," but simply "needed in another role." Sometimes the coach announces in advance who will start to avoid rumors. In 2026, due to social media, dissatisfaction among reserves has become public, and clubs even hire psychologists to work with leaders who do not make the starting lineup.

The Substitute Goalkeeper: A Special Case

The substitute goalkeeper is the most thankless role. He almost never comes out, but must be 100% mentally and physically prepared. An injury to the main goalkeeper can happen in the first minute. Therefore, the second goalkeeper trains like the first one. Good relations between goalkeepers are the key to success. Remember how the main goalkeeper of Germany was injured in the final of the 2014 World Cup, and the substitute came out and played "cleanly".

Youth on the Bench

Experienced coaches often include 1-2 young players in the squad, even if they are not yet ready to play. This benefits their development: they see the level, get used to the atmosphere, feel trust. Sometimes such a junior comes out and becomes a hero (like Mario Götze in the 2014 World Cup final). Forming a bench from a mix of experience and youth is the golden formula.

Forming a reserve team is no less important than building the foundation. A coach who ignores the bench will eventually lose. In modern football, all 20 field players and three goalkeepers must be ready to change the course of the game. Because the champion is not the one who starts better, but the one who finishes stronger.


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Formation of the bench in football // Dodoma: Tanzania (LIBRARY.TZ). Updated: 07.06.2026. URL: https://library.tz/m/articles/view/Formation-of-the-bench-in-football (date of access: 08.06.2026).

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