LL21, putting a link to your member system would help me specifically address your room and situation. That said, like most everyone else here I have an opinion, and personal experience in this hobby, best to keep an open mind on all things and don't get suckered into group think.
From what I recall reading, the recording process does not encode low frequency information in stereo, therefore you need only one subwoofer.
From what I recall reading, multiple woofers cause multiple problems, more is NOT better, therefore you need only one subwoofer.
From my own experimentation involving moving my stereo rack and subwoofer around the room: the best thing in your front stage (
area where two main speakers are) is NOTHINGNESS. No rack, no other equipment and certainly NOT a untreated acoustically speaking TV screen.
However you gotta make exceptions in real life, so make the accommodation for the subwoofer front and center and proud of the main speakers.
I can slightly hear the reflection off the sub's cabinet, mine is taller than it is deep, tried setting it on it's back to lower it's profile and it sounds better (
more invisible).
In my opinion a tube shaped, cylindrical or spherical subwoofer enclosure and or smallest box/cube sub that can get the job done would be best.
I have sound absorbing treatments over the sides of my subwoofer but it is a band-aid, and gets me where I want to be.