Tag
Analytics
Analytics
27 definitions
How good the shooting opportunities a team creates are, usually measured by average xG per shot. A team taking loads of shots from bad positions has low chance quality. A team taking fewer shots but from good positions has high chance quality. Guardiola teams typically have excellent chance quality because they work the ball into good areas rather than shooting from distance.
Liverpool's front three in their peak years had excellent chance quality. They weren't just shooting a lot - they were getting into positions where the xG per shot was consistently high, meaning the chances were actually good ones.
Robbie
Feb 10, 2026
Playing most of the game in the opponent's half, pinning them back regardless of possession. You can have lots of the ball but play it in your own half, which isn't territorial dominance. The best teams do both - high possession and playing it in dangerous areas. Field tilt stats track what percentage of the game is played in each third. Teams that dominate territory create more chances and concede fewer.
Manchester City regularly achieve 70%+ field tilt, meaning most of the game happens in the opponent's third. They pin teams back, recycle possession high up the pitch, and rarely have to defend in their own box.
Robbie
Feb 8, 2026
A measure of pressing intensity. Divide the passes you allow by the defensive actions (tackles, interceptions, fouls) you make in the attacking third. Lower number means more aggressive pressing - you're intervening more often. Higher number means you're sitting off and letting them pass. It's a standard stat now for measuring how much a team presses, though it doesn't tell you how well organized that pressing is.
Liverpool under Klopp consistently posted among the lowest PPDA figures in Europe, often below 8.0, meaning they'd make a defensive action for every 8 passes the opponent attempted in their defensive third - a reflection of their relentless high press.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026
A visual showing where shots were taken from, usually with size or color indicating xG. You can see at a glance whether a team is shooting from good or bad positions. Shot maps reveal patterns - a striker who only shoots from inside the six-yard box, or a midfielder who tries their luck from everywhere. Post-match analysis uses them constantly to show what chances were created.
Harry Kane's shot maps show why his goal-scoring is so efficient - the vast majority of his attempts come from high-xG areas inside the box, while lesser strikers have shot maps scattered all over the pitch with long-range efforts.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026
How close together a team stays when defending. A compact shape has small gaps between players and lines, making it hard for opponents to play through. When compactness breaks down - players drift, lines stretch - holes appear. Analytics can measure it by tracking the distance between the deepest defender and highest attacker, or the space between lines. Staying compact requires discipline and fitness.
Atlético Madrid's compactness under Simeone made them incredibly hard to break down. The gap between their defensive and midfield lines was often less than 10 meters, leaving attackers with no space to receive between the lines.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026
Passes that move the ball meaningfully towards the opponent's goal - usually defined as 10+ yards forward or any pass into the box. It separates useful possession from sideways passing. Players who rank high in progressive passes are the ones who actually move the ball into dangerous areas. Useful for spotting midfielders who drive play forward even if they don't score or assist much.
Toni Kroos consistently ranked among Europe's top midfielders for progressive passes, averaging over 8 per game - his ability to break lines with weighted through balls and diagonal switches made Real Madrid's build-up play among the most effective in the world.
Robbie
Feb 5, 2026
The pass before the assist. Player A passes to Player B, who passes to Player C, who scores - Player A gets the pre-assist. It's a way to give credit to players who set up the setup, especially playmakers who create the opening without getting the final ball themselves. Not an official stat but tracked by analytics sites and used to identify creative players.
Xavi's pre-assist numbers at Barcelona were ridiculous. He'd play the pass that let Iniesta play the pass that let Messi score. Without him starting the move, half those goals never happen.
Robbie
Feb 3, 2026
The moment possession changes hands. Attacking transition means winning the ball and going forward before the opponent can organize. Defensive transition means losing it and either pressing immediately or sprinting back. Both sides are vulnerable during transitions, which is why tactical analysis focuses on them so much. Teams that handle these moments well can control games without dominating possession.
Real Madrid's Champions League run in 2021-22 showcased devastating transitions - Vinícius Jr. and Rodrygo would sprint forward the moment Madrid won the ball, catching elite defenses in disarray and creating the chaos that produced countless comeback victories.
Robbie
Feb 3, 2026
A one-on-one contest for the ball between two players. Duels get split into aerial duels (headers) and ground duels (tackles, physical challenges). Duel success rate is a key metric for defenders and midfielders - it shows how often they win individual battles. Some leagues track them obsessively, and certain players like Casemiro and Van Dijk dominate these numbers.
Virgil van Dijk rarely loses duels. His combination of size, timing, and positioning means attackers struggle to get past him one-on-one, whether the ball is in the air or on the ground.
Robbie
Feb 3, 2026
Dribbles that move the ball at least 10 yards toward the opponent's goal or into the penalty area. It separates players who carry with purpose from those who just run sideways. Wingers and ball-carrying midfielders stack up numbers here. A high progressive carry count means you're beating players and advancing the ball, not just keeping possession.
Vinícius Jr. leads Real Madrid in progressive carries almost every season - his willingness to run at defenders and take them on one-vs-one generates the chaos that creates chances for himself and teammates.
Robbie
Feb 2, 2026