Menu

Not All Passes Are Created Equal:" Objectively Measuring The Risk and Reward of Passes in Soccer from Tracking Data"

calendar icon Oct 9, 2017 1085 views
video thumbnail
Pause
Mute
speed icon
speed icon
0.25
0.5
0.75
1
1.25
1.5
1.75
2

In soccer, the most frequent event that occurs is a pass. For a trained eye, there are a myriad of adjectives which could describe this event (e.g., “majestic pass”, “conservative” to “poor-ball”). However, as these events are needed to be coded live and in real-time (most often by human annotators), the current method of grading passes is restricted to the binary labels 0 (unsuccessful) or 1 (successful). Obviously, this is sub-optimal because the quality of a pass needs to be measured on a continuous spectrum (i.e., 0 → 100%) and not a binary value. Additionally, a pass can be measured across multiple dimensions, namely: i)risk –the likelihood of executing a pass in a given situation, and ii)reward –the likelihood of a pass creating a chance. In this paper, we show how we estimate both the risk and reward of a pass across two seasons of tracking data captured from a recent professional soccer league with state-of the-art performance, then show case various use cases of our deployed passing system.

RELATED CATEGORIES

MORE VIDEOS FROM THE SAME CATEGORIES

Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International license.