A team of experts are analysing every player for every second of every game of the FIFA Arab Cup 2021âą, a ground-breaking first that is leading to a swathe of new performance insights in line with FIFAâs vision of increasing global competitiveness through technology.
Analysts are using the new FIFA Football Language, which has been over two years in the making. Launched on Wednesday, it provides an open resource for coaches and players all across the world, aligning technical expertise and developing all levels of the game. These insights will also be used at the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022âą to better understand trends at the very top of the game.
For each match of the FIFA Arab Cup 2021, one member of a team of analysts, based in Newport, Wales, is assigned to one player on the field to monitor, track and code their individual performance.
This includes noting a playerâs movement, with and without the ball, how many times they break through lines of defence, and how much pressure they put on opposition ball carriers.
This intensive analysis means that over 15,000 data points are collected from every game, giving team analysts, coaches, players, media and supporters new insights to help them better understand and enjoy the game.
This work reflects the vision ofâŻArsĂšneâŻWenger, FIFAâs Chief of Global Football Development, whose vision is for technical observations and football data analytics to beâŻusedâŻtogether to increase and developâŻtheâŻunderstanding of the game and improve the fan experience.
FIFA wants to provide technical directors, coaches and performance analysts with the best possible insights to help them develop talent globally, but to do so, FIFA first needs to understand the status quo of football, both on and off the pitch.
âThe FIFA Football Language is the alphabet of data collection and it helps us to make conclusions [about] whatâs happening on the football pitch and to better understand whatâs happening on the football pitch,â said Wenger.
The conclusions, implementable actions, recommendations and insights will then be distributed to technical experts through various programmes or platforms, such as the new FIFA Training Centre, an online football academy.
The team in Newport, headed by Chris Loxston, Group Project Leader of FIFAâs Football Performance Analysis & Insights team, is made up of 50 football analysts, as well as data engineers, data scientists and performance analysts, and is supported by a team on the ground in Doha as well.
âWe have a team of 25 analysts working on each game, so we have one analyst covering one player for the entire period of the game,â explained Loxston.
âSo, what that allows us to do is go into real, great detail around what that playerâs doing. Typically, a football data set only looks at all the actions around the ball; what we are actually able to do here is look at all the actions off the ball and around the ball as well.
âAn average football data set is somewhere around 2,000-2,500 events per game; we collect in excess of 15,000 data points.”
Former England head coach Steve McClaren has also been in Newport in his role as a FIFA technical expert.
A pioneer of using data analytics during the early part of his career as assistant manager at Manchester United, McClaren is animated when speaking about the range of possibilities these insights will provide for coaches and players, as well as fans.
McClaren also sees these insights as being particularly advantageous in increasing global competitiveness.
âFor the underdog, for the smaller nations, smaller countries, who probably wonât have access to this information, then itâs invaluable and might just give them a critical edge, a marginal gain, weâre talking about small percentages,â said McClaren.
âUltimately, thatâs the vision of FIFA; making World Cups more competitive.
âIf we can give information â and that’s what weâre doing at the moment to the smaller nations, and helping them develop their countries to close the gap â thatâs what FIFA wants. Thatâs their vision.â
After every match at the FIFA World Cup in Qatar, FIFA will provide key data points to all 32 teams and will use key metrics to better inform the television audience during live play.
Recommendations, resources and insights will also be made available to technical experts, coaches and players on the newly launched FIFA Training Centre.
The Football Language is FIFAâs blueprint for how football should be analysed in the future. – www.fifa.com
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