Weak Foot in Football: 5 Research-Backed Training Principles
The weak foot in football is the non-dominant foot used less frequently in play. Research shows structured training reduces functional asymmetry and improves bilateral performance.
The weak foot in football is the non-dominant foot used less frequently in play. Research shows structured training reduces functional asymmetry and improves bilateral performance.
Counter-pressing is the immediate coordinated pressure a team applies after losing the ball, designed to win possession back before the opponent can reorganise.
Becoming a football referee in England starts with registering at your County FA, completing the FA Referee Course, and refereeing five assessed matches to earn your qualification.
Becoming a better centre back demands consistent development across decision-making under pressure, defensive positioning, aerial ability, ball distribution, and leadership communication on the pitch.
VAEP, or Valuing Actions by Estimating Probabilities, is a machine learning metric developed at KU Leuven that assigns a value to every on-ball action in a football match.
The Community and Education Football Alliance is the EFL’s competition for post-16 students in football club education programmes, spanning regional divisions across England and Wales.
Football heatmaps display where players are most active on the pitch during a match, using colour-coded zones generated from optical tracking and event data to support club analysis.
A long throw in football is a set-piece delivery covering 25 metres or more, used by specialists like Rory Delap to create direct goal-scoring opportunities in the penalty area.
Only 46% of football practitioners actively use xG. Understanding which KPIs actually drive performance decisions separates systematic analysis from data accumulation.
Football data analysis operates across at least 10 distinct coordinate systems that are not natively interchangeable. mplsoccer handles the translation layer so analysts do not rebuild it from scratch.