A measure of how aggressively and consistently a team presses the opposition in possession, typically quantified by metrics like PPDA and defensive actions per minute.
Pressing intensity is quantified through several metrics. PPDA (Passes Per Defensive Action) is the most widely used: a lower PPDA indicates a higher pressing team. A PPDA of 6–8 represents aggressive pressing (most top pressing teams in European football); 10–14 represents moderate pressing; above 14 is a low-pressing or sitting-deep approach.
Other pressing metrics include defensive actions in the opposition half per 90 minutes, percentage of defensive actions in the attacking third, and pressing success rate (how often pressing results in winning the ball within 5 seconds). These provide a richer picture than PPDA alone.
High-pressing teams create turnovers in dangerous areas, generating high-quality counter-attack chances. They also exhaust opponents physically over 90 minutes, which is why pressing teams often create their best chances in the final 20 minutes. For betting models, adjusting probability estimates based on pressing intensity (particularly for teams facing high-press opponents for the first time) captures value the market does not fully price.
PPDA (Passes Per Defensive Action)
A measure of pressing intensity — how many opposition passes are allowed before a defensive action is made in the opponent's half.
Gegenpressing
An immediate, coordinated counter-press immediately after losing possession — attempting to win the ball back within seconds before the opposition can organise.
Transitions
The moments of positional switch between attack and defence — teams that excel in transitions create high-xG chances from turnovers at pace.
Pressing Triggers
Specific cues that signal to a team when to initiate a high press — such as a back pass to the goalkeeper, a miscontrol, or a pass to a less technical player.
For informational and educational purposes only. Disclaimer