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Analyzing passing networks in association football based on the difficulty, risk, and potential of passes
Author(s) -
Astrid Salte Wiig,
Else Marie Håland,
Magnus Stålhane,
Lars Magnus Hvattum
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of computer science in sport
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1684-4769
DOI - 10.2478/ijcss-2019-0017
Subject(s) - centrality , football , key (lock) , association (psychology) , identification (biology) , computer science , computer security , statistics , psychology , mathematics , geography , botany , archaeology , psychotherapist , biology
This paper investigates the use of network analysis to identify key players on teams, and patterns of passing within teams, in association football. Networks are constructed based on passes made between players, and several centrality measures are investigated in combination with three different methods for evaluating individual passes. Four seasons of data from the Norwegian top division are used to identify key players and analyze matches from a selected team. The networks examined in this work have weights based on three different aspects of the passes made: their probability of being completed, the probability that the team keeps possession after the completed pass, and the probability of the pass being part of a sequence leading to a shot. The results show that using different metrics and network weights leads to the identification of key passers in different phases of play and in different positions on the pitch.

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