Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup

Abstract The aim of this study was to analyze the effectiveness of long distance passes performed during the 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup. All 64 matches were analyzed, however, actions performed during overtime were not included in the sample. The study defined long pass as an action made by a player from the defensive midfield aiming at passing the ball to another teammate located on the offensive field. The action result assessment followed these criteria: shots on goal, ball possession maintenance, loss of ball possession and ball possession recovery. Total long distance passes were also considered in the analysis. Throughout the tournament, 4,512 long distance passes were attempted. The main findings were that 59% resulted on loss, 28% on maintenance and 12% on recovery of the ball possession, but only less than 1% resulted in shots on goal (F = 505.5; p<0.001; partial ƞ2 = 0.76). Teams with the highest number of long pass attempts loose ball possession more frequently. There were more long distance passes at the first and at the last 15 min of matches. UEFA and Concacaf teams executed, respectively, the lowest and the highest number of long passes. The major outcome of this study is that long distance passes have low effectiveness due to the high rate of loss of ball possession, rarely creating score opportunities. The more the teams executed long passes, the more the teams lose ball possession.

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Main Authors: Reis,Marcos Antônio Mattos dos, Vasconcellos,Fabrício Vieira do Amaral, Almeida,Marcos Bezerra de
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2017
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1980-00372017000600676
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spelling oai:scielo:S1980-003720170006006762018-02-20Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World CupReis,Marcos Antônio Mattos dosVasconcellos,Fabrício Vieira do AmaralAlmeida,Marcos Bezerra de Observational study Performance Soccer Abstract The aim of this study was to analyze the effectiveness of long distance passes performed during the 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup. All 64 matches were analyzed, however, actions performed during overtime were not included in the sample. The study defined long pass as an action made by a player from the defensive midfield aiming at passing the ball to another teammate located on the offensive field. The action result assessment followed these criteria: shots on goal, ball possession maintenance, loss of ball possession and ball possession recovery. Total long distance passes were also considered in the analysis. Throughout the tournament, 4,512 long distance passes were attempted. The main findings were that 59% resulted on loss, 28% on maintenance and 12% on recovery of the ball possession, but only less than 1% resulted in shots on goal (F = 505.5; p<0.001; partial ƞ2 = 0.76). Teams with the highest number of long pass attempts loose ball possession more frequently. There were more long distance passes at the first and at the last 15 min of matches. UEFA and Concacaf teams executed, respectively, the lowest and the highest number of long passes. The major outcome of this study is that long distance passes have low effectiveness due to the high rate of loss of ball possession, rarely creating score opportunities. The more the teams executed long passes, the more the teams lose ball possession.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaRevista Brasileira de Cineantropometria &amp; Desempenho Humano v.19 n.6 20172017-12-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1980-00372017000600676en10.5007/1980-0037.2017v19n6p676
institution SCIELO
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
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databasecode rev-scielo-br
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libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Reis,Marcos Antônio Mattos dos
Vasconcellos,Fabrício Vieira do Amaral
Almeida,Marcos Bezerra de
spellingShingle Reis,Marcos Antônio Mattos dos
Vasconcellos,Fabrício Vieira do Amaral
Almeida,Marcos Bezerra de
Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup
author_facet Reis,Marcos Antônio Mattos dos
Vasconcellos,Fabrício Vieira do Amaral
Almeida,Marcos Bezerra de
author_sort Reis,Marcos Antônio Mattos dos
title Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup
title_short Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup
title_full Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup
title_fullStr Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the Effectiveness of Long Distance Passes in 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup
title_sort analysis of the effectiveness of long distance passes in 2014 brazil fifa world cup
description Abstract The aim of this study was to analyze the effectiveness of long distance passes performed during the 2014 Brazil FIFA World Cup. All 64 matches were analyzed, however, actions performed during overtime were not included in the sample. The study defined long pass as an action made by a player from the defensive midfield aiming at passing the ball to another teammate located on the offensive field. The action result assessment followed these criteria: shots on goal, ball possession maintenance, loss of ball possession and ball possession recovery. Total long distance passes were also considered in the analysis. Throughout the tournament, 4,512 long distance passes were attempted. The main findings were that 59% resulted on loss, 28% on maintenance and 12% on recovery of the ball possession, but only less than 1% resulted in shots on goal (F = 505.5; p<0.001; partial ƞ2 = 0.76). Teams with the highest number of long pass attempts loose ball possession more frequently. There were more long distance passes at the first and at the last 15 min of matches. UEFA and Concacaf teams executed, respectively, the lowest and the highest number of long passes. The major outcome of this study is that long distance passes have low effectiveness due to the high rate of loss of ball possession, rarely creating score opportunities. The more the teams executed long passes, the more the teams lose ball possession.
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
publishDate 2017
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1980-00372017000600676
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