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So what exactly is Pro Zone used for ?

edited December 2006 in General Charlton
This, according to Mervyn Day


Match analysis tools are used in nearly every professional club in the country. In the smaller clubs breaking down the previous game may simply be a case of the manager or coach taking home the match video and taking notes of the time of the important incidents in the game so that he can replay them to his team.

In the larger clubs, match analysis has become very sophisticated - in fact every player’s movement is tracked, measured and recorded for future use. Championship Manager’s ProZone is a very close replica of the tool used at top clubs, albeit in 2D format.

ProZone basically gives you the opportunity to see every touch, every run and every movement of all the players on the pitch, either as an individual, linked with other players, or as the whole team.

It also allows you to contrast your team with your opponents on each of the analysis opportunities. With regard to your team’s physical performance, it will measure and time each run and give you a series of tables detailing a whole catalogue of physical data which can be used in many ways, such as planning your team’s fitness programme, deciding which players need a rest, and so on.

In my time at Charlton with Alan Curbishley we used our post-match analysis system for the following :

1 To review the previous game
2 As an individual player analysis tool
3 As a sectional analysis tool, eg. Looking at the back four
4 As a physical analysis tool


Reviewing the previous game

This takes place as soon as possible, normally a version is available the next day after 3pm kick offs and 2 days after a night game. If in a hurry, either Alan or myself would take a video of the game home with us to watch and then confirm our thoughts after watching the game again with the 2D animation. In a normal week with no midweek match we would review the game paying attention to the following points :

a) Watch the whole game in 2D animation with the video in picture as well.
b) Highlight all the goals, analyse why and how they were scored, both for and against.
c) Highlight all Set Plays for and against, check what was successful and what wasn’t.
d) Look at individual errors, examining why they happened and considering how can they be eradicated.
e) Look at the overall shape in each department.
f) Analyse whether both the team and the individual players carried out pre-match instructions, and did they have an effect on the result and performance?
g) Review the passing and technical tables - who did what?
h) Review the physical table - who did the most work? Who did the most sprints?


Individual player analysis tool


ProZone can be used for individual players; this is normally done at the beginning of the week, maybe as a reaction to a weekend performance or in the case of a younger player as an aid to his football education. We used it in the following ways:

a) Younger players will have their performances from the reserve games transferred into ProZone, giving the coaching staff a chance to help them improve by video education.
b) If players have hit a bad patch, it is possible to go back over a number of games and compare to see if they are doing anything different. If they are making the same mistake time after time, it is easy to highlight and try to correct. It is also aids us when giving more detailed instruction to a player, rather than relying on the players’ recollection of an incident.
c) As an individual player you may be given detailed instructions on how the manager wants you to play and what your duties are, such as man-to-man marking. With ProZone it’s easy to see if an individual has done his job.

A sectional analysis tool

When one the team’ departments is not functioning well, it is very useful to be able to break the team down into its component parts and see how each is performing as a unit. You then analyse how each part of the team can start to help each others to rectify the problem. When you begin to analyse each department you would consider some of the following:

a) Defence – Depending on which shape you were playing, back four, five or three, you would look at the width, how deep you played, how well full-backs covering positions, defending as a unit (e.g. always being in touch with your nearest fellow defender) holding the line for offsides, how quickly you cleared the box.
b) Midfield – Again, depending on what shape is being played, whether a winger is playing… width would be examined, as would support play, availability to passes, angles, and forward runs into the box. If a striker comes short, is a midfielder making a run beyond him, do they protect the back players defensively, do they make a tackle, can they get box to box?
c) Front Players – You would look at their movement, availability, the timing and angle of their runs, their ability to hold the ball up and bring the midfield into the game, their ability to play up front on their own or as a pair or in a three, depending which system is being used.
d) Team Shape – Compactness when defending, being difficult to play through. Open out when attacking, make the pitch as big as possible to give room to pass and move.


In conclusion, ProZone is all things to all men - it depends what you want out of it.

Comments

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    Interesting to see it's used for the reserves as well - though the fact that their games are now played at Stonebridge Road surely means this is now unavailable, and may account, partly, for how shit they've been this season.

    Or am I just in a bah humbug mood?
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    how does it exactly work though? i mean mechanically.. Does everyone have a tracker sewn into their shirts and theres one in the ball or something?
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