Why Some Teams Win the Ball Back Faster

The Numbers Behind an Effective Press

May 29, 2025

PPDA – The Pressure Meter

Passes Per Defensive Action (PPDA) tells you how many passes a team allows in the opposition’s half before they step in with defensive pressure. A lower number means more aggressive pressing. Leeds under Bielsa once averaged just 8.1. Liverpool hovered around 10.2. Burnley and West Ham? Often above 16. That difference reveals mindset. Low PPDA teams want to win the ball back fast. High PPDA teams are more about structure and containment.

High Turnovers – The Threat Multiplier

Winning the ball is one thing. Winning it high up the pitch is another. High Turnovers track how often a team regains possession close to the opponent’s goal—and what they do with it. Manchester City, in their title-winning 2022–23 campaign, averaged 12.7 high turnovers per match—and turned 30% of them into shots. This is pressing with purpose. Not just disrupting play, but converting pressure into chances.

Sprint Intensity – The Hidden Weapon

Pressing isn’t just about running more. It’s about running right. Sprint Intensity looks at how many high-speed efforts a team puts in per match—and when they do it. According to UEFA’s technical report, elite pressing teams cross the 1000-mark in high-intensity runs per game. But it’s not chaos. It’s choreography. The press is triggered, not random—timed to bad passes, backward touches, or isolated defenders.

Brighton – The Blueprint of Control

Roberto De Zerbi’s Brighton side from 2022–23 is a masterclass in pressing with intelligence. Their PPDA hovered around 9.3. Yet they held over 60% of the ball in most games. They didn’t press all-out—they waited, shaped the opponent’s passes, and struck at the right moment. Brighton proved that pressing isn’t just for counter-attacking sides. You can dominate possession and still press with purpose. Their aggression was calculated, not chaotic.

The Data Says It All

A 2023 StatsBomb study showed that shots taken within 10 seconds of a turnover carry 20–30% higher expected goals (xG) than regular open-play shots. The reason is simple: defenders are scattered, goalkeepers are unready, and attackers are already facing forward. Winning the ball high up the pitch isn’t just about defense. It’s about instant threat and game control.

Final Whistle: Pressing Is the New Playmaker

In today’s game, pressing isn’t reckless energy. It’s precise execution. PPDA shows how fast teams act. High Turnovers show what they do with it. Sprint Intensity fuels the engine. When all three align, pressing becomes more than a tactic—it becomes the playmaker. Pressing isn’t just about effort anymore. It’s about impact. And it’s winning matches.