Why Understanding Your Stats Matters
Pro Clubs gives you a wealth of statistics after every match, but most players only look at goals and assists. The reality is that the less glamorous stats — pass accuracy, interceptions, average rating — tell you far more about how you're actually performing and what you need to improve.
This guide breaks down every key stat in Pro Clubs, explains what good numbers look like for each position, and shows you how to use Pro Clubs Tracker to identify weaknesses and track improvement over time.
Average Rating
Your average match rating is a score out of 10 that represents your overall performance. It's calculated by the game engine based on everything you do — passes completed, goals scored, tackles won, interceptions, dribbles, shots on target, and more. Negative actions like losing the ball, committing fouls, and missing chances reduce your rating.
What's a good rating?
Below 6.0
Poor — you're making too many mistakes
6.0 - 6.5
Below average — room for improvement
6.5 - 7.0
Average — solid but not impactful
7.0 - 7.5
Good — consistently contributing
7.5 - 8.0
Very good — key player performance
8.0+
Excellent — man of the match level
Note that ratings vary by position. Strikers who score tend to get higher ratings than CDMs who make interceptions, even though both contributions are equally valuable. Don't compare your CDM rating with your striker's — a 7.0 for a CDM is the equivalent of a 7.5 for a striker.
Pass Accuracy
Pass accuracy shows the percentage of your passes that reached a teammate. It's one of the most important stats for midfielders because it reflects how well you're keeping possession and contributing to build-up play.
What's good? For midfielders, aim for 80%+. For defenders, 75%+ is solid (they attempt more long balls which have a lower completion rate). Strikers can have lower pass accuracy (70%+) because they're attempting riskier passes in the final third.
How to improve: Don't force through balls when they're not on. A sideways pass that keeps possession is better than a through ball that gets intercepted. Use the radar to check for teammates before passing, and avoid blind crosses into the box.
Goals Per Game and Assists Per Game
These ratios tell you how productive you are offensively. They're more useful than total goals or assists because they account for how many matches you've played.
Strikers: A good goals-per-game ratio is 0.7+ (roughly 7 goals every 10 matches). Elite strikers hit 1.0+, but this is rare in competitive divisions.
CAMs and Wingers: Look at combined goals + assists per game. 0.5+ combined is good, meaning you're directly contributing to a goal every two matches.
Midfielders: For CMs and CDMs, 0.2-0.3 assists per game is solid. Your value comes from other stats (interceptions, pass accuracy), not direct goal contributions.
Tackles and Interceptions
These are the defensive equivalent of goals and assists. Tackles show how many times you've won the ball through a challenge, while interceptions show how many passes you've cut out.
Interceptions are more valuable than tackles. An interception means you read the game and positioned yourself to cut out a pass — this is proactive defending. A tackle means the attacker already got past someone and you had to recover — this is reactive defending. High interception numbers suggest good positioning and game-reading.
For CDMs and CBs: Aim for 3+ tackles per game and 2+ interceptions per game. If your tackle numbers are high but interception numbers are low, you're diving in too much instead of reading the play.
Shot Accuracy
Shot accuracy is the percentage of your shots that hit the target (on frame). A low shot accuracy means you're either shooting from bad positions or your shooting technique needs work.
What's good? 50%+ shot accuracy is solid. Top finishers hit 60%+. If you're below 40%, you're wasting too many chances.
How to improve: Stop shooting from outside the box unless you're in genuine space. Most missed shots in Pro Clubs are speculative long-range efforts. Focus on getting into good positions first, then shooting. Also, use finesse shots inside the box — they're more accurate than power shots at close range.
Club-Level Stats That Matter
Beyond individual stats, your club's overall numbers paint a picture of team performance:
Win Rate: The ultimate measure of team success. Above 60% is good, above 70% is excellent, above 80% is elite. If your win rate is below 50%, focus on the fundamentals covered in our other guides before worrying about advanced tactics.
Goals Scored vs Goals Conceded: Your goal difference per game tells you whether you have an attacking or defensive problem. If you're scoring 2+ per game but conceding 2+ as well, your defence needs work. If you're conceding less than 1 per game but only scoring 1, your attack needs more creativity.
Form Streak: Look at your recent 5-10 match form rather than overall stats. Overall stats include matches from when your club was new and finding its feet. Recent form shows your current level and whether you're improving or declining.
Using Pro Clubs Tracker to Improve
Pro Clubs Tracker shows you all of these stats in one place. Here's how to use it effectively:
Check after every session. Look up your club after each gaming session and note your averages. Are they trending up or down? If your pass accuracy dropped from 82% to 75% over the last few sessions, something has changed — maybe you're forcing passes you shouldn't be.
Compare with rivals. Use the Head to Head tool to compare your club against teams in higher divisions. Look at what stats they have that you don't. Usually the difference is in pass accuracy and goals conceded, not goals scored.
Set benchmarks. Pick 2-3 stats you want to improve and set targets. For example: "Get my pass accuracy above 80%" or "Concede less than 1 goal per game over the next 20 matches." Having specific targets gives your sessions purpose beyond just winning or losing.