Progressive passes, defined as passes that move the ball significantly closer to the opponent's goal, are a crucial measure of a team's ability to advance through opposition defenses. At 1X2.TV, progressive passing metrics are integrated into our AI prediction framework.
Defining Progressive Passes
A progressive pass must advance the ball at least 10 yards toward the opponent's goal from the team's own half, or any forward pass into the final third. This definition captures meaningful ball advancement while filtering out sideways and backward passes that inflate total passing statistics. Our models track progressive passes per 90 minutes for both teams and individual players.
Progressive Carries
Progressive carries complement progressive passes by measuring ball advancement through dribbling rather than passing. Some teams rely heavily on individual ball carriers to break through defensive lines, while others use passing combinations. Our models evaluate the combined progressive pass and carry metrics to assess overall ball progression efficiency.
Passes Into the Final Third and Penalty Area
We further subdivide ball progression into passes into the final third and passes into the penalty area. The latter metric is particularly predictive of goal-scoring output because it captures the ability to deliver the ball into the most dangerous attacking zones. Teams with high pass-into-penalty-area rates consistently generate more expected goals.
Defensive Progression Resistance
Conversely, we measure how effectively teams prevent opponents from progressing the ball. Teams with low opposition progressive pass rates are effectively compact and difficult to play through, which our models reflect in lower expected goals against estimates.

