Stories

Data-driven football journalism

Long-form stories grounded in statistics. Not predictions — narratives built on numbers.

Data History

How xG Predicted Leicester's 2015-16 Collapse — That Never Came

In the 2015-16 season, Leicester City's expected-goals data suggested they were dramatically overperforming. Every model said regression was coming. It never did. A data story about the limits of prediction and the beauty of variance.

Sarah Thornton 14 April 2026 8 min read
"Every number is a story that happened on a pitch."

All stories

Data History

How xG Predicted Leicester's 2015-16 Collapse — That Never Came

In the 2015-16 season, Leicester City's expected-goals data suggested they were dramatically overperforming. Every model said regression was coming. It never did. A data story about the limits of prediction and the beauty of variance.

8 min read
Spatial Analysis

The Geography of Premier League Goals: Where on the Pitch Do Teams Score?

Mapping shot locations and conversion rates across all 20 PL clubs. Arsenal's left-half-space dominance, Newcastle's set-piece reliance, and why Brighton score from angles nobody else attempts.

12 min read
Historical

Why Clean Sheets Correlate With Title Wins — A 30-Year Dataset

Since 1992, 24 of 32 Premier League title winners led the league in clean sheets. We chart the relationship between defensive solidity and championship success, season by season.

10 min read
Match Analysis

The Substitution Effect: Do Second-Half Changes Actually Change Outcomes?

Analysing 4,000 Premier League substitutions to measure their impact on match outcomes, goals scored, and xG delta in the 15 minutes after the change.

9 min read
Tactical

Possession is Nine-Tenths of Nothing: The Teams That Win Without the Ball

Counter-attacking football works — the data proves it. How low-possession strategies have produced consistent results across three decades, and why the "tiki-taka or bust" narrative is statistically wrong.

11 min read
Research

Home Advantage After Empty Stadiums: Did Football's Return Change the Data?

Pre-COVID, home teams won 46% of PL matches. During empty stadiums, it dropped to 36%. Post-return, it settled at 43%. The numbers tell a story about atmosphere, referee psychology, and territorial instinct.

7 min read
Data History

Set Pieces: The Hidden Engine of Premier League Points

Set pieces account for roughly 30% of all Premier League goals. We break down which teams are most dangerous from corners, free kicks, and throw-ins — and which are most vulnerable.

10 min read
Research

The Goalkeeper Revolution: How Shot-Stopping xG Changed the Transfer Market

Post-shot expected goals (PSxG) gave clubs a way to measure goalkeepers objectively for the first time. We trace how the metric went from academic curiosity to transfer-window currency.

13 min read
Tactical

Pressing Traps: How the Best Teams Win the Ball Back in Dangerous Areas

High PPDA numbers tell part of the story. The real insight is where teams press. We map the pressing triggers of the top six and show how geography of pressure translates into goals.

14 min read
Historical

The January Effect: Do Winter Signings Actually Improve Results?

Every January window is billed as season-defining. We analysed 10 years of mid-season transfers against subsequent points-per-game to find out whether the data supports the hype.

9 min read
Spatial Analysis

Shot Maps Decoded: What Your Team's Shooting Pattern Really Means

Not all shots are equal. We compare shot maps across the league to reveal which teams create central chances, which rely on long-range efforts, and why shot location is the single best predictor of goal output.

11 min read
Match Analysis

Red Cards and Regression: Do 10-Man Teams Really Lose More Often?

Conventional wisdom says a red card ruins your chances. The data is more nuanced. We examine 15 years of Premier League red cards and their actual impact on results.

8 min read

How we write

Every Varqyst story starts with a question and a dataset. Our editorial team identifies patterns in publicly available football statistics, verifies them against multiple sources, and builds narratives around the findings.

We do not make predictions. We describe what the data shows, contextualise it historically, and let readers draw their own conclusions. All statistical claims are sourced and verifiable.

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