Science & technology | A game of two graphs

AI is being used to model football matches

The mathematics of network analysis helps them follow the action

Illustration: Getty Images/The Economist

To a human observer of football (the soccer sort), the on-pitch patterns—offence stretching and squeezing defence, counterattacks coalescing out of thin air—are as mesmerising as they are easy to follow. For an artificial-intelligence (AI) model, however, understanding what is going on is far from trivial. Raw video is stuffed with information, most of it irrelevant. The first thing an AI engineer, therefore, has to do is teach the model what matters and what doesn’t. For football tactics, player and ball positions are a good place to start. But a team isn’t just a collection of isolated players; it is a network of relationships.

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This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “A game of two graphs”

From the February 15th 2025 edition

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