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Completed Long Passes explained

Get a quick breakdown of Completed Long Passes, plus related metrics and visualization tips. Explore charts, comparisons, and scouting insights with FBPlot.

Category: passingMetric ID: pass_completed_longUsage: Scouting, reporting, and benchmarking

Completed Long Passes helps analysts quantify long-range passes (30+ yards) successfully completed. these diagonal balls and switches of play can quickly transition from defense to attack or change the point of attack.

When you share Completed Long Passes, include the definition so non-technical audiences understand the impact.

Category
passing
Metric ID
pass_completed_long
Usage
Scouting, reporting, and benchmarking

Distribution snapshot

See how Completed Long Passes is spread across players from the last 365 days of data.

Completed Long Passes distribution
Avg 36
Min 1
Max 460
1460

Top performers (last 365 days)

How to interpret Completed Long Passes

Use Completed Long Passes alongside related metrics in the passing category to understand role fit and tactical impact.

  • Compare within the same competition or position group
  • Use percentile ranks to normalize minutes played
  • Combine with at least one supporting metric

Best charts for Completed Long Passes

Radar charts surface it in context, while bar charts isolate the metric for direct comparisons.

  • Radar chart for full profile context
  • Bar chart for side-by-side comparisons
  • Exported visuals for reports and social sharing

Related metrics

Frequently asked questions

What does Completed Long Passes measure?

Long-range passes (30+ yards) successfully completed. These diagonal balls and switches of play can quickly transition from defense to attack or change the point of attack.

When should I use Completed Long Passes?

Use Completed Long Passes when you need to evaluate passing contributions and compare players in similar roles.

Which charts highlight Completed Long Passes?

Radar charts give context across metrics, while bar charts isolate the metric for direct comparisons.

Where can I learn related metrics?

Use the metrics glossary to explore complementary stats in the same category.