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New Dashboard

An enhanced dashboard, so you can continue working with all the tools at your disposal

Tom avatar
Written by Tom
Updated over 3 weeks ago

Red — Session filters

  1. The session filters that used to sit below the bar chart (and above the gauges) are now located at the top of the dashboard.

  2. Important: these filters now apply to the entire screen (charts, central data table, gauges, etc.).

  3. A new session list/filter within the selected range has been added, allowing you to:

  • Select or deselect specific sessions within that range.

  • Control exactly which sessions are included in the analysis.

Blue — Action buttons

  1. Grid: switch between “VS Session” and “Metrics per minute”.

  2. Download: export the session as PDF or download data as CSV/XLS.

  3. Gear icon:
    Select metrics to choose which metrics you want to analyze.
    View gauges to check which gauges are currently active.

Yellow — Bar chart (legacy view)

  • This option lets you display the bar chart in the previous/legacy format used before this update.


Purple — Collapse / Expand (full screen)

  • Use this option to collapse or expand the central data table.

  • When expanded, you can analyze the table in full-screen mode for a clearer, more detailed view.

Green — “VS” comparison selector

From here, you choose what you want to compare the current session against. The main options are:

  • VS player average (the player’s own data)

  • VS position average (same-position group average)

  • VS sessions average (overall average of the selected sessions)

How to use the new “VS” comparisons

1) VS player average (compare the player to themself)

What it does:
Compares the current session (e.g., MD-3) against the player’s own average across their last X sessions of the selected session type (for example, last X MD-3 sessions—or any other type you choose as the reference).

What it’s useful for:

  • Checking whether the player was above or below their usual baseline.

  • Spotting metric-by-metric spikes or drops (load, intensity, volume, etc.).

2) VS position average (compare against the group)

What it does:
Compares the player’s current session against the average of their position group (for example, forwards vs forwards).

What it’s useful for:

  • If a position group (e.g., forwards) completes a specific session, you can quickly see:

    • Which player performed better or worse relative to the group.

  • Ideal for within-group analysis without depending on each player’s personal history.

3) VS sessions average (compare against the overall selected average)

What it does:
Uses the overall average of the selected sessions as the reference, based on the global filters and/or the sessions manually selected within the date range.

What it’s useful for:

  • Understanding where each player stands relative to a general baseline.

  • Great for quick “above / below average” reads across the chosen period.

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