How to Score Your First Flag Football Game in StatHawk
A quick walkthrough of scoring your first flag football game in StatHawk. Open a scheduled game, set your lineup, press Start Scoring, score the first plays, and review the box score after the game.
What this tutorial shows
- How to open a game from the Schedule tab.
- How to set your lineup before kickoff.
- How to add positions for cleaner player context.
- How to press Start Scoring and score the first play.
- How the score, play feed, and box score build as you score the game.
- How to use undo or the play log if something needs to be fixed.
What this creates in StatHawk
- Updated live score.
- A play-by-play feed from the plays you score.
- Player and team stats in the box score.
- Season stats that build from each finished game.
- A cleaner postgame record without rebuilding everything in a spreadsheet.
Transcript
The fastest way to understand StatHawk is to score one game.
Not build a spreadsheet. Not clean up notes after the final whistle. Just score the plays as they happen, and let the app build the game underneath.
Start from your team and open the Schedule tab. Tap into the game you want to score. Before kickoff, set your lineup. Add positions if you want cleaner player context. I recommend it, but it is optional.
Then press Start Scoring. From there, you score the first play and keep going. The score, down, possession, and game situation update as you work through the game.
When your team has the ball, you score the offensive play. A completed pass. A rush. A touchdown. If you use yardage mode, you can add the yards as part of the play. If the play creates a first down, StatHawk asks you to confirm it.
When the other team has the ball, you score the defensive result. A flag pull. A sack. A pass breakup. An interception. The point is not just to keep the scoreboard moving. The point is to give the right player credit while the play is still fresh.
If a touchdown happens, StatHawk moves into the try flow for supported formats. You choose the try, score the attempt, and keep going.
If something gets entered wrong, use undo or the play log. Sidelines are messy. The app is built for that.
As the game moves, the play feed and stats are building in the background. If you share the live link, families can follow the score and play feed from a browser while you keep scoring.
When the game is final, open the box score. This is where the live scoring turns into something useful: the game summary, player stats, team stats, and season totals.
That is the basic StatHawk loop. Score the game live. Get the box score after.
Related tutorials
How to Share a Live Flag Football Score With Parents
Parents want the score. Coaches need their hands free. This tutorial shows how to share a read-only live link from StatHawk.
How to Create a Flag Football Box Score and PDF
When the game is final, StatHawk turns the plays you scored live into coach-ready output. This tutorial shows where to find the box score and PDF.
How to Score Flag Pulls in Flag Football
Flag pulls are defensive plays. This tutorial shows how to give defenders credit for regular pulls, assisted pulls, and pulls for loss while scoring the game live.
Score your next game with StatHawk
Free on iPhone and iPad. Score the game live and share a read-only link with parents.
Download StatHawk Free

