How to Track Receiving Yards in Flag Football
Receiving yards should not be rebuilt from memory after the game. This tutorial shows how a completed pass in StatHawk can credit the receiver and build the receiving stat line while you score live.
What this tutorial shows
- How receiving yards start from a completed pass.
- How to choose the receiver.
- How to enter yards in yardage mode.
- How first-down context stays connected when prompted.
- How receiving stats come from the same live play as passing stats.
What this creates in StatHawk
- Reception.
- Receiving yards in yardage mode.
- Matching passing stats.
- Cleaner receiver output.
- Cleaner box score and player stat review.
Transcript
Receiving yards can disappear fast if you wait until after the game.
In StatHawk, record them as the catch happens.
Tap Pass Play, choose Complete, and confirm the passer if the app asks.
Then pick the receiver and enter the gain in yardage mode.
If the play reaches the target, answer the first-down prompt and keep scoring.
That one completed pass can create the reception, the receiving yards, and the matching passing stats.
After the game, the receiver's production is already in the box score.
Related tutorials
How to Track Passing Yards in Flag Football
Passing yards should not be a postgame math project. This tutorial shows how a completed pass in StatHawk can update the passer, receiver, yardage, and box score while you score live.
How to Use a Flag Football Stat Sheet Without a Spreadsheet
Paper stat sheets are hard to keep clean on a sideline. This tutorial shows how live scoring in StatHawk creates the stat table for you.
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.
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

