Stats and Box Scores

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.

What this tutorial shows

  • How live scoring replaces postgame stat cleanup.
  • How common plays build the game record.
  • How the Box Score fills from the plays you score.
  • How player and team stats become easier to review after the game.
  • How finished games build season stats.

What this creates in StatHawk

  • Game box score.
  • Player stat tables.
  • Team stat tables.
  • Season totals.
  • Cleaner postgame review.

Transcript

The hardest part of a stat sheet is not writing one play down.

It is making the whole thing add up after the game.

StatHawk flips that around. You score the game live, and the stat sheet builds underneath.

A completion. A rush. A flag pull. A touchdown. Each play you score becomes part of the live score, the play feed, and the box score.

So when the game ends, you are not starting from a messy notebook or rebuilding a spreadsheet from memory.

Open the Box Score, and the player and team stats are already there.

Then every finished game keeps adding to the season stats.

Score the game once. Let the stat sheet build itself.

Related tutorials

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