Stats Are Not Just for Bragging
Most players look at their Pro Clubs stats once, feel either pleased or deflated, and then ignore them. That is leaving a significant amount of value on the table. The numbers that PROCLUBS.IO surfaces about your club and your individual performance are not just scoreboard data. They are a diagnostic tool, a way of identifying exactly where things are going wrong and giving you a specific target for what to work on next.
This guide walks through what you can find on PROCLUBS.IO, how to read the key numbers, and how to turn that information into practical actions that actually improve your game over time.
What PROCLUBS.IO Shows You
When you search for your club on PROCLUBS.IO, you get access to two layers of data. The first is your club-level overview. This includes your overall win rate, goals scored and conceded, your divisional record, and a summary of your recent form. The second layer is individual player stats, where you can see how each member of your squad is performing across key metrics.
The individual player view is where the most useful analysis happens. For each player you can see their average match rating, goals and assists per game, pass success rate, and other position-relevant stats depending on their role. You can see these numbers in two modes: club stats, which shows performance only in matches played for this specific club, and career stats, which aggregates across all their Pro Clubs activity.
For improvement purposes, club stats are generally the more useful lens. They reflect your player's performance within your specific team setup, formation, and style, which is the context you are actually trying to improve.
How to Find Your Club and Individual Profile
Getting started is straightforward. Go to the PROCLUBS.IO homepage, search for your club name, and select it from the results. If your club name is common you may need to check the club ID or region to confirm you have the right one. Once you are on your club page, you can see the full member list and click through to any individual player profile.
Bookmark both your club page and your personal player page. You are going to be coming back to these regularly, so making them easy to access removes friction from the habit of checking your numbers consistently.
The Key Stats to Monitor and What They Tell You
Not all stats carry equal weight. Some are vanity numbers. Others are reliable indicators of whether you are actually contributing positively to your team. Here are the ones that matter most and what they reveal.
Average match rating is your overall performance indicator. EA calculates this based on a combination of your contributions across the match, weighted by position. A consistent 7.0 or above across a meaningful number of matches suggests you are a reliable, positive contributor. A rating that hovers below 6.5 consistently is a signal that something specific is not working, even if it is not immediately obvious what that is.
Goals and assists per game for attacking players, and clean sheet rate for defensive players, show your direct contribution to outcomes. But be careful about reading these in isolation. A striker with a poor pass rate who scores occasionally is often costing the team more in possession than they are contributing in goals. A goalkeeper who makes impressive saves but has a poor clean sheet rate may be making errors elsewhere.
Pass success rate is one of the most revealing stats across all positions. Low pass accuracy, particularly below 75 percent, almost always correlates with a lower match rating and with a team that struggles to maintain possession and create consistent attacking opportunities. It is also one of the most actionable stats to improve because the fix is usually straightforward: play simpler passes, make better decisions about when to release the ball, and stop attempting low-percentage options under pressure.
Win rate at the club level tells you how your overall team setup is performing. If your personal stats are solid but your club win rate is low, the issue may be structural. If your personal stats are dipping at the same time your win rate is dropping, you are part of the problem and need to look at what is changing in your own game.
How to Identify Specific Weaknesses
The most powerful use of stats is pinpointing exactly what to work on, rather than having a vague sense that things are not going well. Here is how to approach that diagnosis.
If your average match rating is dropping, the first place to look is your pass success rate. A declining pass rate and a declining match rating almost always move together. The fix is to simplify your passing choices. You are likely attempting too many ambitious passes that are being intercepted or misplacing passes under defensive pressure. Commit to making the safe option your default choice for two or three sessions and watch how it affects both your pass rate and your overall rating.
If your match rating is consistent but your team is losing regularly, look at the club-level stats. Are you conceding more than you are creating? If so, the issue might be defensive organisation rather than individual performance. Are you creating chances but not converting? The issue may be in the final third rather than across the whole pitch.
If one player in your squad consistently has a significantly lower rating than everyone else, that is a conversation worth having with the team. Frame it around the data rather than personal criticism: the stats suggest their current role is not bringing out the best in them, and it might be worth discussing whether a different position or a different set of responsibilities might suit them better.
Setting Improvement Targets Using Stats
Once you know your baseline numbers, you can set specific, measurable targets. Vague goals like playing better or winning more are almost impossible to act on. Specific targets like raising your pass success rate from 72 percent to 80 percent over the next twenty matches give you something concrete to chase.
Keep your targets small and achievable. Trying to improve three different stats simultaneously spreads your focus too thin. Pick one number, decide what behaviour change will move it, commit to that change for a defined period, and then check whether the number has responded. If it has, move on to the next target. If it has not, question whether your approach to changing it needs to be different.
Using Match History to Spot Patterns
Over time, your match history reveals patterns that individual game results hide. Are you consistently losing matches against teams that sit deep and hit on the counter? Are you winning comfortably against lower-ranked clubs but struggling against teams in your division or above? Do your losses tend to come in the first fifteen minutes or in the final ten when fatigue might be a factor?
These patterns are visible when you look at results in aggregate rather than reacting to each result individually. They point to specific things your team needs to work on: defensive organisation against counter-attacking teams, tactical adjustments in specific game states, or fitness and concentration in particular phases of the match.
PROCLUBS.IO gives you access to the data that makes this kind of analysis possible. Used consistently and honestly, it is one of the most straightforward ways to accelerate your improvement. The teams that track their numbers, set targets, and review their patterns will outpace teams that play on instinct alone. Start with your club page, record your baseline numbers today, and check back after every ten to fifteen matches to measure whether the trend is moving in the right direction.