Pulling current player details into TactiQ.
TactiQ Score, per-90 performance stats, and multi-season form — with direct routes into compare and rankings.

A Premier League goalkeeper sitting at 67.87 on the TQ scale — adequate starter territory, meeting positional expectations without distinguishing himself at the elite level. Across 32 matches (2,880 minutes), his composite rating of 6.84 per 90 reflects steady, unremarkable output. The absence of granular goalkeeper-specific metrics (save percentage, xG prevented, clean sheets) means this read is built on composite signals rather than shot-stopping detail.
The TQ Score of 67.87 is driven primarily by the composite performance signal — no individual sub-score (finishing, creation, defense) is applicable for this role, so the score reflects overall positional contribution without a single standout or drag dimension. The 6.84 average match rating across 2,880 minutes anchors the mid-60s placement.
Form score of 69.56 sits just 1.69 points above the TQ Score of 67.87 — within the ±5 stable band, indicating no meaningful upward or downward shift. Performance has been consistent rather than trending in either direction.
Greif's TQ Score of 68.46 is the closest match — both sit in the adequate-starter band, though Greif edges marginally higher on the composite scale.
Top 50 players by TactiQ Score — filter by position, form, and confidence.
TactiQ Score, form, confidence, and season stats compared side by side — instantly.
Every TactiQ Score is deterministic and traceable. Read the full methodology behind the numbers.
Atubolu's 67.18 TQ Score places him in near-identical territory, making him a strong peer benchmark; the key difference is league context, with Atubolu operating outside the Premier League.
Alisson's current TQ Score of 66.74 lands fractionally below this player's 67.87, though Alisson's historical peak and reputation sit well above what either composite score currently reflects.
A 0–100 measure of overall quality. Combines statistical output with league difficulty, multi-season weighting, and a consistency factor. Target range for strong players: 70–85.
Weighted toward recent matches. Can diverge from the TactiQ Score when current form is meaningfully stronger or weaker than the multi-season average.
How much evidence supports this score. Lower confidence means thinner data — fewer seasons, fewer appearances, or gaps in coverage. A provisional score is real signal with appropriate caveats.
TactiQ Scores are deterministic — given the same evidence, they produce the same output. The evidence packet system, confidence labels, and publication gate are all explained in full.
Read the full methodology →