Artificial intelligence is no longer coming for football. It is already inside the game.
It is in the cameras that track every movement, the models that value space, the recruitment engines that compare players across leagues, the injury systems that monitor fatigue, the tactical simulations that test what should have happened, and the ownership models that increasingly treat clubs as data-driven assets.
The Algorithmic Game is a clear, ambitious, and deeply practical guide to the transformation of modern football through artificial intelligence, analytics, computer vision, and predictive modelling.
From the early days of manual notation and the long-ball theories of Charles Reep to today's pitch-control models, expected possession value, ghosting, digital athletes, AI-assisted recruitment, and smart stadiums, Steffan Luiz de Vhoury explains how the sport is becoming legible to machines - and what that means for players, coaches, scouts, executives, investors, and supporters.
This is not a book arguing that football should surrender to algorithms. The opposite is true. Football remains emotional, physical, chaotic, and human. But the old mythology of instinct alone is no longer enough. The clubs that win the next era will not simply collect more data. They will build better intelligence loops between people, process, technology, and judgment.
Inside, the book explores:
how football analytics evolved from event counts to real-time AI;
why computer vision and tracking data changed the meaning of tactical analysis;
how pitch control, expected threat, and possession value models reveal hidden structure;
how AI is reshaping recruitment, transfers, squad chemistry, and player valuation;
how digital-athlete systems are changing injury prediction and performance management;
why data capability now affects club economics and institutional investment;
how coaches, scouts, and analysts must adapt to the age of machine assistance;
what the 2026-2030 horizon may bring for generative training design, smart stadiums, and football governance.
Illustrated with explanatory figures, practical tables, and strategic frameworks, The Algorithmic Game is written for readers who want to understand not just the technology, but the power shift beneath it.
The future of football will not be machine versus human.
It will be the clubs that know how to combine both against the clubs still pretending the old myths are enough.