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Scouting notes and confidence

Scouting notes help captains prepare for opponents. They may include past results, observed strengths, lineup history, or captain-entered notes.

Confidence

Scouting confidence shows how sure Captain HQ is about an opponent estimate. High confidence usually means recent, plentiful match data; low confidence means the estimate may be based on a small or older sample.

Use confidence as a guide, not a guarantee. Players improve, pairings change, and league data can be incomplete.

Source

The source explains where a scouting estimate came from, such as published league results, prior matchups, captain notes, or projections when direct data is thin.

Captains should use the source to decide how much weight to give the note.

Projected strength

Projected strength summarizes how dangerous an opponent looks based on record, roster, history, and scouting notes. Treat it as guidance for preparation, not a promised result.

A strong projection can help captains choose matchups, but availability and team goals still matter.

Recency

Recency shows how fresh the opponent profile is. Newer roster imports, match results, and scouting notes make the profile more useful for match prep.

Older information can still help, but it should be checked against recent results when possible.

Sample size

Sample size is the amount of match history behind the profile. A larger sample usually makes scouting notes and confidence more dependable.

Small samples can still be useful, especially for a new opponent, but captains should avoid overreacting to one result.