A real player profile, not a star rating.
Six axes. One scale. Two viewpoints. Summit's assessment engine runs on the Summit Player Assessment Framework — developed in collaboration with world-renowned coach Peter Jeffrey. Same lens, same language, every coach, every player.
Six categories, one radar.
Summit assesses on six categories — technical, tactical, physical, mental, movement, and lifestyle — each broken down into named sub-skills with anchored 0–10 rating descriptions. There's no "what does 7 mean?" ambiguity. Each level on the scale is described, so two different coaches in the same club come to comparable scores.
The whole profile renders as a single radar chart. One look, one picture, one conversation starter.
Coach view vs self-assessment.
Players assess themselves on the same framework. Their radar and the coach's radar overlay on the same chart, and the gap between them is surfaced explicitly as a perception gap analysis. Where does the player think they're stronger than the coach does? Where are they harder on themselves than they need to be?
That gap is a coaching cue. A player who consistently under-scores themselves on tactical depth is a confidence conversation. A player who consistently over-scores themselves on movement is a video-review conversation. Both are conversations worth having — and both are surfaced by the platform, not buried in your memory.
AI overview, written in plain English.
Each completed assessment can be given an AI-generated narrative overview — written in plain coaching English, based on the actual scores, with the perception gaps called out. It's the paragraph you would have written if you'd had a quiet half-hour after the session. The coach edits it, approves it, and optionally shares it with the player. Nothing leaves the platform unless you say so.
Progression over time.
Every assessment is stored, dated and historically accessible. Comparison views let a coach overlay the player's profile six months ago against today. Annual reviews become a five-minute screen, not a five-hour spreadsheet. And because assessments are file-based JSON under the hood, the data is fast to write, fast to read, and easy to take with you if you ever needed to.
Share toggle — privacy by default.
A coach's assessment of a player is private until the coach actively shares it. That's deliberate. Sometimes the conversation needs to happen face-to-face before the radar lands in the player's account. Sometimes the parent should see it first. Sometimes the player is ready and you want them looking at it tomorrow. The share toggle puts that timing entirely in the coach's hands.