Definition
The scoring space is the area of the pitch within the final 15 metres before the endzone. It is one of two high-value attacking zones in our system. When the disc enters this zone, the offence is in scoring range and the defensive pressure increases accordingly.
In Context
The scoring space demands the same discipline as the Under Space — inactive cutters should not be in it. Congestion here is even more costly than elsewhere because the field is compressing and throwing angles are becoming sharper.
When the Under Space and scoring space overlap — typically when the disc is inside the final 15 metres — we transition into structured endzone offence. The principles stay the same, but the spacing adjustments become critical.
The scoring space is also an offensive danger zone — the back of the endzone is where the field runs out, angles become extreme, and forced throws are most likely.