Tag Archives: Chris Anderson

Everything We Know About Soccer Is Wrong

By Zach Slaton, Contributor

It has been nearly two months since The Numbers Game: Why Everything You Know About Soccer Is Wrong was published in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, meaning that soccer quants in North America have had to pay for international shipping if they wanted to get their hands on the book.  The need for such expensive shipping ends on July 30th, 2013 when the book is published in both the United States and Canada.  While the authors of the book, Chris Anderson and David Sally, have been very pleased with the book’s reception in Europe they are looking forward to what they hope is a slightly different reaction in North America.  David Sally explained, “I think we are really glad with the reaction in the UK and The Netherlands where the book launched a few weeks ago.  I think we’re hoping the reaction is going to be even stronger in the US because there is more of an appetite for statistics in sports.  It’s a more natural audience.  I think there is also the coolness and hipness factor to soccer.  A lot of people are trying to understand the game more deeply, and we hope the books serves as a way to get even deeper into the game.” Chris Anderson believes North Americans’ appetite for numbers combined with soccer being a less popular sport than it is in Europe makes the book perfect learning material about a game that is rising in popularity. “[Dave and I] are Americans, and we love American soccer.  We’d love to see the game grow in the US, so in whatever small way the book can tell them something about soccer they didn’t know but they wanted to know and will help them understand and make sense of what’s going on on the field when they’re watching or their kids are playing.  If we can contribute to helping grow soccer in the US in whatever small way I’d personally be really excited about that.” The way Anderson and Sally approach learning about the game is by asking repeated, intelligent questions, answering them with the best available data, and then asking the next logical question that comes from the answer to the previous question.  In laymen’s terms, they end up pealing back the layers of the soccer onion.  The duo divides their examination of the game into three parts: Before the Match, which examines the larger patterns within the game that seem largely immutable: luck accounts for 50% of the outcome of a match, frequency of scorelines are relatively consistent between top leagues, and the rarity of goal scoring makes the game somewhat unpredictable and the value of goal scorers dependent upon when they score their goals versus the scoreline of the match. On the Pitch, which explains how the game is a balance of strategies.  Preventing a goal is more important to earning points than scoring one, the game is about managing turnovers, and the game can be controlled by both tiki taka as well …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

The Credit Crisis May Not Be China's Biggest Problem

By James Gruber, Contributor The best investment ideas rarely come from the latest news item or brokerage research report. They’re often found on the fringes of finance or outside the field altogether. Right now, everyone is focused on China’s poor economic data and the potential for a hard landing in future. This is fair enough given the possible fallout. But despite what some think, China’s credit crisis will end at some point. And perhaps it will be sooner than most believe if the new leaders are serious about tightening policy rather than reflating the credit bubble. Asia Confidential is going to explore an issue which has the potential to have a larger impact on China’s future than the current credit crunch. Few in the investment industry and even fewer in China itself are aware of it. But it is well-known in the world of technology. That is, the internet is currently transforming the manufacturing industry in a similar way to what it did to the publishing world before. Anyone with internet access and desktop fabrication tools can become a manufacturer nowadays. That’s lowered the barriers to entry and resulted a deluge of smaller entrepreneurs becoming manufacturers. Previously, you’d have needed millions of dollars or a much larger company to manufacture your ideas. Today, it can all be done with a few clicks of a mouse. This transformation may have far-reaching consequences. Large manufacturers are on notice given the number of small entrepreneurs entering the space. As are mass production companies which deal with large orders. That’s where China comes in, being the world’s largest mass manufacturer. For start-up manufacturers won’t want the expense of large orders or the transportation costs associated with small orders from China. They’re likely to look for more nimble suppliers who are closer to home. That means China’s manufacturing dominance could be under serious threat, and soon. And manufacturers in the developing world may be the ones to benefit. The potential impact from this change on China will be the focus of this week’s newsletter and we’ll follow up with the broader economic and investment implications in our next issue. The internet enters the real world There are two powerful, yet opposing forces which are likely to drive the global economy going forward. The first is significant over-indebtedness in the developed world continuing to weigh on economic growth, despite what the Paul Krugmans of the world would have you believe. The second is extraordinary technological change which has the potential to propel future economic growth. Which of these forces will have the greater impact in the long-term? It’s unsurprising that Chris Anderson, a former editor of technology magazine Wired, thinks that changes in the tech world will be key driver of future economic growth. In his book, Makers: The New Industrial Revolution, Anderson makes a strong case that the digital revolution is about to move beyond our laptop screens into the real world of physical goods, with dramatic consequences: “The past ten years have been about discovering new ways to create, invent, and work together on the Web. The next ten years will be about applying those lessons to the real world.” What exactly does he mean by this? Well, manufacturing has gone digital. Physical objects …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

The SSAC Interview of Jeff Agoos

By Zach Slaton, Contributor

Throughout the month of March this blog will be publishing interviews with each of the four panelists that were on the 2013 Sloan Sports Analytics Conference’s Soccer Analytics panel.  The first interview in this series was with Chris Anderson and David Sally, while the second interview was with ESPN Stats and Information analyst Albert Larcada.  This week’s interview is with MLS and US Men’s National Team legend and current MLS Technical Director of Competition Jeff Agoos.  Retiring with five MLS Cups, a US Open Cup, a CONCACAF Champions Cup, 134 national team caps, and a slew of other team and personnel awards in 2005, Agoos held a number of positions within the New York Red Bulls’ organization until he moved on to the position of MLS Technical Director of Competition in March, 2011.  Agoos’ responsibilities as technical director include “analyzing the style and level of play, utilizing multiple soccer database tools and interfacing daily with club technical departments,  [to] oversee an annual League-wide technical assessment and help formulate strategies and initiatives to continue elevating the level of play in MLS.” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

The Real Reason Women Aren't Leaning In

By Jan Bruce, Contributor Last weekend in the midst of reading the buzz about Sheryl Sandberg’s much-lauded Lean In, I caught Chris Anderson’s SXSW interview with Elon Musk, founder of Tesla Motors. When asked about work-life balance, Musk made it clear that he doesn’t have much, and also doesn’t suffer guilt about not seeing his kids much and working when with them. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

The SSAC Interview of Albert Larcada

By Zach Slaton, Contributor

Throughout the month of March this blog will be publishing interviews with each of the four panelists that were on the 2013 Sloan Sports Analytics Conference’s Soccer Analytics panel.  The first interview in this series with Chris Anderson and David Sally was published last week.  This week’s interview is with ESPN Stats and Information analyst Albert Larcada.  Albert has worked for ESPN since earning Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from the University of Central Florida, and has helped them build and maintain a number of analytical models within ESPN including the Soccer Power Index.  I sat down with Albert ahead of the Sloan Conference’s soccer-specific panel to discuss ESPN’s models, how they integrate their data into storylines, where ESPN is looking to grow with their recent job posting within Albert’s group, and where he thinks the conference can continue to grow in the coming years. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Elon Musk on Mars, False Reviews, Aliens, and Armageddon

By Tim Beyers, The Motley Fool

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If anyone figures out how to create a “Star Trek“-style transporter for traveling across continents or even planets in the few seconds it takes to blow apart and then reassemble human molecules into a full-fledged body, my bet is it’ll be Elon Musk.

On Saturday, the Tesla Motors chief executive talked of his intentions to disrupt nearly every form of terrestrial and interstellar transportation at the annual South By Southwest (SXSW) conference in Austin, Texas.

Source: Business Insider/SXSW.

During a talk that covered everything from humanity’s will to explore Mars to strategies for juggling email and parenting, Musk captivated an audience of thousands when he described SpaceX‘s recent effort to overcome harrowing in-flight malfunctions to dock yet another Dragon supply capsule with the International Space Station. The company’s first effort ended successfully in October.

This time, Musk said, three of the four thruster pods weren’t working after liftoff, which left the capsule effectively adrift in space. His team responded by piecing together a solution that involved broadcasting fresh code to the Dragon over a borrowed Air Force communications network. The hope? Give the spacecraft a sort of in-orbit “Heimlich maneuver” that would push open pathways for activating dormant thrusters. Hacking for the space age, you might call it.

And that was just the opener. Over an hour-long interview with former Wired editor Chris Anderson, Musk covered a wide range of topics. Here’s a sampling of takeaways both relevant and trivial:

On Tesla and his fight with The New York Times: Asked to post-mortem the experience of battling the Times, Musk said he might have published a piece countering the paper’s rebuttal to his initial criticisms. “I don’t have a problem with critical reviews. I have a problem with false reviews,” Musk said, calling writer John Broder‘s test a “low-grade ethics violation.”

On aliens: Musk believes they’re out there. “Hopefully we do [detect other life], and hopefully it isn’t a warship coming toward us.”

On the Dreamliner: Musk made headlines when he offered to help Boeing solve battery issues with the 787. Why did he do it? For a friend. Musk said Virgin’s Sir Richard Branson told him his airline was losing “hundreds of millions” as a result of the snafu. Virgin Atlantic has ordered 15 of the 787 aircraft with an option for at least eight more.

On China’s cheap solar cells: U.S. solar cell makers such as SunPower and First Solar have suffered astounding losses thanks to cheap imports. Musk doesn’t see that as nearly as much of a problem as others do. “What China is doing in the solar panel world is awesome, because they’re lowering the cost of solar power for the world,” Musk said. SolarCity , in which he is an investor, may very well be benefiting from the cuts.

On having kids: Musk is a father of five. “You should all have kids. Kids are awesome,” Musk …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

A Few Quick Thoughts on MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference Day One

By Zach Slaton, Contributor Day Two of the 2013 Sloan Sports Analytics Conference is already underway, but here are a few brief thoughts from Day One. The Soccer Analytics panel is at 1 PM this afternoon, but the next best thing was on Thursday night at the third annual Soccer Analysts meet up at McGreevy’s.  All credit goes to Sarah Rudd and Ravi Ramineni for arranging an event that had 30+ soccer nerds discussing their latest theories, favorite teams, and sharing a few beers along the way.  You’ll find very few gatherings with so many of the foremost soccer analytics writers and practitioners present and engaged in casual, off-the-record conversation.  A small sampling of attendees included two out of the four Soccer Analytics panelists – Chris Anderson and Blake Wooster – along with Manchester City’s Gavin Fleig, the “reclusive” Orbinho (his own Twitter profile description, not mine), and the entrepreneurial Howard Hamilton, amongst others.  There were even a few people unable to attend the conference who still attended the meet up knowing the fun and value in the Soccer Analysts event.  All had a good time, new connections were made, and everyone made it back to their hotels in time to not make the first day of the conference too tiring. The theme of the day one panels was certainly data presentation and making data consumable by non-analysts.  There is a sense from the conference’s size, its range of participants, and the general zeitgeist of sports analytics outside of the conference that the battle for acceptance has been won by the data nerds.  Trouble With the Curve moments now seem to be the exception rather than the rule, but there is still a lot to be done by data analysts to ensure their models are used in the most effective manner possible by those who are not as numbers-inclined.  The conference has emphasized cleaner and leaner data presentation as being key to such success, with an outstanding emphasis on Tufte principles in the Data Visualization panel.  Data analysts who want to be effective and move up within organizations should heed the conference’s advice and focus as much on their presentation, visualization, and general “people” or EQ/EI skills as their data management and programming skills. Betting analytics has its own panel on Saturday, but that didn’t stop gambling from coming up during Friday’s panels.  Blackjack legend Jeff Ma and Nate Silver, known for his poker exploits amongst others, provided interesting commentary on the True Performance and the Science of Randomness panel.  They actively encouraged attendees to use gambling and games-of-chance of the legal variety as one of the best training grounds for the use of probabilistic thinking and applied statistics.  Elsewhere on day one the Business of Sport panel provided some useful comparisons between the prevalence of betting organizations as sponsors of teams in Europe (even to the point of having their logos on jerseys) and such organizations’ complete absence in official relationships with North American professional sports teams and leagues.  Gambling is always a …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Georgia man, 69, charged with murder after driveway shooting

A Georgia man is facing murder charges after he allegedly shot and killed a man who mistakenly pulled into his driveway.

Phillip Walker Sailors, of Lilburn, is being held on a malice murder charge after the Saturday night shooting in the northeastern suburb of Atlanta, according to Gwinnett County Jail records.

Rodrigo Abad Diaz, of Duluth, was shot in the head as he tried to drive away from Sailors’ home, an arrest warrant indicates.

Sailors’ attorney, Mike Puglise, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the Vietnam veteran was home with his wife late at night and assumed Diaz arrived for a home invasion. Sailors was defending his home and maintains his innocence, Puglise said.

Diaz’s girlfriend, meanwhile, painted a more sinister image of Sailors, claiming he shot Diaz without asking questions and then pointed the gun at her. The couple, who were accompanied by two other friends, had planned to go ice skating, the newspaper reports.

“I want him to spend all his life in prison,” Angie Rebolledo, 17, told the newspaper. “He is a crazy man.”

As Rebolledo tended to Diaz, she said Sailors showed no remorse and offered no assistance.

Friends and relatives countered that portrayal of Sailors by citing the retired Bell South employee’s “unblemished” reputation in the community for more than 40 years, according to Chris Anderson, pastor of Killian Hill Baptist Church in Lilburn.

Puglise said a neighbor of Sailors’ had recently been robbed, making the elderly man wary when he spotted two people in his driveway. He then grabbed his gun as he headed outside and fired a warning shot into the air. Puglise said Sailors fired at Diaz only after the young man accelerated his car toward him.

“He thought he was going to get run down,” he said.

The police report, however, indicates that Diaz’s vehicle was leaving Sailors’ property when Diaz was shot. Police said the Colombia native’s red Mitsubishi was found at the end of the driveway, with Diaz slumped over the steering wheel and blood covering his face.

Puglise dismissed suggestions that Diaz’s race may have been a factor in the incident.

“[This was] not a question of color, not a question of race, this is a question of a tragic event dictated by fear,” Puglise told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News