Tag Archives: Soccer Analytics

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 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

The SSAC Interview of Chris Anderson & David Sally

By Zach Slaton, Contributor

One of the many benefits of attending the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference is personal interaction with a number of people normally only accessible via email, Twitter, or Skype.  Most conference attendees look forward to such personal interaction, and are even willing to do on the record interviews.  I was fortunate enough to interview each of the four panelists on the conference’s Soccer Analytics panel at various times throughout the weekend, and will be publishing transcripts of those interviews over the next week. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Soccer Analytics at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference

By Zach Slaton, Contributor Soccer analytics operates within an interesting space in sports culture.  Perhaps its biggest group of casual users – the types of fans and analysts that drove sabermetrics in baseball – are located in places like the United States where the game doesn’t occupy as much of the national sports consciousness. Alternatively, soccer analytics is still largely seen as a pollution of the beautiful game in the areas of the world where it is most popular.  Thus, the conundrum exists in how to meld these two worlds – one where the sport is most popular and another where its analysis is most popular.  For three years running the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference has been trying to do this via their soccer-specific panels, and while this year’s panel made some improvements over previous years it demonstrated that a change in strategy and perhaps the types of panelists invited are in order if the 2014 panel is to deliver on the field’s promise.  Meanwhile, soccer analytics material outside of the panel continued to flourish and offered glimpses of what might be included in future panels. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

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