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Call For Research: Ted and Analytics

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  • Call For Research: Ted and Analytics

    OK, Maxie reposted an item yesterday in red's panic thread about the 2017 Draft.

    It was about the SPARQ evaluation system and how it helps team identify useful physical characteristics from combine numbers. This was in partial response to my post of an article from The Ringer about how SPARQ and its descendants are making team very conscious of explosive athletic traits among its potential draftees.

    Its all very much in a vein of analytics applied to player personnel. In this case, the draft.

    There are two Packer connections: first is John Dorsey saying his Chiefs are 15% Oakland Athletics (research) and 85% Atlanta Braves (old school scouting). this was in the Ringer article.

    Second is that within the last year or two, Ted said in a press conference he was hiring or talking to a couple people about analytics as it applied to player personnel. He may have said they have hired people or that he was talking to consultants.

    Short version, there are a lot of Packer draftees in last two drafts who look good in the SPARQ system and I think you can make a case the Packers have been getting faster. (Best example for this might be Martinez as your ILB rather than Reggie Ragland - see Maxie's post).

    So I need someone to find that Thompson PC where he mentions analytics. I think its on the board here; I know he said it but I neither remember when or where. He specifically said it was on his to do list and that he was talking to two (or a couple of) people to get up to speed.

    The reason we need it is that a writer has expressed interest in pursuing this for an article after I pestered them on Twitter.
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

  • #2
    February 23rd, 2015

    The Packers rarely use analytics on the personnel side, as general manager Ted Thompson admitted in a recent interview with the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Thompson, an old-school GM, said, "I'm not saying I believe in [analytics], but I'm not going to shut my ears to it. ... We are beginning the process of dabbling in analytics."
    Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

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    • #3
      Found it!

      The proliferation of advanced statistical data has led many teams to create positions for full-time analysts to break it all down, and it appears the Green Bay Packers soon will be next.
      Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

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      • #4
        It's also known as "analitics" in some quarters.
        "The Devine era is actually worse than you remember if you go back and look at it."

        KYPack

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        • #5
          A lot of good stuff here on SPARQ for the NFL on this FAQ: https://3sigmaathlete.com/faq/

          An example:
          There are a vast number of players who have tested out well but failed to make an impact in the NFL. The issue here is hit rate. While Wes Welker had a successful career as a marginal athletic tester, there aren’t very many Wes Welkers around. It’s hard to identify that player, even for the best of scouts. I prefer to take my chances with the better athlete, and the data bears this out: good players also tend to be good athletes.
          One time Lombardi was disgusted with the team in practice and told them they were going to have to start with the basics. He held up a ball and said: "This is a football." McGee immediately called out, "Stop, coach, you're going too fast," and that gave everyone a laugh.
          John Maxymuk, Packers By The Numbers

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          • #6
            So Analitics gets you Damarious Randall, and scouting gets you Ladarius Gunter? and Geronimo Allison?
            What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

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            • #7
              Originally posted by texaspackerbacker View Post
              So Analitics gets you Damarious Randall, and scouting gets you Ladarius Gunter? and Geronimo Allison?
              Yes. But there are 100 times more Randall's than either Gunter or Allison. If you're looking for a classic SPARQ failure, it's not Randall. It's Jeff Janis. Nobody's arguing a pure athlete without natural football instincts is a sure bet to make it in the NFL. We're saying it's the best way to cull through the thousands of players in college and find the players worth pursuing by scouts.
              One time Lombardi was disgusted with the team in practice and told them they were going to have to start with the basics. He held up a ball and said: "This is a football." McGee immediately called out, "Stop, coach, you're going too fast," and that gave everyone a laugh.
              John Maxymuk, Packers By The Numbers

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Maxie the Taxi View Post
                Yes. But there are 100 times more Randall's than either Gunter or Allison. If you're looking for a classic SPARQ failure, it's not Randall. It's Jeff Janis. Nobody's arguing a pure athlete without natural football instincts is a sure bet to make it in the NFL. We're saying it's the best way to cull through the thousands of players in college and find the players worth pursuing by scouts.
                Agreed, however, I'd argue he's a product of scouting too. And unlike Randall, who I tend to be skeptical is ever gonna amount to more than a journeyman, I still think one of these years, something will click for Janis, and he will be a star in this league - hopefully with the Packers.
                What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

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                • #9
                  It will never "click" for Janis. Why? He's got an ugly girlfriend. hahahahahahahahaha

                  One time Lombardi was disgusted with the team in practice and told them they were going to have to start with the basics. He held up a ball and said: "This is a football." McGee immediately called out, "Stop, coach, you're going too fast," and that gave everyone a laugh.
                  John Maxymuk, Packers By The Numbers

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Ron Wolf is not a fan. This is from an April, 2016 article:

                    Former Packers general manager Ron Wolf sees little value in analytics as a rule. In retirement, Wolf spends his winters in Florida and often frequents the St. Louis Cardinals' spring training facility in Jupiter.

                    There he spends many hours commiserating with former Cardinals manager Tony LaRussa and general manager Walt Jocketty. One can only imagine the discussions the three have about scouting talent, making draft decisions and running a franchise.

                    None subscribes to the "Moneyball" philosophy.

                    Wolf said the closest he came to such a thing was an experiment Oakland used incorporating physical testing numbers.

                    "When I was with the Raiders in the '80s, we tried it with height-weight-and-speed guys, guys that tested very well at each position," Wolf said. "We tried to draft those guys, the high-testers. And not one of them made it. Not one. Seriously.

                    "I don't know enough about analytics in football. I don't know how you can incorporate that. As you well know, you can take a statistic and use it any way you want. You can twist that anytime you want to do that."

                    http://archive.jsonline.com/sports/p...376816711.html
                    I wonder how the Wolf puppy feels about it?

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Maxie the Taxi View Post
                      It will never "click" for Janis. Why? He's got an ugly girlfriend. hahahahahahahahaha
                      You know this how?
                      What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by texaspackerbacker View Post
                        You know this how?
                        I was joking.

                        Did you watch the youtube? Or the movie? It's great.
                        One time Lombardi was disgusted with the team in practice and told them they were going to have to start with the basics. He held up a ball and said: "This is a football." McGee immediately called out, "Stop, coach, you're going too fast," and that gave everyone a laugh.
                        John Maxymuk, Packers By The Numbers

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Maxie the Taxi View Post
                          It will never "click" for Janis. Why? He's got an ugly girlfriend. hahahahahahahahaha
                          Does his wife know?
                          He better hope not. Mrs. Janis:



                          (There is supposed tb be a picture of her here with the buck she shot.)

                          https://www.instagram.com/p/BL9jtVkjdlv/
                          Last edited by Patler; 01-08-2017, 01:02 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Patler View Post
                            Ron Wolf is not a fan. This is from an April, 2016 article:



                            I wonder how the Wolf puppy feels about it?
                            Ron Wolf's quote is typical in-the-box, old school thinking. I imagine his conversations with Tony La Russa in St. Louis were very much like the conversation around the table in the Youtube clip I posted. lol
                            One time Lombardi was disgusted with the team in practice and told them they were going to have to start with the basics. He held up a ball and said: "This is a football." McGee immediately called out, "Stop, coach, you're going too fast," and that gave everyone a laugh.
                            John Maxymuk, Packers By The Numbers

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              There is no level to which old school types won't sink to torpedo the notion that a new idea might work. I have no doubt the height-weight-speed guys were busts at a higher rate for Wolf. It sounds entirely like they looked at it in the abstract, like the Raiders always overdraft speedy wideouts (Darius Hayward Bey).

                              However, Wolf had height and weight restrictions for several positions. He also advised Schneider against taking Russell Wilson based on his height. So Ronnie was tied to the same kind of thinking that he claimed proved to be unworkable.

                              LaRussa loved to bang on about analytics, but the hometown team that Ted mentions being well into analytics was the Houston Astros. The Astros a short time ago were fined and had to fire a high level scout who was a key player in their move to data based analysis. He stole information to help build the Astros analytics database.

                              The team he stole information from, the team with the most far reaching database in baseball?

                              The St. Louis Cardinals.

                              LaRussa protested too much. He and Jocketty wanted the credit not to be shared and so they denied their front office used the stuff. When Jocketty resisted its continued use, he was let go. LaRussa followed soon after.
                              Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.

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