ESPN's analytics rankings

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LongTimeListener

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This could get heated and locked up faster than a politics thread.

The Great Analytics Rankings

ESPN ranked every team based on how it embraces the new world. The top two franchises, the Philadelphia 76ers and Houston Astros, certainly do wonders for the cause.

The San Francisco Giants and the Seattle Seahawks fit in the "One Foot In" group, mid-range among the five categories (All-In, Believers, One Foot In, Skeptics, Nonbelievers). Imagine if they were Believers, they'd be unbeatable like the Indians and Browns!
 
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Lakers, Jets, Knicks, Avalanche and the Washington NFL team are certainly crushing it, though.
 
I was really hoping this was about a story on BR or Deadspin, where some enterprising reporter took the last five years of dribble spewed by all of ESPN's prognosticating analysists and reviewed who came close to being right. How accurate are the mock drafts? The March Madness predictions?
 
Does getting rid of players before they reach a certain age count as analytics?

I would think this would apply a lot more to MLB and the NBA (I have no idea about hockey) than it would the NFL.

What's the NFL equivalent of a guy who draws a lot of walks? :D
 
My team would be in the one-foot-in category. I'm certainly not going to hand the franchise over the computer geeks. Consider it, but let those who watch and analyze the players and the games have the loudest voice.
 
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Does getting rid of players before they reach a certain age count as analytics?
I would think this would apply a lot more to MLB and the NBA (I have no idea about hockey) than it would the NFL.
What's the NFL equivalent of a guy who draws a lot of walks? :D

Any New England Patriots offensive player not named Tom Brady?
 
From the "all-in" Pirates...

"The way that we are integrated is a strength," Fox told ESPN.com. As Fox and his staff continue development of the Pirates' baseball information system, he says he believes the team has the resources to adapt to the next set of challenges that player tracking data will bring.

Most important, analytics have a voice in Huntington's decision making. "One of the best things about Neal is his inclusiveness," Fox adds, "he is always willing to share his thought process and listen to ideas."


I have no problem with my Buccos using data, but what I bolded seems to be a long way from being "all-in."
 

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