Amavi, Gana, Vertout, Traore all look like bloody good players to me.
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on October 08, 2015, 12:17:20 AMDoes anybody think sabermetrics are all a club uses when anyone with a basic grasp of it knows it has limited use in football compared to its use in baseball. It's widely used in American sport no reason an American owner wouldn't think it would work over here.I can think of 2 football clubs with American owners who know so little about football they would probably give it a punt,and pay a wad of cash not only to use the system,but put the people in place to use it.I would guess it comes in cheaper then having a worldwide scouting network which any top club should have.
Does anybody think sabermetrics are all a club uses when anyone with a basic grasp of it knows it has limited use in football compared to its use in baseball.
If someone can't work out how to make the most of talented players then that sounds like an issue with the manager more than the players. IMO any way.
Quote from: bertlambshank on October 08, 2015, 12:31:53 AMQuote from: PeterWithesShin on October 08, 2015, 12:17:20 AMDoes anybody think sabermetrics are all a club uses when anyone with a basic grasp of it knows it has limited use in football compared to its use in baseball. It's widely used in American sport no reason an American owner wouldn't think it would work over here.I can think of 2 football clubs with American owners who know so little about football they would probably give it a punt,and pay a wad of cash not only to use the system,but put the people in place to use it.I would guess it comes in cheaper then having a worldwide scouting network which any top club should have.It is just lazy journalism. I bet most of the journos that use the term "moneyball" don't even understand it. Most of the time they link it to buying young talented players, buy cheap sell expensive. Which is what most clubs have been doing since long before Billy Beane was even born or Bill James first started publishing his own stats. So by their standards Benteke is a "moneyball" signing. As was Platt, Yorke etc. The closest example to sabermetrics being used would be Liverpool with Downing (most crosses) and Carroll (headed goals). It wasn't moneyball as they ended up spending £55m on them, and they quickly found out it doesn't work that way in football anyway.
Quote from: ozzjim on October 08, 2015, 12:14:16 AMAmavi, Gana, Vertout, Traore all look like bloody good players to me. Sounds like the manager doesn't think so which is part of the problem and an easy get out for the club when it goes tits up.
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on October 08, 2015, 12:32:14 AMIf someone can't work out how to make the most of talented players then that sounds like an issue with the manager more than the players. IMO any way.Too right it is but if the manager doesn't fancy the player to play in the system the manager wants that is a big problem for the club.The problem is scouting this way doesn't make allowances for the sale of play.You can bet once a certain German rocks up in Merseyside the first thing he will do is do it his way.
Quote from: bertlambshank on October 08, 2015, 12:21:46 AMQuote from: ozzjim on October 08, 2015, 12:14:16 AMAmavi, Gana, Vertout, Traore all look like bloody good players to me. Sounds like the manager doesn't think so which is part of the problem and an easy get out for the club when it goes tits up.Yep, he's getting his excuses in because he knows the end is near.
Correct he wanted players who did a lot of things well, because he knew he couldn't get superstars. So getting players on base often made it easier for teams to score runs without getting home runs. You could essentially chip away at the scoreboard. It also put immense pressure on opposing pitchers. It works as a concept or theory in small markets with low revenue, or those sides who couldn't compete with the bigger sides. But it's not like Oakland has made the playoffs that often and they've never won the World Series. Not everything can be achieved through analytics. Sometimes you just need better talent and that costs money.
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on October 08, 2015, 12:32:14 AMIf someone can't work out how to make the most of talented players then that sounds like an issue with the manager more than the players. IMO any way.Too right it is but if the manager doesn't fancy the player to play in the system the manager wants that is a big problem for the club.The problem is scouting this way doesn't make allowances for the style of play.You can bet once a certain German rocks up in Merseyside the first thing he will do is do it his way.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-3263913/Aston-Villa-boss-Tim-Sherwood-concerned-untested-foreign-signings-not-adapt-quickly-avoid-relegation-battle-missing-preferred-targets.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490Shoot me for linking the heil
Quote from: PeterWithesShin on October 08, 2015, 12:39:21 AMQuote from: bertlambshank on October 08, 2015, 12:31:53 AMQuote from: PeterWithesShin on October 08, 2015, 12:17:20 AMDoes anybody think sabermetrics are all a club uses when anyone with a basic grasp of it knows it has limited use in football compared to its use in baseball. It's widely used in American sport no reason an American owner wouldn't think it would work over here.I can think of 2 football clubs with American owners who know so little about football they would probably give it a punt,and pay a wad of cash not only to use the system,but put the people in place to use it.I would guess it comes in cheaper then having a worldwide scouting network which any top club should have.It is just lazy journalism. I bet most of the journos that use the term "moneyball" don't even understand it. Most of the time they link it to buying young talented players, buy cheap sell expensive. Which is what most clubs have been doing since long before Billy Beane was even born or Bill James first started publishing his own stats. So by their standards Benteke is a "moneyball" signing. As was Platt, Yorke etc. The closest example to sabermetrics being used would be Liverpool with Downing (most crosses) and Carroll (headed goals). It wasn't moneyball as they ended up spending £55m on them, and they quickly found out it doesn't work that way in football anyway. Spurs were using it as well.It really isn't a very good advert for it.