Its frustrating that bloom is a statistical expert in football we have a team of analysts researching players and studying opposition.,........ Yet we still buy poor players and consistently get tactics wrong in games
Frustrating? What do tactics have to do with algorithms. Reading Soccernomics suggests that the manager & tactics are far less important than what most fans think.
'Lump on England in the last one dayer, its probably bent as there is nothing on it' hint.
Why not play an active Moneyball game with The Albion? His data indicates (by player) the odds of success, so assemble a squad capable of promotion. He'll keep losing 3M-5M a year in The Championship, so that can't be his goal as a successful businessman. FFP is a barrier I suppose but wasn't for Leicester or QPR. He'll know the payoff (Prem money plus increased value of the club) vs. the investment necessary and the risks (he has the data apparently), so why aren't we involved in that game?
Look at England's record in dead rubbers against teams from the sub-continent ove the last 15-20 years. It's scandalous.
It looks to me like that's exactly what we are doing, whilst spending within our FFP allowance. A lot of this window's business had a moneyball vibe about it I thought.
I'm convinced one day a bet like that will pay a chunk of my mortgage off.
I suppose one could make the same argument for Eng vs Aus, Headingly '81 and it's the fact that the unthinkable does happen in sport means these markets are ripe for manipulation.
100% agree.
It's inconceivable to me that a numbers based nerd type like Bloom wouldn't be using some kind of stat based approach to buying players or at least be a part of the decision making process. I think that he is also aware that a portion of our fans wouldn't take to this so is sensible enough to keep it quiet.
You mean the one where a couple of the Aussie team had a quid or so on themselves to lose at 500/1?!
I'm convinced you are right.
This one has massive question marks against it. Wasn't a dead rubber though.
http://www.espncricinfo.com/england-v-pakistan-2010/engine/current/match/426416.html
I suppose one could make the same argument for Eng vs Aus, Headingly '81 and it's the fact that the unthinkable does happen in sport means these markets are ripe for manipulation.
I know. Unthinkable today. I don't think anyone seriously thinks they threw it though do they?
I don't think Merv etc would have thrown anything other than a cricket ball, really hard, at someone's head.
It's quite the irony though. Back then they lose from an impossible position, admit to having a few quid on it and everyone has a jolly good laugh and puts it automatically in their top ten sporting moments ever.
A few years later results that are only just a little less incredible get on no one's highlights reel and are apparently devoid of player bets, though everyone suspects they're bent.
That game was more bent than a night out with Dale Winton, Graham Norton, Alan Carr and Lewis Hamilton. I think that was the game with the No ball incident (a market which you can't bet on all the more bizarely) when the young bowler got banned.
The dead rubber scenario works in one day games, sadly, the sub continent teams don't seem to mind throwing the odd test match when there is something on it either (the aforementioned Sri Lanka game wasn't a dead rubber either). Whilst we still see Test cricket as the ultimate here, 20/20 and 50 over games seem to have taken over in the sub continent.
Its frustrating that bloom is a statistical expert in football we have a team of analysts researching players and studying opposition.,........ Yet we still buy poor players and consistently get tactics wrong in games
Thank you. That article crystalised a few thoughts I had on TB.
Explains some strange body language given in reaction to a question asked at the NWSS meeting as well.
I'm off to sort out a football algorithm of my own.