Footballer Rating: Using science to identify true football/soccer stars

World Cup 2010 player ratings [dead link]

Listen to All Things Considered (NPR) Interview (Guy Raz)

Check latest Cosmic Log on our analysis (Alan Boyle, MSNBC)

Listen to Science News (Science) podcast

Listen to Scientific American podcast (Cynthia Graber)

Listen to National Academy of Engineering’s Engineering Innovation Podcast and Radio Series (Randy Atkins)

As a young boy growing up in Portugal, Luís Amaral loved playing, watching and talking soccer. Amaral and his friends passionately debated about which players were “the best.” But, it was just a matter of opinion. Unlike baseball and basketball, there isn’t a lot of statistical information detailing how each soccer player contributes to a match.

Amaral, now a professor at Northwestern University, combined his love of soccer with his research team’s computational skills to measure and rank the success of soccer players based on an objective measure of performance instead of opinion. The results of the study will be published June 16, 2010 PLoS ONE, a journal published by the Public Library of Science.

Though their analysis, Amaral and his team were able to objectively rank the performances of all the players in the 2008 European Cup tournament. Their results closely matched the general consensus of sports reporters who covered the matches as well as the team of experts, coaches and managers that subjectively chose players for the “best of” tournament teams.

“In soccer there are relatively few big things that can be counted,” said Amaral, professor of chemical and biological engineering with the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science and senior author of the paper. “You can count how many goals someone scores, but if a player scores two goals in a match, that’s amazing. You can really only divide two or three goals or two or three assists among, potentially, eleven players. Most of the players will have nothing to quantify their performance at the end of the match.”

To find a quantitative way to rank players, co-author and Northwestern graduate student Josh Waitzman first wrote software to pull play-by-play statistical information from the 2008 Euro Cup website. This type of extensive statistical information is usually only gathered for important matches, Amaral said. Amaral and Jordi Duch, the paper’s first author and an assistant professor of applied math and computer science at Universitat Rovira I Virgili in Spain, used the data to quantify the performance of players by generalizing methods from social network analysis.

“You can define a network in which the elements of the network are your players,” Amaral said. “Then you have connections between the players if they make passes from one to another. Also, because their goal is to score, you can include another element in this network, which is the goal.”

Amaral’s team mapped out the flow of the soccer ball between players in the network as well as shooting information and analyzed the results.

“We looked at the way in which the ball can travel and finish on a shot,” said Amaral, who also is a member of the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO) and an Early Career Scientist with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. “The more ways a team has for a ball to travel and finish on a shot, the better that team is. And, the more times the ball goes through a given player to finish in a shot, the better that player performed.”

“It would never happen by chance that we would get such striking agreement with the consensus opinion of so many experts if our measure wasn’t good,” Amaral said.

He says this kind of analysis can be used outside of the soccer world, too. Companies could use the method to rank and evaluate the performance of employees working together on a team project, for example.

The title of the paper is “Quantifying the Performance of Individual Players in a Team Activity.”

The National Science Foundation supported the research.

— Erin White

Selected Coverage

How to find the world’s best soccer players. Forbes (Jonathan Fahey)

Study tries to evaluate performances of players. AP (Rachel Cohen)

Researchers use science to identify soccer stars. National Science Foundation

The science of soccer stats. MSNBC.com (Alan Boyle)

Professor ranks and rates soccer players. UPI

Algorithm ranks world’s top soccer talent. CNET.com (Elizabeth Armstrong Moore)

Science’s take on soccer. The Scientist (Jef Akst)

New soccer stat method determines best players Discovery News

Software allows researchers to compute a soccer player’s value to his squad Washington Post

Mundial 2010: Deco foi sexto melhor no Euro2008, segundo análise por computador de investigador português. LUSA

Computador dá nota à performance dos jogadores e não se distrai com favoritismos Público (Nicolau Ferreira)

O homem do jogo: Elano Ciência Hoje On-line (Thiago Camelo)

Mondiali: Sconfita, ma un software promuove gioco Italia ANSA

Descubren el algoritmo del tiqui-taca Telecinco

La ciencia da la razón al pulpo Paul La Razon (Eva M. Rull)

La ciencia del España Alemania Quo (Alex Fernandez)

When It Comes to Stats, Soccer Seldom Counts New York Times (Tom Kaplan)

Also posted at:

Science Daily
Eureka! Science News 
PhysOrg.com 

NationalGeographic.com
Sports Illustrated

ABC News
CBS News

San Francisco Examiner
MiamiHerald.com
San Diego Union Tribune
Austin American-Statesman
San Jose Mercury News
Denver Post
Fort Worth Star Telegram
San Francisco Chronicle
Sacramento Bee
Seattle Times
Salon
Baltimore Sun
Los Angeles Times
USA Today
Washington Post 
Boston Globe
Arizona Daily Star 
Napa Valley Register
Casper Star-Tribune Online
The Southern
BlueRidgeNow.com
Ledger Independent
Herald & Review
Spartanburg Herald Journal
Kansas City Star 
Bellingham Herald
Lexington Herald Leader
American Chronicle
Bradenton Herald
Centre Daily Times
Wilkes Barre Times-Leader
Greenwich Time
Orlando Sentinel 
Washington Examiner
Gaea Times (blog)
Las Cruces Sun-News
York Daily Record
Daily Press
TheNewsTribune.com
Myrtle Beach Sun News

KMPH Fox 26 
fox4kc.com
WKOW-TV.com
WFTV Orlando
WKRN
KPLR 11
NTV
FOX CT
WTVM
FOX2now.com
WMC-TV
WLBT-TV
WAFB.com
KLAS-TV (blog)
WSFA
KFSM
KFVS
News 8 KFMB
WBOC TV 16 
KTVU San Francisco
WDIV Detroit
Central Florida News 13 
KIRO Seattle
myCentralOregon.com