It's a method that football is starting to embrace, so I thought it worth a discussion.
Analytics is nothing new to sports. Although never called by its current name, baseball has been tinkering with it for decades ever since the St. Louis Cardinals employed a shift against a slugging left handed hitter named Ted Williams, the American League MVP, in the 1946 World Series. They stacked the left side of the infield and outfield against the dead pull hitter, the best hitter in baseball. Williams hit nearly 150 points below his season average and the Cardinals beat the heavily favored Red Sox and won the series.
Baseball is much more suited to analytics than football. Every hitter has a batting average, every pitcher an ERA. Relative to any individual statistic kept in football, such as a completion percentage or yards per carry, baseball's statistics are more objective and less likely to be influenced by other factors.
My personal take is that it's currently getting used in inappropriate situations. For example, on a 4th and 2 situation in the first quarter and at the opponent's 25 yard line, analytics would determine that a team try for the first down vs. kicking a field goal. The problem is that it does not incorporate subjective factors, like the strength of your running game, the defense they're running against, wind and weather conditions, and so on. Those types of factors are usually not in play in a MLB game. There's no scatter diagram showing a hitter's tendencies. It's all based on an accumulation of multiple team's success rate. My opinion is that analytics are a useful tool for a coach contemplating a decision, but they should not replace the good ole human intuition of an experienced coach that knows his team's and his opponent's strengths and weaknesses
Comments?