Do you reckon it could work for us? It did cross my mind a few months back whether other teams' had given it a go and that it'd be a sneaky move to try. I have an affinity to the Oakland A's and what they achieved, not too dissimilar to ourselves.
I might have a punt on our next manager being a computer. There is a thread on the other side of the site about machines replacing human functions. This might be the next step in that direction in football. After how they treated Mark Warburton (who did an amazing job for them) because he didn't buy into Moneyball theory, I hope that Brentford go down this season.
This is the future. The FinkTank has been using detailed computer analysis on all aspects of football for ages and comes up with loads of good stuff. One example is NEVER go for a shot at goal from a direct free kick. Statistically hardly ever pays off. But the fans love it and only remember the 1 in a 100 screamer into the net.
The film is indeed very inspiring and Brad Pitt does a decent job as a lower end coach.
Baseball strikes me as a game of individual performance , whereas, footy has lots of elements dependant on your team mates.
Hoe do you calculate where best to put the ball based on all the cir***stances required to win it and get it there in the first place , plus, having the right player in the right place to receive it.
Simple enough from a set piece but another thing in open play
In that case when pennant got those 2 for wigan last year it must have been a one in a couple of seasons happening.
I wonder how many direct free kicks are awarded and taken direct to goal each full league Saturday?
I also wonder which individuals have the best ratio.
Since 2007 the highest number of goals scored direct from free kicks in any single Premiership season was only 32. In 2014-15 three players shared highest number of such goals - precisely TWO each. That said my 100-1 may be an exaggeration although the point remains valid imo.