Apps, AI, & sweeper keepers - big data hits the football big time

Riyad Mahrez and Rodolfo borrellImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Manchester City's assistant coach Rodolfo Borrell (right) uses a tablet computer to illustrate a coaching point to Riyad Mahrez

As Manchester City's players returned to the home dressing room after January's exhilarating, exhausting 2-1 win over Liverpool, music shuddered from speakers. A house remix of Gregory Porter's Liquid Spirit mixed with gleeful shouts as the celebrations began.

But in one corner, three men huddled quietly together.

Ederson and John Stones stared at a big screen as Harry Dunn, a member of manager Pep Guardiola's backroom staff, zipped through a timeline of the match action to show a replay of Stones clearing the ball off his own goalline, with just 11mm to spare.

By the time they were showered, changed and back in the tinted privacy of their cars, Ederson, Stones or any of their team-mates could open the Hudl app on their phone and watch that moment, along with every other involvement they had in the game.

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That same orange icon will be on most Premier League players' screens.

Some will log on after a match to find a similarly comprehensive compilation of highlights (and lowlights). Others will find a selection of clips with complimentary or critical coaches' notes. Some are even required to put together their own showreel, demonstrating where they felt they did well and could do better.

When it comes to the serious business of deciphering what happened on the pitch, all 20 Premier League sides have a relationship with the American technology firm, which monitors every match from five tactical cameras, as well as the traditional broadcast angle shown on television.

Watching from high in the stands at Etihad Stadium during City's win over Liverpool, two of the club's performance analysis department worked furiously on laptops, using the programme to capture the devil in the match's detail.

Touches, tackles, shots, passes, high presses, deep blocks, set-pieces, slip-ups and much, much more are monitored with about 90 different aspects of the game "coded" live, while the game is going on, to tie incidents to the relevant footage.

Their work can be used to flag things up to the tablet-clutching coaches on the bench and maximise the 15-minute interval.

"At half-time the coaches can see anything they want," explains Aaron Briggs, Manchester City's senior first-team performance analyst.

"If they spot an incident at a corner, we can pull the clip, find the best angle to get the coaches' point across and they will deliver it to the player using the technology."

But full-time is when the real hard work begins for Briggs and his team.

They will then spend about four hours going back through each City match looking for more subtle tactical cues and formational shifts, focusing on each individual player in turn, coding the footage to produce a deeper level of analysis.

A top-level match contains roughly 2,500 bookmarks, highlighting points of interest to be called up at the touch of a button.

Image source, Hudl
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The view that an analyst would have as they classify the different incidents of a match

If Guardiola's performance analysis chief, Carles Planchart, wants to see where City's attempts to play out from the back are faltering, he can instantly review every time his defenders have been hustled out of possession.

If the Spaniard wants to see how vulnerable an opposition full-back is to a quick switch of play, he can review how they dealt with crossfield balls over the past five seasons.

In April, he described how City, external had scored a goal after noting and exploiting Chelsea midfielder Jorginho's tendency to stray out of position as his team pressed high upfield.

The evidence for every tactical theory is ready for review in seconds.

With stats gatherers, such as Opta, providing a raft of raw numbers, and footage from across different continents easily available, analysts can spot trends that previously would take hundreds of hours to chisel out.

In the 1950s, former accountant Charles Reep, sometimes sporting a miner's helmet to illuminate his notes, would manically scribble down play-by-play diagrams at every Swindon home match to try to find out the most effective playing styles. His recommendation of long-ball route-one football, external shaped the English psyche for decades to come.

During his time in charge of Argentina, Leeds United boss Marcelo Bielsa would spend 12 hours a day, on his own, spooling through videotapes of matches, laboriously editing clips together and drawing up diagrams. He took a library of 2,000 video tapes, external for his team to watch to the 2002 World Cup in Japan.

Image source, Getty Images
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Despite his exhaustive video research, Bielsa's Argentina side were eliminated in the group stages of the 2002 World Cup

Briggs has his own memories of technology limiting, rather than accelerating, analysis.

"When I first started my career at Preston in 2008, there was a television with a massive back and a small 20-inch screen," he says.

"Below, it had a double cassette player and you would play the game on the top VHS, stopping, fast-forwarding to find the bits that you wanted to record on to the bottom deck. The whole process would take about a day.

"Then came the era of DVDs. You would be sent the opposition games through the post, the manager would be waiting for it and I would be chasing Royal Mail, trying to find out if it had been tracked and when it would arrive.

"I used to take a nine DVD burner with me for every away trip, put a master DVD in the top and then burn nine copies for the coaches. Now we just stick it on a hard drive and transfer it instantly to whoever we want."

The hard drives are only getting bigger.

Spatial information is the latest frontier in football's big data arms race. For the past few years, Premier League matches have not just been filmed but 'tracked', with the movement of every player and the ball continuously recorded via optical technology.

"The spatial data is so key because when you look at an individual's involvement in the game it is normally less than two minutes on the ball," says Briggs.

"The spatial data is the other 98% of the game that no-one has really looked at previously."

The technology has revolutionised basketball's NBA since its arrival in 2013, with teams and players tweaking collective tactics, external and individual techniques, external to increase their chances of winning.

Unlocking potential percentage gains in football, a less structured, more fluid sport where scores are relatively few, is trickier.

Premier League frontrunners Manchester City and Liverpool are among those to employ data scientists to crunch the numbers, but, as well as the finest minds, artificial intelligence is also being brought to bear.

Stats Edge is a match preparation tool produced by Stats Perform that was first road-tested by Croatia at last year's World Cup.

Before their semi-final, team analyst Marc Rochon could instantly call up every set-piece opponents England had delivered in the tournament, seeing the runs made by each attacker, the type of delivery favoured by each taker and which area of the box were most profitable in generating attempts at goal.

Gareth Southgate's "Love Train" was duly derailed, helping Croatia to a showpiece final against France.

This season is the first that the programme is available to Premier League clubs.

It uses spatial data to detect different phases of play, giving an overview on how teams build from the back, how they counter-attack, how often and how high they press, their reliance and vulnerability to crosses, their deep-lying defensive shapes and how their formation morphs as they move upfield.

If a player is slow in taking up their defensive role, if there is unexploited space between the lines, if a particular forward burst is where a team derives a large number of their chances, the programme remorselessly, objectively exposes it.

Image source, Stats Edge
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How the tool provides an overview of a team's playing style in a particular group of matches

"When Marcelo Bielsa did his press conference at Leeds last season, describing his tactical preparation, what he showed was throwing people at analysing formation," says Dr Patrick Lucey, the company's chief scientist.

"He took in 51 of Derby's games and each took four hours - that just reeks of needing disrupting. We need new technology to address that."

However, if it turns out machines can do the job of a small battalion of analysts, where will that leave Briggs and football's superpowers?

Will their less well-resourced opponents be able to uncover flaws in City that would have stayed hidden to the unassisted human eye?

Or, by laying every tactical quirk bare, will technology foil whatever ploy they come up with to narrow the gap?

The team behind the AI tool believe machine learning will encourage, rather than stifle, innovation.

Paul Power, AI scientist, points to the way some goalkeepers, such as Julian Pollersbeck at Hamburg,, external have been deployed well out of their box when their team is in possession, the sort of tactic that would traditionally have been seen as too risky, whatever rewards it might offer.

"Technology and data is information which allow people to make better decisions and evolve the game - because those coaches can see where the ball is lost most often and what the risks are and how to mitigate them," he says.

"Teams have always had questions, but data has not always had the answer. Now, with the advent of deep learning and modelling dynamic systems, we can start to answer them."

Image source, Getty Images
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Pollersbeck was deployed up towards the halfway line when Hamburg were in possession by then-manager Christian Titz

And this is just the start.

In the future there will be a scouting tool that will flag potential transfer targets, not on how well they are playing for their current team, but on how they would fit the style of their possible buyers.

The aim is to model the delicate alchemy of teamwork, predicting how players move and interact alongside each other, a process they term "ghosting".

This year, their company is tracking how the very skeletons of college basketball players move,, external helping teams make miniscule technical adjustments and winkle out "tells" that hint at what an opponent is about to do.

But sometimes, still, whatever the computers say, whatever the analysts can show, the wrong option is the right choice.

Four months after Stones and Ederson had gathered to watch one decisive moment in the Premier League race, another arrived at Etihad Stadium.

With 20 minutes to go and City unable to break down a stubborn Leicester side in the penultimate game of the season, central defender Vincent Kompany stepped forward 25 yards out from goal.

"If you analyse all the centre-backs from across the world, hitting the ball from the distance that Vinnie did, you would tell him not to shoot," remembers Briggs.

Indeed, boss Guardiola, along with players Sergio Aguero, Gabriel Jesus and Raheem Sterling, admitted afterwards they were willing their captain to do anything but.

"Vinnie felt the moment though, delivered and it was a major reason why City won the Premier League," adds Briggs.

"There is always going to be the individual talent of the players on the pitch who can decide a game in a moment. It is not going to be computer v computer, the fans don't want that and I think football would kind of lose its soul if that happened."