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What is 1 Nerd Sports?

Patrick Barlow • September 22, 2022

The origin story you'll probably forget

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To answer the title briefly, 1 Nerd Sports is a sports analytics company and blog. But the origin story isn't as blasé as that. If you're interested, continue reading. If not, check out some of our stats and the blog.

Sports analytics is a fast-growing, ever-crowded industry, popularized by the 2011 movie "Moneyball". Since then, a myriad of companies and tools have popped up, each claiming to be the next best thing. But this isn't a history of sports analytics. For that, I recommend Google. This is a history of 1 Nerd Sports, and why I decided to throw my hat into the ring in such a competitive industry.

This story starts in November 2021. The latest CFP poll had been released, and, as per usual, there was plenty of debate over who the committee got right, and who they got wrong. Without an equal chance at the playoff for every team, this discussion was destined to rage on forever. But even that wouldn't decide who was truly the best team that year. That's when I decided to create an objective team rating system.

In order for this to work, so many questions needed to be answered. What stats mattered the most? What separates the good teams from the great? Could a team that went 3-9 be better than a team that went 9-3? Is a great team in a bad conference better than a good team in a good conference?

With these questions in mind, I went to work. Using Microsoft Excel, Claris FileMaker Pro, and the College Football Data API, I began working on a formula, the Team Rating Analysis Model. It took a great deal of building, breaking, and improving the formula (and it's still being improved every day). After almost 1 year, it was complete.

The Team Rating Analysis Model, or TRAM, is an objective model that rates each team across several criteria. There are some basic ideas behind TRAM that make it all work. Here are a few:

  1. Great teams find a way to win
  2. The team that starts the season is never the same as the team that finishes it (for better or worse)
  3. Being in a bad conference does not make you bad
  4. Not all wins are made equal

Obviously, some will find disagreements with these ideas, and that's okay.

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