This contribution comes from the desk of Dan Schlauch.
Abstract:
The importance of an effective kicking game in the NFL is undeniable. Kickers are regularly the highest scoring players on a team and are repeatedly asked to perform in key situations of high stakes. The difference between the best performing kicker (Janikowski) and the worst performing kicker (Brown) in 2009 totaled over 35 points, which would likely make the difference in several games. Additionally, the mean salary of kickers was the lowest in the NFL at just over $1.5 million.
However, despite these considerations, this analysis shows that kickers receive a disproportionately high percentage of team salary and that money spent on kickers has a startlingly low return on investment.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Friday, September 17, 2010
Re-Launch: Community 2.0

But one of my goals continues to be helping building a collaborative community of football stat heads without “premium” content or “proprietary” black-box stats, and I’d like to offer readers a platform for sharing ideas and analysis. In the recent off-season, I completed a long-standing goal of building an open NFL play-by-play database suitable for research and making available to everyone. Immediately, readers started parsing the data, adding fields for various things, and sharing their insights in the comments section of the post.