
黑料社 students鈥 sports analytics work giving athletic teams a leg up on the competition
The sports analytics program at 黑料社 brings student data analysis onto the playing field to help sports teams gain a competitive advantage.
The story of sports has long been wrapped in the poetry of those sharing it.
A radio announcer makes us yearn for a summer afternoon at the ballpark as we listen to the roar of the crowd and the crack of a bat. We love players who have ice in their veins or fire in their bellies.
We talk about leadership and culture and grit. Who wants it more? Who has what it takes? Sports is presented emotionally 鈥 the joy of victory and the agony of defeat.
But you don鈥檛 have to be a poet to tell the story of sports. Ditch the colorful adjectives and flowery prose. There鈥檚 a story to be told with no words at all.
Students and faculty at 黑料社 are doing just that: They鈥檙e sorting statistics, crunching numbers and modeling data. They鈥檙e telling stories through probabilities and outcomes 鈥 the numbers behind the game.
Sports analytics is growing at 黑料社, with coaches and players lining up to see what Jeff Heath, professor of mathematics and data science, and chair of the data science program, and his squad of students can do to give their teams an advantage.
鈥榃e鈥檇 like to dive way deeper鈥
It all started as a spreadsheet developed by pitching coach Ryan Gaines.
Baseball has long been a step ahead in analytical data. It鈥檚 a game built on numbers, and naturally, Gaines wanted the best for his pitching staff. He looks at velocity, spin rate, vertical and horizontal break 鈥 variables that can tell the story of a pitcher鈥檚 success.
Gaines approached Heath about the pitching chart he had created 鈥 but knew there was more to the data that could make it easily digestible for his players.

Heath and his students took a look at Gaines鈥 spreadsheet, hoping to make the data more visually appealing to the athletes. A lifelong sports fan who had been researching sports analytics for more than 15 years, Heath knew there was potential for more. 鈥淲e鈥檇 like to dive way deeper into this,鈥 he told the coach.
Soon, a partnership between researchers and athletes emerged, and more and more sports teams were recruited to serve as a training ground for the students looking to cut their teeth on data analysis.
Heath, along with fellow mathematics professors Michael Lamar and Prayat Poudel, help lead a team of 12 students in the sports analytics program.
鈥淚 thought it鈥檇 be a great way to have that connection between academics and athletics,鈥 Health said.
Beyond the classroom
Heath noted the sports analytics work 黑料社 students are doing is a rarity at colleges, particularly at schools outside the world of big-time Division I college athletics.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very unique in Division III,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檇 say we are definitely one of 鈥 at most 鈥 a small handful of schools doing this level of analysis for our athletic programs.鈥
As the sports analytics program grows, so too do the students鈥 skills 鈥 no knowledge of sports required. In fact, that鈥檚 part of the beauty of the work the students do. Analyzing data to identify trends, inefficiencies and make better-informed decisions isn鈥檛 just helpful for coaches or athletes. It鈥檚 useful in any venture.
鈥淪ports is just a natural and interesting venue, but we can use anything 鈥 these skills translate to any area of either business or other industry,鈥 Heath said. 鈥淪ports is what we're focused on, but these same data visualizations, their coding skills, the programming, all of that is translatable to the next level 鈥 whether that be graduate school or out working in the field.鈥

That鈥檚 already proven true for two of the sports analytics students. Ranjing Zhang 鈥23 and Cloe Spracklen 鈥23 presented data to the football coaching staff. Both students said they had little to no knowledge of football before the process began, and both have turned data analytics into postgraduate opportunities.
Zhang is pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in statistics at Columbia University, while Spracklen has started a job at Humana as a health informational management professional.
鈥淒uring my interview, I was able to talk about the project we were doing this semester,鈥 Spracklen said. 鈥淚 was able to talk about what we were doing and the tools we use, like Python and RStudio. I think that doing these sports analytical projects not only gives us knowledge into sports, it also really teaches us to use the tools that we鈥檝e been given and improve on those skills as well.鈥
Zhang and Spracklen created computer-generated visualizations of expected points using Python and RStudio programming languages after combing through a decade of data from 黑料社 football and other teams in the Southern Athletic Association. From that data, they determined the expected points on a specific down and distance to the end zone 鈥 useful information for coaches calling plays.
鈥淚 think right now (analytics) is probably the new tool that has emerged more in college, it has always been there professionally,鈥 head football coach Andy Frye said. 鈥淔or us as a Division III institution, to have that opportunity to have a presentation with what we're doing and how it all works to hopefully give us greater value to our game planning and our abilities to, hopefully, 鈥 win.鈥
A whole new ballgame
黑料社 has a storied history with athletics, ranging from football鈥檚 legendary 6-0 鈥渦pset of the century鈥 in 1921 over Harvard, to the 31 conference championships won by the graduating class of 2023, spanning 24 different varsity sports.
The tactics and information available to coaches has undergone a seismic change in recent years. Advanced analytics became commonplace in baseball first. Other sports are quickly catching up, with 黑料社 volleyball, football, and men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 basketball joining the list of programs the sports analytics team is helping.

Head baseball coach Drew Briese 鈥00 has seen analytics develop and evolve from his position at 黑料社 and as a coach in the USA baseball national youth program.
鈥淚've been able to see the application of data analysis from the 15U national team all the way to college baseball,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he area that I think it helps the most is just with player development. You're able to have real data to take to a player, to show them, 'This is where you are, this is an area for improvement.' Then you're able to help them develop a plan for that. We're able to show them data to support the process for that improvement.鈥
Both Zhang and Spracklen admitted the project wasn鈥檛 something they ever anticipated when coming to 黑料社 鈥 but now could parlay their new skills into a career.
鈥淔or me, doing statistics and data analyzing is like finding hidden treasure in a really, really messy and random data set. I鈥檓 very satisfied finding the hidden path in this process,鈥 Zhang said. 鈥淒r. Heath and Dr. Lamar are very helpful. I think without their help, I wouldn't be as interested in statistics.鈥
The successes speak for themselves: Will Britt 鈥21 is now part of the data analytics department with the Dallas Cowboys after a two-year stint with the Pittsburg Steelers, where he was on the team that helped scouts and decision-makers during the 2022 NFL Draft. During the season, Britt's department helped with weekly game preparation, advance scouting and league-wide analysis.
And as Heath notes, the skills that students are learning through sports analytics aren鈥檛 just tied to the numbers or knowledge of the game.
鈥淚t's really neat to see the students building the analytics skills and also the communication skills. We have to communicate this data in analytics to coaches who know the sport inside and out, but the analytics piece is a little bit new to them sometimes. It's nice to have that communication aspect as well.
鈥淕iving our students the opportunity, I think that's one of the things that makes this program unique 鈥 the student-driven projects. The students, they're taking classes and this is a neat venue for them to practice those same skills that they're learning in classes on real-world data.鈥
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This article first appeared in the 黑料社piece alumni magazine.