top | item 7077495

Where Football Players Call Home

41 points| chwolfe | 12 years ago |mode.github.io

24 comments

order
[+] icefox|12 years ago|reply
[+] mxfh|12 years ago|reply
There is a per capital (college-aged male population) view.

Yet there is an issue with the scale, which is quite distorted by single player/low population (<50k) county values. They should be filtered out for the definition of the coloring scale. They don't provide any good information since county population sizes vary by magnitudes. (I wouldn't even recommending filling the county with a color in these cases as simple dot at the county centroid should suffice)

Granularity matters, counties are a not a optimal unit for this, aggregating by congressional districts would better, yet still not optimal.

[added] Alternatively counties could be clustered to some minimum size. The US Census Bureau provides sets of counties with above 50000 total population as a XLS spreadsheet. http://www.census.gov/people/eeotabulation/data/eeoupcoming....

[+] ignostic|12 years ago|reply
I thought the same thing - until I noticed the per capita button. This should be on by default.

Unfortunately it then becomes clear that sample sizes are so small that we can't draw any real conclusions. You look at Garfield county in Montana and there are only 25 college-age males, so the 1 player anomaly makes it suddenly look like a big sports hub.

Cool concept and execution, but insufficient data.

[+] s0rce|12 years ago|reply
And the data normalized per county is overrun by noise from counties with 10 people and 1 player.
[+] snake_plissken|12 years ago|reply
I don't understand how this comic relates to absolute vs per-capita
[+] ovulator|12 years ago|reply
The more interesting data is when it is filtered by conference or team.
[+] imp|12 years ago|reply
Click "Per Capita" on the map. They have that accounted for.
[+] mountaineer|12 years ago|reply
This is great. Would be interesting to pull up the list of players from each county too.
[+] 91bananas|12 years ago|reply
I'd like to see this across other sports too.
[+] oddshocks|12 years ago|reply
It looks like you're missing two states.
[+] letney|12 years ago|reply
I came here to say the same.

As a resident of Hawaii it often peeves me to see it left out of so many geographic info-graphics.

Hawaii as a sizeable Polynesian pupulation, so my guess is that both the total and per-capita numbers for Hawaii are on the high end of the spectrum.

It's too bad this is not revealed in an otherwise great visualization.

[+] brucehart|12 years ago|reply
Very nicely done. I've thought about doing something similar with college basketball players. My idea was to plot the locations of the players with a circle and make the radius of the circle tied to some sort of stat such as points scored or minutes played (or something more advanced like PER*minutes played). I think it would give some interesting insights into the recruiting footprint of each school. For football, there are enough players on each roster that highlighting the counties gives a similar view.
[+] bennstancil|12 years ago|reply
Doing the same thing for basketball should be pretty easy (but like you said, it may not be quite as interesting because there are a lot fewer players). I'm going to try to put that together this weekend and see how it looks.