default search action
Anthology of Statistics in Sports, 2005
- Jim Albert, Jay M. Bennett, James J. Cochran:
Anthology of Statistics in Sports. ASA-SIAM series on statistics and applied probability 16, SIAM 2005, ISBN 978-0-89871-587-3 - Jim Albert, Jay M. Bennett, James J. Cochran:
1. Introduction. 1-4 - Jim Albert, James J. Cochran:
2. The Use of Sports in Teaching Statistics. 5-10 - Hal Stern:
3. Introduction to the Football Articles. 13-15 - Scott M. Berry:
4. A Geometry Model for NFL Field Goal Kickers. 17-22 - Mark E. Glickman, Hal S. Stern:
5. A State-Space Model for National Football League Scores. 23-33 - David Harville:
6. Predictions for National Football League Games via Linear-Model Methodology. 35-43 - Donald G. Morrison, Manohar U. Kalwani:
7. The Best NFL Field Goal Kickers: Are They Lucky or Good? 45-52 - Hal Stern:
8. On the Probability of Winning a Football Game. 53-57 - Jim Albert, James J. Cochran:
9. Introduction to the Baseball Articles. 61-66 - Jim Albert:
10. Exploring Baseball Hitting Data: What about Those Breakdown Statistics? 67-75 - Jay M. Bennett:
11. Did Shoeless Joe Jackson Throw the 1919 World Series? 77-86 - Jay M. Bennett, John A. Flueck:
12. Player Game Percentage. 87-89 - George Casella, Roger L. Berger:
13. Estimation with Selected Binomial Information or Do You Really Believe That Dave Winfield Is Batting .471? 91-101 - Cliff Frohlich:
14. Baseball: Pitching No-Hitters. 103-109 - Bill James, Jim Albert, Hal S. Stern:
15. Answering Questions about Baseball Using Statistics. 111-117 - G. R. Lindsey:
16. The Progress of the Score during a Baseball Game. 119-144 - Robert L. Wardrop:
17. Introduction to the Basketball Articles. 147-148 - Bradley P. Carlin:
18. Improved NCAA Basketball Tournament Modeling via Point Spread and Team Strength Information. 149-153 - Patrick D. Larkey, Richard A. Smith, Joseph B. Kadane:
19. It's Okay to Believe in the "Hot Hand". 155-162 - Neil C. Schwertman, Kathryn L. Schenk, Brett C. Holbrook:
20. More Probability Models for the NCAA Regional Basketball Tournaments. 163-167 - Amos Tversky, Thomas Gilovich:
21. The Cold Facts about the "Hot Hand" in Basketball. 169-174 - Robert L. Wardrop:
22. Simpson's Paradox and the Hot Hand in Basketball. 175-179 - Robin H. Lock:
23. Introduction to the Ice Hockey Articles. 183-186 - Timothy J. Danehy, Robin H. Lock:
24. Statistical Methods for Rating College Hockey Teams. 187-192 - William Hurley:
25. Overtime or Shootout: Deciding Ties in Hockey. 193-196 - Donald G. Morrison, David C. Schmittlein:
26. It Takes a Hot Goalie to Raise the Stanley Cup. 197-201 - Scott M. Berry:
27. Introduction to the Methodologies and Multiple Sports Articles. 205-208 - Scott M. Berry, C. Shane Reese, Patrick D. Larkey:
28. Bridging Different Eras in Sports. 209-224 - Bradley Efron, Carl Morris:
29. Data Analysis Using Stein's Estimator and Its Generalizations. 225-233 - David A. Harville:
30. Assigning Probabilities to the Outcomes of Multi-Entry Competitions. 235-239 - Robert Hooke:
31. Basketball, Baseball, and the Null Hypothesis. 241-243 - Frederick Mosteller:
32. Lessons from Sports Statistics. 245-250 - Harry V. Roberts:
33. Can TQM Improve Athletic Performance? 251-256 - Hal S. Stern:
34. A Brownian Motion Model for the Progress of Sports Scores. 257-263 - Donald Guthrie:
35. Introduction to the Miscellaneous Sports Articles. 267-269 - Hal S. Stern, Wade Wilcox:
36. Shooting Darts. 271-274 - Francis Scheid, Lyle Calvin:
38. Adjusting Golf Handicaps for the Difficulty of the Course. 281-285 - Gilbert Bassett, Joseph Persky:
39. Rating Skating. 287-291 - Alan J. Lee:
40. Modeling Scores in the Premier League: Is Manchester United Really the Best? 293-297 - Geert Ridder, J. S. Cramer, P. Hopstaken:
41. Down to Ten: Estimating the Effect of a Red Card in Soccer. 299-302 - David Jackson, Krzysztof Mosurski:
42. Heavy Defeats in Tennis: Psychological Momentum or Random Effect? 303-310 - Robert Tibshirani:
43. Who Is the Fastest Man in the World? 311-316 - Howard Wainer, Richard D. De Veaux:
44. Resizing Triathlons for Fairness. 317-322
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.