The Record (Troy, NY)

FITZ’S GIFT

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Into analytics? Then the NFL has a competitio­n for you.

The league has scheduled the inaugural NFL Big Data Bowl, a football analytics event for affording college students and profession­als. Entrants will have the opportunit­y to utilize historical data sets of the same player tracking data used by teams, and suggest innovation­s about how football is played and coached.

Finalists will present to league and club personnel at the combine in Indianapol­is in late February, accessing NFL player tracking data used by teams to analyze league trends and develop on-field strategies.

Participan­ts can sign up for the competitio­n on a website at ops.nfl.com/ bigdata-bowl. There are two competing categories: undergradu­ate/graduate student division, and an open division for participan­ts not in higher education.

“As the sports analytics community continues to expand and progress, we are excited to host an analytics competitio­n focusing on creative and innovative ways to approach and use football data,” says Damani Leech, the NFL’s senior vice president of football strategy and business developmen­t. “The NFL and its clubs use of football analytics continues to grow and focusing the competitio­n on college students and young profession­als allows us to hear from the next generation of young minds that will help shape the industry in the years to come.”

Submission­s using NFLprovide­d data fall under three themes: “Understand­ing On-Field Speed;” ‘’Proposing a Rule Change;” and “Identifyin­g the Best Receiver-Route Combinatio­ns.”

Eight finalists in the Big Data Bowl - four from each of the two participan­t categories - will head to Indi- FILE - In this Oct. 28, 2018, file photo, Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald speaks after an NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers, in Glendale, Ariz. Fitzgerald and the Cardinals won’t be playing in the Super Bowl.

anapolis to showcase their work on Feb. 27, the first day of the combine. Two grandprize winners will receive four tickets to any regularsea­son game of their choice.

RB RECEPTIONS

Running backs Christian McCaffrey and Saquon Barkley both are approachin­g records — and not in the ground game.

Carolina’s McCaffrey, in his second NFL season, leads all players at his position with 94 catches. He needs nine to surpass the league mark set by Matt Forte in 2014 with Chicago. It will be difficult to reach because starting quarterbac­k Cam Newton is sidelined with a shoulder problem. Or maybe not, because replacemen­t inexperien­ced Taylor Heinicke might concentrat­e on short throws.

The other running backs with at least 100 catches in a season are LaDainian Tomlinson for the Chargers in 2003 and Larry Centers for the Cardinals in 1995.

The Giants’ Barkley has caught 82 balls, tops among rookies. Reggie Bush set the mark for rookie running backs with 88 for the Saints in 2006. Larry Fitzgerald and the

Arizona Cardinals won’t be playing in the Super Bowl. They might wind up with the first pick in the NFL draft.

Fitzgerald, though, is making sure someone deserving makes the trip to the big game in Atlanta: Jameson Lopez, a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army.

Teaming with with USAA and The Pat Tillman Foundation — USAA will be coordinati­ng similar efforts with other players around the NFL — Fitzgerald will host Lopez for Super Bowl weekend, something Fitzgerald calls “a trip of a lifetime.”

Earlier this year, during the “My Cause My Cleats” campaign, Lopez and Fitzgerald met; Lopez is a Tillman scholar and shared with the star wide receiver how he has benefitted from the foundation set up to honor Pat Tillman’s legacy.

Lopez was the leader of a tank platoon deployed in support of Operation New Dawn. During his deployment to Iraq, he was responsibl­e for coordinati­ng more than 300 combat missions with the Iraqi and Kurdish security forces.

A member of t he Kwat’san (Quechan) Tribe in Fort Yuma, California, Lopez spent a significan­t

Los Angeles Chargers running back Melvin Gordon was a fantasy football player in college and said he used to get ticked when players would be unable to go. Gordon missed last Thursday’s game at Kansas City, which for many fantasy football leagues was the first week of the playoffs, and he posted a message on Twitter saying he understood their frustratio­n.

“I used to get ticked when guys weren’t playing and now I understand. I just wanted to let them know that I feel their pain. If I could have played I really would,” Gordon said.

The fourth-year running back said he received more messages than usual from family and friends because of the postseason stakes involved, but he took it all stride and understood.

“I know it is playoffs/ championsh­ip time and this is for their bread. It was cool,” he said.

Gordon will be back this week when the Chargers host the Ravens, which is championsh­ip week in many leagues.

SNEAKY SACK MASTER

With a league-leading total of 47 sacks, the Minnesota Vikings naturally have had pass-rushing productivi­ty from every position on their defense. Sending nickel cornerback Mackensie Alexander has proven to be a particular­ly effective strategy, with all four of his career sacks coming this season to tie a franchise record for a defensive back.

“Heck, if you don’t get blocked, he should have an asterisk by that name,” coach Mike Zimmer quipped.

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