nflfastR
is a set of functions to efficiently scrape NFL play-by-play data. nflfastR
expands upon the features of nflscrapR:
cp
) and completion percentage over expected (cpoe
) in play-by-play going back to 2006We owe a debt of gratitude to the original nflscrapR
team, Maksim Horowitz, Ronald Yurko, and Samuel Ventura, without whose contributions and inspiration this package would not exist.
The easiest way to get nflfastR is to install it from CRAN with:
To get a bug fix or to use a feature from the development version, you can install the development version of nflfastR from GitHub with:
if (!requireNamespace("remotes", quietly = TRUE)) {install.packages("remotes")}
remotes::install_github("mrcaseb/nflfastR")
We have provided some application examples under vignette("examples")
. However, these require a basic knowledge of R. For this reason we have the nflfastR beginner’s guide in vignette("beginners_guide")
, which we recommend to all those who are looking for an introduction to nflfastR with R.
Even though nflfastR
is very fast, for historical games we recommend downloading the data from here. These data sets include play-by-play data of complete seasons going back to 1999 and we will update them in 2020 once the season starts. The files contain both regular season and postseason data, and one can use game_type or week to figure out which games occurred in the postseason. Data are available as .csv.gz, .parquet, or .rds.
nflfastR
uses its own models for Expected Points, Win Probability, Completion Probability, and Expected Yards After the Catch. To read about the models, please see vignette("nflfastR-models")
. For a more detailed description of Expected Points models, we highly recommend this paper from the nflscrapR team located here.
Here is a visualization of the Expected Points model by down and yardline.
Here is a visualization of the Completion Probability model by air yards and pass direction.
nflfastR
includes two win probability models: one with and one without incorporating the pre-game spread.
nflfastR
uses this source for 1999-2010)nflfastR
modelsnflfastR
1.0nflscrapR
team, Maksim Horowitz, Ronald Yurko, and Samuel Ventura, whose work represented a dramatic step forward for the state of public NFL research