Okay, so today I’m gonna talk about my little experiment with FC Kuressaare. Yeah, the Estonian football club. Don’t ask me why, I just felt like messing around with some football data.

FC Kuressaare: Your Ultimate Guide to Football Fun!

First things first, I needed data. I started by scraping some basic info off their website – you know, player names, positions, that kind of stuff. It was a real pain, honestly. The site wasn’t exactly built for easy scraping. Lots of manual cleaning involved, which I absolutely hate.

Then I tried to find some match statistics. This was even harder! Official stats were scattered all over the place, in different formats. Ended up piecing together data from a couple of different sports websites. It was messy, and I’m still not 100% sure everything lines up perfectly. Data quality is always a headache, isn’t it?

Once I had some usable data (or what I hoped was usable), I threw it into a spreadsheet. I’m no data scientist, okay? Excel is my weapon of choice. Started doing some basic analysis. Goals scored, assists, that kind of thing. Nothing fancy.

Here’s where it got a bit more interesting. I wanted to see if there were any patterns in their game. Like, did they tend to score more in the first half or the second? Did certain players have a higher shot accuracy? Tried to visualize some of this stuff with charts. My charts looked like garbage, but they gave me a rough idea.

I even tried to predict the outcome of their next match! Completely unscientific, based purely on gut feeling and a few flimsy stats. I was way off, of course. Proves you can’t just rely on numbers, you need actual football knowledge, which I clearly lack.

FC Kuressaare: Your Ultimate Guide to Football Fun!

Lessons learned? Data is messy, football analysis is harder than it looks, and my Excel skills are probably stuck in 2010. But hey, it was a fun little project. Might try another team next time, maybe one with better-organized data. Or maybe I’ll just stick to watching the games instead of trying to analyze them.

  • Data scraping is a time sink.
  • Cleaning data is even more of a time sink.
  • Football stats are surprisingly hard to find in a consistent format.

Next Steps (Maybe?)

Honestly, probably not. But if I were to do it again, I’d try to:

  • Find a better data source.
  • Learn some actual data analysis techniques.
  • Use a real programming language instead of Excel.

But yeah, that’s the FC Kuressaare story. A bit of data, a bit of frustration, and a whole lot of wasted time. But hey, that’s what hobbies are for, right?

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