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Google will broadcast real-time analytical predictions during the NCAA Final Four

NCAA
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Google has teamed up with the NCAA for this year’s March Madness (it’s apparently the “official cloud” of the tournament), bringing machine learning and statistical analysis to decades of game data. But now they’re going even further, with an audacious real-time experiment that could well blow up in their face.

As a blog post from the Google Cloud team explains, a group of basketball enthusiasts, data scientists, and computer techs set out to analyze the data from 80 years of NCAA games and unleash machine learning on this massive pile of data to uncover trends or facts that might not be readily apparent.

For example, if you’re picking an upset, go with the cats — teams with a feline mascot are more likely to bust your bracket.

If you’re a statistics nerd, this is all interesting stuff, but so far the “Wolfpack” (that’s what the team is calling themselves) has focused on historical data culled from thousands of minutes played. But what if they turned their efforts to anticipating what would happen next?

That’s exactly what they’ll be doing this weekend, and they’ll even be airing their predictions in a commercial set to air during halftime of the Final Four games.

Other sports have been using predictive models for quite some time, of course. For instance, baseball uses WAR (Wins Above Replacement) to estimate how much a player will add to a team’s win total as compared to a hypothetical average player. That’s over an entire season though, with hundreds of at-bats. The Google team is planning to estimate what will happen in the final 20 minutes of a single game, which is a tiny sample size.

During the first half, the team will use all the data they can gather and crunch the numbers up, down, and sideways against historical tournament performances, team tendencies, basic strategies, and anything else they can come up with to produce statistical predictions that they think are highly probable to occur.

On site at the Alamodome in San Antonio, they will then quickly turn their predictions into a television ad, which will be passed on to CBS and Turner to air on TBS just as the second half begins.

They aren’t planning to predict the game winner, so don’t get your bookie on the phone just yet. The predictions could be anything — number of three-point attempts, offensive rebounding percentage, even minutes played.

“One of the exciting things about running an experiment like this in real time is we don’t know for sure what will happen,” the team wrote on their blog. They could be right on the money or wildly off base. Either way, it will be fun for number-crunchers everywhere to watch the results of their experiment unfold in real time.

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Mark Austin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Mark’s first encounter with high-tech was a TRS-80. He spent 20 years working for Nintendo and Xbox as a writer and…
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