The goal of footBayes
is to propose a complete workflow to:
Fit the most well-known football models, including the double Poisson, bivariate Poisson, Skellam, and Student‑t distributions. It supports both maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) and Bayesian inference. For Bayesian methods, it incorporates several techniques: MCMC sampling with Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, variational inference using either the Pathfinder algorithm or Automatic Differentiation Variational Inference (ADVI), and the Laplace approximation.
Visualize the teams' abilities, the model checks, the rank-league reconstruction;
Predict out-of-sample matches.
Starting with version 2.0.0, footBayes
package requires installing the R package cmdstanr
(not available on CRAN) and the command-line interface to Stan: CmdStan
.
For a step-by-step installation, please follow the instructions provided in Getting started with CmdStanR.
You can install the released version of footBayes
from CRAN with:
install.packages("footBayes", type = "source")
Please note that it is important to set type = "source"
. Otherwise,
the ‘CmdStan’ models in the package may not be compiled during
installation.
Alternatively to CRAN, you can install the development version from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("leoegidi/footBayes")
In what follows, a quick example to fit a Bayesian double Poisson model for the Italian Serie A (seasons 2000-2001, 2001-2002, 2002-2003), visualize the estimated teams’ abilities, and predict the last four match days for the season 2002-2003:
library(footBayes)
library(dplyr)
# Dataset for Italian Serie A
data("italy")
italy <- as_tibble(italy)
italy_2000_2002 <- italy %>%
dplyr::select(Season, home, visitor, hgoal, vgoal) %>%
filter(Season == "2000" | Season == "2001" | Season == "2002")
colnames(italy_2000_2002) <- c("periods",
"home_team",
"away_team",
"home_goals",
"away_goals")
# Double poisson fit (predict last 4 match-days)
fit1 <- stan_foot(data = italy_2000_2002,
model = "double_pois",
predict = 36,
iter_sampling = 200,
chains = 2)
The results (i.e., attack and defense effects) can be investigated using
print(fit1, pars = c("att", "def"))
To visually investigate the attack and defense effects, we
can use the foot_abilities
function
foot_abilities(fit1, italy_2000_2002) # teams abilities
To check the adequacy of the Bayesian model the function pp_foot
provides posterior predictive plots
pp_foot(fit1, italy_2000_2002) # pp checks
Furthermore, the function foot_rank
shows the final rank table and the plot with the predicted points
foot_rank(fit1, italy_2000_2002) # rank league reconstruction
In order to analyze the possible outcomes of the predicted matches, the function foot_prob
provides a table containing the home win, draw and away win probabilities for the out-of-sample matches
foot_prob(fit1, italy_2000_2002) # out-of-sample posterior pred. probabilities
For more and more technical details and references, see the vignette!
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