Is the number of Prehistoric Animal Genera a good Guide to National Football Team Performance?
At the start of the 2008 European Football championships some of the team members at Everything Dinosaur conducted a quick analysis of the sixteen countries taking part to ascertain whether the number of prehistoric animal genera recorded within a country would act as a guide to football team performance.
Prehistoric Animal Genera
No in-depth analysis of the actual number of genera recorded was carried out, most of the countries playing in the football tournament have had far more genera recorded from palaeontological finds from their countries than we stated. Team members merely used what data they could find from the office files one evening, as a very crude and general guide. The number of genera was weighted in accordance with the size of the country concerned; (it was felt appropriate to do this, as how else where we able to compare the likes of Croatia and Austria with Russia for example). For extra spice, we also factored in the number of mentions a participating country had had within our own web log.
Based on this analysis, we produced a ranking table, listing the expected position of each nation based on the statistical data provided.
To view the first article and summary table: European Champions for Prehistoric Animal Genera.
With the group games now concluded and the quarter finalists determined, it is a good time to review our data to see how accurate our predictions were. According to our study, Germany should win the tournament, beating France in the final (countries ranked one and two respectively in our analysis). It is true that Germany have made the last eight, unfortunately France have been knocked out, indeed the French finished bottom of their group.
How Did We Do?
The top ranked teams, according to this analysis are listed below along with their tournament record:
National Team Performance at Quarter Finals Stage (2008 European Championships)
Rank | Country | Performance |
1 | Germany | Quarter finalist |
2 | France | Knocked out |
3 | Spain | Quarter finalist |
4 | Russia | Quarter finalist |
5 | Portugal | Quarter finalist |
6 | Greece | Knocked out |
7 | Switzerland | Knocked out |
8 | Sweden | Knocked out |
9 | Turkey | Quarter finalist |
10 | Poland | Knocked out |
11 | Italy | Quarter finalist |
12 | Romania | Knocked out |
13 | Holland | Quarter finalist |
14 | Czech Republic | Knocked out |
15 | Austria | Knocked out |
16 | Croatia | Quarter finalist |
Data source: Everything Dinosaur
It seems that using this rather bizarre methodology, four out of the eight teams that have made the quarter finals have been predicted correctly. In essence, had we picked 8 countries at random, we statistically would have had a chance of predicting half of them correctly, so without having to conduct Chi squared tests or indeed subjecting our work to a more rigorous analysis we can conclude that prehistoric animal genera does not seem to have an impact on a football team’s performance.
However, Germany, the country ranked number one in our survey could still win the Championship.
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