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My candid view – Can better data make African football more transparent? 

Home National My candid view – Can better data make African football more transparent? 
My candid view – Can better data make African football more transparent? 

Carlos Mureithi

Soccer is Africa’s most popular sport, but finding comprehensive data on the game in the continent to help in decision making is often a challenging task. Sometimes data are not available, or they are fragmented.

Rainbow Sports Group, a US-based company that provides management, marketing, and media solutions for sports agencies and African soccer players, this year launched an interactive data platform for African soccer.

The African Football Data Centre surfaces information about player valuations, sponsorship deals, broadcasting revenue, stadia, and the social media performance metrics of players, federations, and competitions. 

It asserts the potential to turn subjective opinions into hard facts. It may also increase transparency in a debilitatingly corrupt industry.

Soccer stakeholders need insights

“When you don’t have a scientific opinion, it becomes very subjective,” Kingsley Pungong, CEO of Rainbow Sports Global said. “When it’s subjective, it becomes a subject to varied interpretations. That’s why our football is mainly not appreciated because everybody has a subjective opinion.”

Pungong adds that lack of proper data on African soccer leads to undervaluation of the continent’s players, clubs, and other sports assets.

Agents, marketers and other stakeholders on the continent can use global soccer websites that provide updates and results, but these are not Africa-focused and rarely go beyond general numbers like game scores. They need more detailed numbers on players, clubs, and leagues.

The websites may be unreliable too, says Michael Mwebe, a Dar-es-Salaam–based consultant at Siyavuma Sports Group, a South African sports management company. 

In January, for example, he was trading a soccer player to a Ugandan club but couldn’t ascertain how many goals the player had scored the previous year. One website said 11 goals, another 13, and the player himself said he’d scored 14.

Such shortcomings force soccer agents and other stakeholders to use “informal” channels to get insight into the sport in the continent, Mwebe said, including using google, social media connections, and soccer journalists. However, he added, a person providing the information may have a bias toward a player.

There are exceptions to data availability though, as statistics for soccer players who have played for their national teams or in the CAF Champions League, the highest level of African club soccer, are more readily available for example.

How does African Football Data Centre work?

The African Football Data Centre has a research team that collects primary data from the internet and it works with soccer federations, leagues, and players around the continent. It was developed in partnership with KPMG Football Benchmark, which offers tools for analysing operational, financial, and digital performances of soccer clubs.

Rainbow Sports Group plans to also partner with clubs in Africa to be able to collect data on their players. “If you want to say this guy is good enough for Bayern Munich, you just don’t say it as being subjective opinion, you say it based on a scientific assertion,” Pungong said. – Quartz Africa

*Carlos Mureithi is the editor and East African correspondent at Quartz Africa.