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re: Per capita, Louisiana is producing the most NFL skill/speed talent, and by a large margin

Posted on 5/5/21 at 9:53 am to
Posted by RD Dawg
Atlanta
Member since Sep 2012
27303 posts
Posted on 5/5/21 at 9:53 am to
quote:

Those factors include among other things economic/finances of the local school district (some school districts can support more participation and field larger teams), economics of the family, how much the local community values football. So in some towns in the SEC footprint, football is as much of the local town culture as God, Family and Country, etc.


Once again,nothing more than anecdotal evidence and opinion to refute participation.


quote:

when you compare the 59 LA HS players on NFL rosters starting the 2020 NFL season vs. the 60 from Alabama and PA, etc, using population as the scaler does not have issues related to using participation rates.



What? There are MULTIPLE issues with using population compared to participation...how can you not understand this? Florida is the perfect scenario and yet you somehow have zero explanation for their low rates and you even tried to refute it at first.

Give up dude and take the L
Posted by dstone12
Texan
Member since Jan 2007
30459 posts
Posted on 5/5/21 at 10:41 am to
quote:

Give up dude and take the L
one thing is for sure....you will not take the L on this per capita issue across multiple threads.

Rake Hates Mustard
You hate per capita.
Posted by JKChesterton
Member since Dec 2012
4012 posts
Posted on 5/5/21 at 11:30 am to
quote:

What? There are MULTIPLE issues with using population compared to participation...how can you not understand this? Florida is the perfect scenario and yet you somehow have zero explanation for their low rates and you even tried to refute it at first.

Give up dude and take the L


I clearly stated there are problems with using Population. I noted Florida as an example. There are also problems using participation rates. Alabama and LA have comparable populations but more kids play HS football in AL than LA, i.e self-select to play do to the Football culture that permeates the entire state (2 SEC schools in state similar to LA in size). So when comparing AL to LA, AL will look not as good as LA clearly do to higher rates among kids who no matter what they ever do, they are not going to play in college, much less NFL.

Scaling by population when comparing states like AL, LA, you can add South Carolina as well being comparable, correct for the issues related to participation that varies across those 3 states, factors which you can't control for.

Economist use population to compare state GDP, mean/Median Income, education level, unemployment. FBI uses population to measure Crime, etc.

You don't think there are differences across states i.e participation rates in the job market for example. Now to address issues, economist also use labor participation and look at how many people are in the job market as well.

So both per capita (population) and participation (people in job market actively seeking employment) are used when measuring Economic data. So these Economist seem to use both measures.
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