Age: Its impact on fights (Part I)
I'm not sure if this is eligible for the contest, as I'm using data from my database. But I thought I would start it off with some fun stats, rather than get deep into the analysis straight off the bat. Let me know if you'd like more.
This was spurred on by the Bloody Elbow/Fight Metric Research Contest. I wonder if using FM data makes it ineligible?
Whatever the case is, here I am with another “stat geek” article for our readers’ consumption. Some notes before I get into the bulk of it:
- 1,361 fighters have valid birthdates in the database (this is a relatively new data attribute for us).
- 4,317 pro fights have two fighters with a valid birthdate.
- 4,062 pro fights are used in this analysis (excluded draws and no contests) when both fighters need a valid birthdate.
- 18,898 pro fights are used in this analysis (excluded draws and no contests) when only one fighter needs a valid birthdate.
As you can see, not the largest sample set, but a decent amount nonetheless.
For starters, the average MMA fighter (at the time of the fight) was 10,198 days old. If you divide this by 365.2425 (don’t hate on leap years), you get a yearly result of 27.92… so roughly 27 years and 11 months.
The winner, on average, was 126 days younger. Although slim, this is pretty substantial considering the data set.
The oldest fighter in the analysis at the time of the fight? Dan Severn. He’s the oldest winner AND oldest loser.
The youngest fighter? Nam Jin Jo. Now, I’m not sure if this is legit, but he was only 5,346 days old (a little over 14 years and 7 months) when he beat Jin Woo Kim in a 2005 Spirit MC show.
The oldest age in a fight, by far, took place when Randy Couture beat Mark Coleman -- nearly 92 years.
More to come…
Originally posted at: http://www.fightmatrix.com/2011/04/12/age-its-impact-on-fights-part-i/
The FanPosts are solely the subjective opinions of Bloody Elbow readers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Bloody Elbow editors or staff.
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YUS!

Could you add what method you followed to gather all the information. I know it is readily available on th einternet, but it would be crazy to assume that you copy-pasted everything by hand…or maybe you just have that mch dedication. Either way, I’d like to know.
And thanks for the hard work.
I have database of my own that tracks much of the same data, but it is much much much (very much) smaller than yours. I havn’t had a ton of time to sink into it, but have been thinking about the proper set up of normalized tables that would allow me to scale well.
I’m guessing that you got the data from a combination of sherdog/wikipedia using some PERL scripting to pull the data. From there I would guess you’re using one of the several free mysql hosting services unless you’re using a sql server or oracle machine at your place of employment.
Am I close? And do you need any partners?

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