Who cares about per capita for this kind of thing?
Edit: before you pile on the downvotes remember California is low here but has more players than a lot of the high per capita states combined.
TA-MajestyPalm on
Is this the state they were born in? Cool graphic
purplenyellowrose909 on
Born? High school? College?
legend023 on
The south simply prioritizes football more. The northeast likes lacrosse or some shit and a lot of the good players in the more niche states sometimes move to richer football areas just for football.
Also, the NFL has a high proportion of African-American players which correlates with high proportion of African-Americans in the Deep South for obvious reasons
Mother-Glass8065 on
I am just tired of the constant American maps. Think of us Europeans you selfish yanks!
cinciNattyLight on
Now do Samoa…
vader62 on
I wonder what the effects of ethno demographics has on this phenomena. Those states have very large populations of African American peoples.
sammysbud on
„Put some grits on the stove. Jiffy cornbread, booty corn-fed“ – Beyoncé
Quarkonium2925 on
Wait, New Mexico has an NFL player?
samdex11 on
This map is for over representation, not “where players mostly come from”. California, Ohio,and PA are all higher in overall players than all of the dark green states.
lowprofilefodder on
I mean, you’re not going to get the next great thinker from these places. It makes sense.
cocobunaware on
I’d like to see a corolation with house prices by county across the US where nfl & nba players come from.
Admitted as someone from the UK I’d mainly like to see this for trollish reasons.
HornedShoe on
Pahokee, FL
Nomad2457 on
Vermont probably has none because people there do not like to engage in stereotypical American behavior. I’ve met quite a few who call the Super Bowl the “Stupid Bowl”.
JeromesNiece on
This map alone is not sufficient to support the claim that NFL players „mostly come from“ the South and from Iowa. The map shows that these states have the highest *rates* of players coming from there per capita. But in order to see where the highest total number of players come from, you have to multiply the rate by the population.
California, for example, has 12x as many people as Iowa, so it produces 4.3x as many NFL players as Iowa, despite the much lower per capita rate.
DrewPeanuts021 on
The proper title would be “A person born in the south, or Iowa, has the highest likelihood of playing in the NFL.” Granted, if you took overall numbers, the map would look about the same. However, California and Texas have huge populations. They probably put out more total players than are represented in the map. I’d imagine Ohio may be a bit higher up too. Without looking further, I’d bet that Texas and California are the highest represented states by numbers only in the league. The point gets across, but the statement isn’t necessarily true.
Budget_Addition1381 on
What would be cooler is a zip code breakdown. South of lake ochochobee in FL there’s a town of 500 with 50 NFL players 😂
Feeling-Currency6212 on
Iowa is where the Tight Ends come from. The South is where everyone else comes from
Holeevyer on
Like the opposite of Hockey.
Tommyblockhead20 on
The title isn’t what the map is saying. The map is places with the most players per capita. Somewhere with 3 million people and 100 NFL players has way more players per capita than somewhere with 30 million people and 200 NFL players. But that’s not the same as most players coming from there. Now it might still be true that those states are where the most players come from, but that’s impossible to know from this map.
Agreeable-Fig308 on
Highly „well“ represented in the NFL
aaapod on
makes sense why they’re all jesus freaks
Porschenut914 on
I would be curious how much this is influenced by the major college football teams. With many of the biggest programs and thus most airplay from the south.
BigRedThread on
The title is not an accurate interpretation of the map. The South and Iowa are overrepresented but that doesn’t mean that’s where most NFL players come from
Yes, most players are from the most populous parts of the country.
Waste_Research_5631 on
Could this map reflect economic opportunity? The lower the expectation of a decent job, the greater the participation in football.
shibapenguinpig on
That’s per capita, not total.
ParadiddlediddleSaaS on
I’m a little surprised my home state (MI) is this high, but the Lions were selling out even when they were terrible plus two B1G schools and three larger directional D1 schools so I guess it makes sense.
Empower_the_Now on
Coming from Minnesota, that explains so much. Iowa: the Dirty South of the Midwest.
WyattWrites on
Damn give Iowa an NFL team if they carrying the league on their back like that.
CaseInformal4066 on
Im not familiar with American football. Is this another „black belt“ map?
BourbonCrotch69 on
Map of where the black people are..plus Iowa
rahxephon7 on
I wish there were stats for American Samoa. Their culture is very sports heavy and competitive.
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35 Kommentare
Who cares about per capita for this kind of thing?
Edit: before you pile on the downvotes remember California is low here but has more players than a lot of the high per capita states combined.
Is this the state they were born in? Cool graphic
Born? High school? College?
The south simply prioritizes football more. The northeast likes lacrosse or some shit and a lot of the good players in the more niche states sometimes move to richer football areas just for football.
Also, the NFL has a high proportion of African-American players which correlates with high proportion of African-Americans in the Deep South for obvious reasons
I am just tired of the constant American maps. Think of us Europeans you selfish yanks!
Now do Samoa…
I wonder what the effects of ethno demographics has on this phenomena. Those states have very large populations of African American peoples.
„Put some grits on the stove. Jiffy cornbread, booty corn-fed“ – Beyoncé
Wait, New Mexico has an NFL player?
This map is for over representation, not “where players mostly come from”. California, Ohio,and PA are all higher in overall players than all of the dark green states.
I mean, you’re not going to get the next great thinker from these places. It makes sense.
I’d like to see a corolation with house prices by county across the US where nfl & nba players come from.
Admitted as someone from the UK I’d mainly like to see this for trollish reasons.
Pahokee, FL
Vermont probably has none because people there do not like to engage in stereotypical American behavior. I’ve met quite a few who call the Super Bowl the “Stupid Bowl”.
This map alone is not sufficient to support the claim that NFL players „mostly come from“ the South and from Iowa. The map shows that these states have the highest *rates* of players coming from there per capita. But in order to see where the highest total number of players come from, you have to multiply the rate by the population.
California, for example, has 12x as many people as Iowa, so it produces 4.3x as many NFL players as Iowa, despite the much lower per capita rate.
The proper title would be “A person born in the south, or Iowa, has the highest likelihood of playing in the NFL.” Granted, if you took overall numbers, the map would look about the same. However, California and Texas have huge populations. They probably put out more total players than are represented in the map. I’d imagine Ohio may be a bit higher up too. Without looking further, I’d bet that Texas and California are the highest represented states by numbers only in the league. The point gets across, but the statement isn’t necessarily true.
What would be cooler is a zip code breakdown. South of lake ochochobee in FL there’s a town of 500 with 50 NFL players 😂
Iowa is where the Tight Ends come from. The South is where everyone else comes from
Like the opposite of Hockey.
The title isn’t what the map is saying. The map is places with the most players per capita. Somewhere with 3 million people and 100 NFL players has way more players per capita than somewhere with 30 million people and 200 NFL players. But that’s not the same as most players coming from there. Now it might still be true that those states are where the most players come from, but that’s impossible to know from this map.
Highly „well“ represented in the NFL
makes sense why they’re all jesus freaks
I would be curious how much this is influenced by the major college football teams. With many of the biggest programs and thus most airplay from the south.
The title is not an accurate interpretation of the map. The South and Iowa are overrepresented but that doesn’t mean that’s where most NFL players come from
This is a per capita map, misleading title
“Bryan Bulaga, Iowa”
https://youtu.be/IVuwgSfVdeY?si=VLnXXmOzoO-Pt5nu
Yes, most players are from the most populous parts of the country.
Could this map reflect economic opportunity? The lower the expectation of a decent job, the greater the participation in football.
That’s per capita, not total.
I’m a little surprised my home state (MI) is this high, but the Lions were selling out even when they were terrible plus two B1G schools and three larger directional D1 schools so I guess it makes sense.
Coming from Minnesota, that explains so much. Iowa: the Dirty South of the Midwest.
Damn give Iowa an NFL team if they carrying the league on their back like that.
Im not familiar with American football. Is this another „black belt“ map?
Map of where the black people are..plus Iowa
I wish there were stats for American Samoa. Their culture is very sports heavy and competitive.