Sports
Meet the former Vikings and Packers visionary known as the grandfather of NFL analytics
Editor’s note: This article is part of The Changemakers series, focusing on the behind-the-scenes executives and people fueling the future growth of their sports.
LAKE ELMO, Minn. — When he retired from the Green Bay Packers, finally ready to leave the job that surpassed his wildest dreams, Mike Eayrs plucked folders from file cabinets and tried to figure out what he could actually take.
So many of the documents inside these folders were proprietary. Hundreds of printed spreadsheets, color-coded with highlighter yellows and electric greens, harboring the most detailed information you could possibly find about the NFL teams we all watch and love.
For decades, one of Eayrs’ many duties was creating these game-day cheat sheets for coaches. The laminated sheets of paper contained countless data points about every opposing coach: the play calls they preferred in certain situations, how their game plan would shift depending on the score and how quickly they’d typically unveil their plan during a game.
Walking away from his role as the Packers’ director of research and development nine years ago, Eayrs did not need any of these relics. Though he might be interested in a keepsake or two. Eventually, he grabbed one particular file, one he had compiled ahead of Super Bowl XLV, the Packers’ victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers.
“This is it,” Eayrs says, sliding it over.
Now 73, he is sitting at the kitchen counter in his home about 30 miles from Minneapolis. It’s a quaint spot. He lives here with his wife, Mary Jo. Their three children are out of the house now and have families of their own, so they have time to spend Sunday afternoons in August like this, relaxing and hosting a curious visitor.
Nothing about the appearance of Eayrs’ home hints at his former life as an NFL visionary, a man who is viewed by many as the grandfather of NFL analytics and referred to in hushed tones as the secret weapon in the Packers’ rivalry with the Minnesota Vikings. There are paintings on the family’s walls, no pictures memorializing Eayrs’ time on NFL sidelines. His wispy white hair and staccato voice make him rightfully seem like a blend of an engaging statistics teacher and an uplifting coach.
But then he scans through his keepsake and starts talking about the 2011 Steelers. How defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau played Cover 3 on 91 percent of their snaps in base personnel, and how the Packers used this tidbit of information to their advantage. The data is complex and contextualized, compiled to support the Packers’ coaches in making in-game decisions.
That’s how Eayrs viewed his role, first with the Vikings, then with their enemies to the east — as decision support. He did not set out to work in what is now widely known as “analytics.” In fact, when Eayrs stumbled into all of this in the 1980s, there was really no such thing as sports analytics. Why he was hired in the first place, how his job evolved over time and how he adapted to the changes are lessons about data science and quantitative analysis, a subset of NFL front offices that has become increasingly more prevalent.
“Mike was a lone ranger,” says former NFL coach Brian Billick, who won a Super Bowl as coach of the Baltimore Ravens. “He was theorizing some of the stuff we talk about now 40 years ago. He was so far ahead of the curve. He was brilliant.”
Mike Eayrs, wife Mary Jo and their family following the Packers’ victory in Super Bowl XLV. (Courtesy of the Eayrs family)
Before they built a sleek practice facility in the Twin Cities, the Vikings held training camp in Mankato at the local college. After practice, the Vikings coaches often crossed paths with the Minnesota State coaches. Once, in the early 1980s, the college’s head coach suggested some of the Vikings coaches sit down with one of his assistants, Mike Eayrs.
Soon after, Vikings assistants Les Steckel and Floyd Reese cast a shadow in the doorway of Eayrs’ office. They asked if they could talk, and Eayrs nodded nervously. They told him what they’d heard, that Eayrs had been studying regression lines and standard deviation charts relating to football.
Pulling up chairs across from Eayrs’ desk, one of them said: “Show us some of the things you got.”
Eayrs sifted through some papers, wondering where to start. He began as simply as possible. He explained that Minnesota State had gone 3-7 the year before and that he had watched the film of all 10 games, trying to identify patterns in the wins and losses.
“The thing that emerged right away was ball security,” Eayrs told them. “We threw interceptions and fumbled the ball.”
Steckel and Reese didn’t see this as much of a revelation. Even then, coaches knew turnover margin correlated with wins and losses.
So Eayrs took a different approach. Wanting to make the conversation more interactive, rather than acting like a know-it-all math person speaking to two experienced football people, Eayrs asked, “Do you know how long the average possession is?”
Reese, a defensive coach, replied, “You get a lot of three-and-outs.”
Steckel, the offensive coach, interjected, “But there’s a lot of 10-play drives, too.”
“In a way, both of you are right,” Eayrs said. “The mean number of plays in a drive is 5.8. (Nearly 40 years later in 2024, the average number of plays per drive is 5.71.) I’m the offensive play caller. I tell myself every time we take the field, I’ve got to have a plan in my mind of how we’re going to get from where we’re starting to scoring position in six plays or less.”
“Why do you do that?” Steckel responded.
In an instant, the coaches had gone from skeptical to curious. Maybe the most interesting aspect of their earnest interest was the fact that Eayrs was talking like a coach. It was as if his being a play caller earned him immediate credibility.
“If you look at the three games we won,” Eayrs said, “what happened was, somewhere in that possession, we had a long gain. Your goal as a play caller is to empower your men to set the circumstances up to get the big gain.”
In a nonintuitive way, he was explaining the impact of explosive plays on wins and losses.
Eayrs then asked them how much their play calling changed depending on the score of the game. Did they account for score differential when scouting their opponent’s tendencies?
Steckel and Reese looked at one another before shaking their heads: “No.”
“You’re missing one of the most important variables of the game,” Eayrs said. “The score has a distinct relationship with strategy.”
This back-and-forth continued for over an hour until Steckel and Reese realized they were about to miss practice. They asked Eayrs if he would show up at the high-rise dormitory on campus later that night. Eayrs ultimately did, and when he got there, another handful of Vikings coaches had come to meet him. They asked thoughtful questions that got Eayrs thinking about additional studies he could do. He left inspired.
Over the next few years, Eayrs compiled data packets and sent them to NFL teams. Legendary Dallas Cowboys executive Gil Brandt called him to ask about the information. Lou Holtz, then the head coach at the University of Minnesota, invited him to a meeting and asked, “What are you trying to do with this?” Eayrs told him he hoped to establish a consultant business so he could take his family on a nice vacation. “You keep producing these tables with numbers,” Holtz said, “and before you’re done, you’ll take your family on the greatest vacation you’ve ever known.”
A couple of years later, in June 1985, the Vikings did the inevitable. At the urging of the coaching staff, they hired a man who had neither played nor coached in the NFL. To do what exactly? At the time, Eayrs didn’t fully know.
What is an explosive play? @jasonjwilde‘s 2001 profile of former director of research Mike Eayrs revealed Green Bay counted:
• Passes over 16 yards
• Runs over 12 yardsMore: https://t.co/NU8haSIl4d pic.twitter.com/XRgN7TNW90
— The Power Sweep (@ThePowerSweep) January 23, 2019
Growing up, friends peppered Brian Eayrs: What does your dad do for the Vikings?
Brian would be lifting books out of his locker, and he’d hear the questions from classmates.
Is he a coach?
“Kind of,” Brian would say.
Is he a statistics guy?
“Kind of,” Brian would say.
What do you mean … kind of?
“He’s a statistics assistant for the coaches,” Brian would say, then leave it at that.
Eayrs’ job evolved over time. In 1985, his first season with the Vikings, the defensive staff was developing a new package. The coaches argued constantly, but a consensus formed around the information Eayrs presented: If teams were running a toss sweep more than any other play, why not design the package around limiting the toss sweep?
In general, legendary Vikings coach Bud Grant despised data. Eayrs initially printed packets of information and placed them on Grant’s wooden desk. Grant rarely acknowledged Eayrs’ insights in the early days, so Eayrs dipped into his own backstory, to what had intrigued him about football data in the first place.
When he was hired at Minnesota State in Mankato, Eayrs was asked to teach a class nobody else wanted to teach: statistics. The subject bored students some and the professors more. Eayrs thought he’d be a better fit for a leadership course or some psychological field relating to problem-solving. But he didn’t have a choice. From the outset, he vowed to find a textbook that did not read like rocket science, one that would allow the students to apply the subject to something fun like sports.
The class was segmented into groups, and each later presented its findings. One group studying the NFL discovered that the standard deviation curve was abnormally high in the middle with two long tails at the end. According to Eayrs, that meant there were 26 similarly talented teams clustered in the middle, and there were three outliers on both ends of the spectrum.
“What I used to tell the coaching staff in our meetings was, ‘You can be an optimist, or you can be a pessimist,’” Eayrs says. “Basically, if you’re an optimist, we’re sitting in this room, and we only have to figure out how to make eight to 10 crucial plays at the right time, and we’re going to be in the playoffs. And if you’re a pessimist, we are eight to 10 plays away from the abyss. The difference in that middle spectrum of teams really boils down to who can do the right thing at the right time.”
While the early studies shaped Eayrs’ perspective of the NFL, it also helped him connect with Grant. The simpler the information he could disseminate to Grant and the more he could align it with Grant’s coaching priorities, the more he believed Grant would listen. So he exchanged tables and charts for quick bullet points and, soon after, Grant started to knock more frequently on his door.
“Have you got a minute?” Grant would ask.
“What was I going to say to Bud Grant? No?” Eayrs says now.
Once, Grant sat across from Eayrs’ desk and said, “You know, we put an awful lot of work into practice. But I don’t really think we’re practicing as efficiently as we could. Is there anything you can think of that would help us?”
Eayrs thought silently.“We could start to record more information,” he suggested.
“Good idea,” Grant said, then stood and exited.
His mind racing, Eayrs wondered: How? And what? How would they measure practice, and what should they measure? He sketched out some ideas, utilizing a spreadsheet he’d already created for game day as a foundational resource. At the time, play-by-play data had not yet been automated. So, Eayrs decided he and a handful of assistants would jot down the plays called during practice, the defensive fronts used, the coverages deployed and the results of the play.
Almost a decade later, when Billick was hired as the Vikings’ offensive coordinator, he asked Eayrs to use a stopwatch to track the time between a snap and throw. By then, Brian Eayrs was a teenager, visiting the Vikings’ facility and burying himself in a dark room with his father while they charted practice reps together. Brian watched coaches enter the room and ask his father questions, then he listened to his father’s deliberate responses. It was almost as if Eayrs was having to convince the coaches to use his information.
But many of them did. And when they did, Brian was paying attention from section 131 at the Metrodome, wearing purple and grateful to be so close to his childhood team.
Mike and Brian Eayrs. (Courtesy of the Eayrs family)
In 2001, the Vikings hosted the Packers at the Metrodome, but that night, Brian was not sitting in section 131. He had been sequestered in an end zone section surrounded by green and gold.
“That was the most eerie game of my life,” he says. “It was very strange.”
His father had made a change. After 16 seasons with the Vikings, Green Bay hired him away. Head coach Mike Sherman wanted someone who could gather, organize and filter information and help the Packers make better in-game and off-field decisions. Sherman said most folks within the NFL during the early 2000s knew how far ahead of the curve Eayrs and the Vikings were.
“So,” Sherman says, “we stole him away.”
Sherman remained the head coach until 2005. Mike McCarthy was hired a year later and not only kept Eayrs on, but also asked him, specifically after Green Bay’s 6-10 season in 2008, to bury himself in business strategy. Why? To find out if there were any approaches they could take and adapt to help the football side of the organization evolve.
Eayrs identified two relevant examples. The first was a study produced by the now-defunct Bemis Company, which transformed its strategy to offer more autonomy to its employees in the factory. The second was a report from Southwest Airlines explaining that its customer service was enhanced by providing gate attendants the ability to issue refunds to passengers. After months of research and planning, Eayrs presented his findings to McCarthy and the Packers staff.
Essentially, he believed the more the players on the field controlled the decision-making, the better off Green Bay would be. He even referenced an old Grant line, saying that decision-makers should come from the middle of the field. Offensively, quarterback Aaron Rodgers developed hand signals. Defensively, linebacker A.J. Hawk designed quick word association methods of changing the call from one to another.
“We never told the players about Bemis or Southwest Airlines,” Eayrs says. “They never knew the backstory.”
So much of Eayrs’ work was like this — unknown and never written about, but resoundingly impactful.
Mike Eayrs Green Bays Director of Research and Development spent 16 years with Vikings the last 12 with Packers.Gives GB huge inside edge.
— Larry Fitzgerald Sr. (@FitzBeatSr) December 3, 2012
Once, Eayrs applied a standard deviation curve to a 16-game NFL season and found that 10 to 12 games go like the staffers think they will, and there are two games on opposite ends of the spectrum that wind up as outliers due to injuries, turnovers or a flipped game script. He calls the negative games “Twilight Zone” games where “you’re going to see the train coming down the tracks,” Eayrs says, “and you’re going to try to do everything you can to divert it. You can’t.”
Another time, he used decades of practice data to answer the question of which drill most correlates with game results. The answer shocked him: seven-on-seven.
Eayrs’ curiosity could have kept him going forever. Even after he retired in 2015, Pro Football Focus hired him as an analyst to help the company make use of its swaths of automated data. Holtz would be happy to know that Eayrs’ family has taken numerous trips in the last decade.
You might not be surprised to find out that Brian’s kids are now getting the questions he once did: Is your dad a coach? Or is he a statistician?
Brian joined former Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll’s staff in 2013 and is currently helping first-year head coach Mike Macdonald. Data is more accessible now than it was when his father did the job, and Brian’s coding ability only multiplies what’s possible. Still, Brian believes that the core of what he and other analytics staffers across the league can offer is not like Jonah Hill in “Moneyball,” but more like the real-life Mike Eayrs. He was a man without answers who spent his entire work life trying to find them.
The Changemakers series is part of a partnership with Acura.
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(Top photo: Charlie Riedel / Associated Press)
Sports
PGA Tour signals new era with axing of Hawaii events from schedule
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The PGA Tour has announced that it will not be hosting an event in Hawaii during the 2027 season, ending a 56-year run of holding a tournament in The Aloha State. The change comes as the Tour and CEO Brian Rolapp have consistently teased a revamped schedule beginning next year.
The Tour was forced to cancel The Sentry at the start of the 2026 campaign due to the dying grass on the Plantation Course at Kapalua amid a local dispute with the company responsible for delivering water to the area.
An aerial view of the golf course from over the ocean prior to The Sentry at The Plantation Course at Kapalua on December 31, 2023 in Kapalua, Maui, Hawaii. (Photo by Ben Jared/PGA TOUR) (Ben Jared/PGA TOUR)
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With The Sentry being canceled, the Sony Open at Waialae Country on Oahu served as the Tour’s season opener in ‘26, which was won by Chris Gotterup. The event was in the final year of its sponsorship, although the Tour has shared that it is working toward making the event the opening event on the PGA Tour Champions circuit.
Chris Gotterup of the United States celebrates with the trophy on the 18th green after his winning round of the Sony Open in Hawaii 2026 at Waialae Country Club on January 18, 2026 in Honolulu, Hawaii. (Photo by Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images) (Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)
The Tour’s removal of The Sentry and the Sony Open wipes out what has now turned into a traditional two-week stretch on the island to begin a new season.
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The PGA Tour did not share further details about the 2027 schedule upon its announcement about leaving Hawaii, but with Sentry reportedly being an event title-sponsor through 2035, it will need to find a new landing spot on the calendar. The logical stop would be Torrey Pines in San Diego, which checks the West Coast and great weather boxes, but the venue is also looking for a new sponsor, as its deal with Farmers Insurance ended in 2026.
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View of the 18th hole is seen during the final round of The Sentry at The Plantation Course at Kapalua on January 5, 2025 in Kapalua, Maui, Hawaii. (Photo by Ben Jared/PGA TOUR via Getty Images) (Ben Jared/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)
The Tour’s decision not to begin next season in Hawaii makes sense, as there are plenty of venues in the lower 48 states that are much easier to operate from, but the departure will have a tremendous financial impact on the state.
The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reports that The Sentry is estimated to have a $50 million annual impact on the community, while the Sony Open directly generates an estimated $100 million in revenue per year, plus another $1 million per year to Friends of Hawaii charities.
Sports
Prep talk: Another book is out from running coach Martin Dugard
Martin Dugard is a prolific author and writer. He’s also an assistant cross-country coach at Santa Margarita after being head coach at JSerra for 15 years.
His newest book is “The Long Run,” which discusses the 1970s running boom and is a narrative history of four who sparked the marathon boom: Steve Prefontaine, Frank Shorter, Joan Benoit Samuelson and Grete Waitz.
He’s going to have a book signing on Saturday at 1 p.m. at Barnes & Noble, 26751 Aliso Creek Rd., Aliso Viejo.
Don’t be surprised if he tries to run from Rancho Santa Margarita to his book signing.
This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email eric.sondheimer@latimes.com.
Sports
Stephen A. Smith makes brutal gaffe while talking about the Golden State Warriors
For years, Stephen A. Smith’s many football blunders have been easy enough to explain away.
He’s not an NFL guy (remember when he said the three key players for a game were three guys who weren’t playing in the game?)
Stephen A. Smith falsely claimed the Warriors haven’t made the playoffs since 2022, but Golden State reached the second round in both 2023 and 2025. (Jerome Miron/Imagn Images)
He’s definitely not a college football guy (remember when he called Jalen Milroe Jalen “Milroy” multiple times and then read the wrong stat line after a College Football Playoff game?).
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ESPN forces him into those conversations because First Take has to talk football, and Smith knows that football is the most popular sport in the country and he needs to be seen as an authority (even though he isn’t).
But Monday’s latest mistake is a lot tougher to excuse, because this time Smith wasn’t talking about the NFL or college football. He was talking about the Golden State Warriors, one of the defining NBA dynasties of the last decade.
In other words, he was talking about the sport and the league that’s supposed to be his bread and butter.
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While discussing whether Steve Kerr has coached his last game with Golden State, Smith confidently stated the Warriors “haven’t been back to the playoffs since that championship in 2022.”
Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr looks on during a game against the Sacramento Kings. (Robert Edwards/Imagn Images)
That’s not even close to true. Not only did Golden State make the playoffs last season, but they also reached the postseason in 2023. Last year, the Warriors made the playoffs, beat the Rockets in seven games and advanced to the second round before losing to the Timberwolves. In 2023, they beat the Sacramento Kings in the first round and before losing to the Lakers in the Western Conference semifinals.
So, Smith wouldn’t even have been right if he said they haven’t won a playoff series since 2022. But he didn’t say that. He said they didn’t make the playoffs in any of the past four years, except they did it twice.
Yikes.
This is not an obscure piece of NBA trivia that Smith could be easily forgiven for not knowing. Perhaps he was too busy playing solitaire on his phone and just missed two of the past three NBA postseasons. That’s a tough look for the guy who fancies himself as the No. 1 NBA analyst in the country.
And it’s a terrible look for ESPN, as they keep selling Smith as one of the faces of their NBA coverage.
Stephen A. Smith made a brutal gaffe while talking Warriors playoff history
If Smith made this kind of mistake while talking about the NFL, nobody would be shocked. At this point, sports fans practically expect him to butcher football analysis. It’s almost endearing that a guy with the ego of Smith can be so consistently wrong while also delivering every “fact” with the utmost confidence. It’s part of the Stephen A. experience.
But this one hits differently because the NBA is where he’s supposed to at least know the basics. This is where Smith prides himself as being an authority figure.
Stephen A. Smith incorrectly stated the Golden State Warriors haven’t made the playoffs since their 2022 championship, despite the team reaching the postseason twice since then. (Candice Ward/Imagn Images)
And yet he couldn’t keep the recent playoff history of the Warriors straight. The team whose head coach is in the news every other week. The team that has won four championships since 2014. Arguably one of the most important franchises in the NBA over the past 15 years.
Yes, Golden State missed the playoffs in 2024 after getting bounced in the Play-In Tournament (although they won 46 games that season). And yes, it fell short again this season. But that’s a lot different from acting like Steve Kerr has spent four years wandering the basketball wilderness since winning that 2022 title.
He hasn’t. In fact, the team is 175-153 in the past four regular seasons.
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The Warriors made the second round in 2023. They made the second round again in 2025.
Before burying Steve Kerr on national television, maybe Stephen A. Smith could take 10 seconds to confirm whether the Warriors were actually, you know, in the playoffs.
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