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PFF may be changing bigly moving forward
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:10 pm
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:10 pm
PFF Lays Off Several Employees Amid Company Sale
Former employees Steve Palazzolo, Sam Monson (via their channel that is about 2 years old), and Mike Renner talk about it.
Gemini summary of the video:
quote:
A slew of Pro Football Focus employees were laid off on Monday as Cris Collinsworth sold the company’s enterprise business side to Teamworks in a deal reportedly worth nine figures.
A source told Front Office Sports that PFF called employees to an all-hands meeting on Monday, during which it was announced that about half of them would be moving to the new company. PFF possessed both a content side and a data team—all 32 NFL teams subscribe to the company’s enterprise data set—and most of those who survived the layoffs were on the data side, a source said.
In the announcement of the sale, it was revealed that Collinsworth—NBC’s lead NFL color commentator—would retain control of the “consumer business,” meaning the content side of the company. It is currently unclear how many people were laid off in total and how many still remain with PFF. Among those to announce their departures on Monday were fantasy football analyst Jon Macri, social media specialists Mike Kennedy and Beckett Mesko, NFL editor John Owning, writer Thomas Valentine, and designers Andrew Russell and Seth Reese.
Former employees Steve Palazzolo, Sam Monson (via their channel that is about 2 years old), and Mike Renner talk about it.
Gemini summary of the video:
quote:
The acquisition of Pro Football Focus (PFF) by Silver Lake represents a major shift from a founder-led media and data company to a tech-backed data powerhouse. Here is a detailed breakdown of the sale and the future strategy as discussed in the video:
The Structure of the Deal
Majority Stake Acquisition: Silver Lake has officially acquired a majority stake in PFF. Cris Collinsworth, who bought the company in 2014, will remain involved as a significant minority shareholder and will continue to be the face of the brand.
Capital Injection: The primary purpose of this sale is to provide PFF with the "dry powder" (capital) necessary to compete with other massive sports data conglomerates like Sportradar and Genius Sports.
Strategic Objectives and Expansion
Expansion into Betting: A major driver for this deal is the legalization of sports betting across the United States. PFF plans to use Silver Lake's resources to integrate their proprietary player grades and data directly into betting platforms and consumer apps.
Consumer Growth: While PFF is already a staple for NFL and NCAA teams, the new goal is to make their high-level analytics more accessible and "gamified" for the average fantasy football player.
Global Reach: Silver Lake's portfolio includes various international sports properties, which will assist PFF in expanding its data collection and analysis models to other sports beyond American football.
Technological Evolution
AI and Automation: Historically, PFF relied on hundreds of analysts manually charting every play. The video highlights that Silver Lake’s expertise in tech will help PFF transition toward more automated, AI-driven data collection to increase speed and reduce overhead.
Data Integrity: Despite the move toward automation, the video emphasizes that the "human-in-the-loop" grading system—the core of PFF’s reputation—will remain a vital part of their methodology to ensure accuracy that pure machine learning cannot yet replicate.
Future Leadership
Operational Continuity: The current executive team is staying in place. The partnership is described as a "strategic alignment" rather than a hostile takeover, ensuring that the football experts who built the database continue to guide its development.
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:14 pm to SlowFlowPro
Maybe I've been living under a rock, but I was today years old when I found out Cris Collinsworth owned PFF
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:20 pm to Broski
quote:“Now here’s a guy” makes more sense when you know about those guys
I was today years old when I found out Cris Collinsworth owned PFF
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:29 pm to SlowFlowPro
Had no idea Collinsworth owned PFF.
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:36 pm to iwyLSUiwy
Never understood why their metrics were ever taken serious. Football is the ultimate team game and it is almost impossible to grade individual players when they don’t know their assignments and don’t have the game film.
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:38 pm to RedHawk
quote:
Never understood why their metrics were ever taken serious.
This acquisitions shows they are. The consumer-facing PFF is taking a huge hit but the stuff they sell to NFL/CFB teams is booming and was the focus of this sale.
However, this does explain why their draft coverage has been abysmal this year. I was curious. Almost no full prospect profiles are available.
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:50 pm to RedHawk
quote:
don’t have the game film.
Huh?
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:51 pm to KosmoCramer
Dawg hasn’t heard of the All 22
Posted on 4/1/26 at 12:58 pm to SlowFlowPro
quote:
This acquisitions shows they are. The consumer-facing PFF is taking a huge hit but the stuff they sell to NFL/CFB teams is booming and was the focus of this sale.
Their data is very helpful for teams who have the rest of the information on hand to make PFF data make sense. It does not work and never worked in a vacuum by itself.
Looks like they retained the portion of the business that made money and dumped the part that lost money.
Posted on 4/1/26 at 1:01 pm to bstaceyau19
quote:
It does not work and never worked in a vacuum by itself.
Why not?
Posted on 4/1/26 at 1:17 pm to KosmoCramer
quote:
Huh?
I think they go off the same TV broadcasts we watch and not the actual game film.
Posted on 4/1/26 at 1:20 pm to RedHawk
quote:
I think they go off the same TV broadcasts we watch and not the actual game film
1) Anyone can have access to the All-22 through NFL+ Premium
2) Each NFL team contracts with PFF for a reason
Posted on 4/1/26 at 1:38 pm to RedHawk
quote:
Never understood why their metrics were ever taken serious.
I think NFL teams will take any (what they deem) legit critique they can get.
PFF has taken a hit among fans, but originally people liked it because a lot of fans like to argue on player rankings and player A being better compared to player B followed with eloquent thoughts such as “he clears” or “it’s not even close”
Posted on 4/1/26 at 1:49 pm to Broski
quote:You must be the reason my rock was so crowded, we are the same Cris Collinsworth/PFF age.
Maybe I've been living under a rock, but I was today years old when I found out Cris Collinsworth owned PFF
Posted on 4/1/26 at 1:53 pm to SlowFlowPro
that's pretty wild. A couple of the guys that did the youtube channel, Connor Rogers and Tre Sikkema have been hosting a show called NFL Stock exchange. I assume it'll be similar to a lot of the former youtube content from pff
Posted on 4/2/26 at 8:11 am to SlowFlowPro
I wonder how much of an impact AI has on the PFF evaluations. Once trained this should be a use case example where it excels and significantly cuts costs and inconsistencies.
Basically, just train an AI/LLM on how to score snaps and turn it loose on game film. (Assuming they haven't already).
Basically, just train an AI/LLM on how to score snaps and turn it loose on game film. (Assuming they haven't already).
Posted on 4/2/26 at 8:21 am to KamaCausey_LSU
You AI people are insufferable
Posted on 4/2/26 at 8:34 am to NIH
*AI image of Collinsworth laughing all the way to the bank*
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