I'm a huge football(soccer) fan and interested in Machine Learning too. As a project for my ML course I'm trying to build a model that would predict the chance of winning for the home team, given the names of the home and away team.(I query my dataset and accordingly create datapoints based on previous matches between those 2 teams)
I have data for several seasons for all teams however I have the following issues that I would like some advice with.. The EPL(English Premier League) has 20teams which play each other at home and away (380 total games in a season). Thus, each season, any 2 teams play each other only twice.
I have data for the past 10+ years, resulting in 2*10=20 datapoints for the two teams. However I do not want to go past 3 years since I believe teams change quite considerably over time (ManCity, Liverpool) and this would only introduce more error into the system.
So this results in just around 6-8 data points for each pair of team. However, I do have several features(upto 20+) for each data point like Full-time goals, half time goals, passes, shots, yellows, reds, etc. for both teams so I can include features like recent form, recent home form, recent away form etc.
However the idea of just having only 6-8 datapoints to train with seems incorrect to me. Any thoughts on how I could counter this problem?(if this is a problem in the first place i.e.)
Thanks!
EDIT: FWIW, here's a link to my report which I compiled at the completion of my project. https://www.dropbox.com/s/ec4a66ytfkbsncz/report.pdf . It's not 'great' stuff but I think some of the observations I managed to elicit were pretty cool (like how my prediction worked very well for the Bundesliga because Bayern win the league all the time).
That's an interesting problem which I don't think has an unique solution. However, there are a couple of little things that I could try if I were in your position.
I share your concerning about 6-8 points per class being too little data to build a reliable model. So I would try to model the problem a bit differently. In order to have more data for each class, instead of having 20 classes I would have only two (home/away) and I would add two features, one for the team being home and other one for the away team. In that setup, you can still predict which team would win given if it is playing as home or away, and your problem has more data to produce a result.
Another idea would be to take data from other European leagues. Since now teams are a feature and not a class, it shouldn't add too much noise to your model and you could benefit from the additional data (assuming that those features are valid in another leagues)