I used to think the same, however he puts a lot of his opinion on twitter about all local clubs and i used to follow him. I mentioned this before, so apologies for repeating myself
I occasionally commented on things he wrote, sometimes in agreement, but often in disagreement. I commented on Wednesday last season when he'd once again been overly forgiving of them, he was on the Jos and Chansiri bandwagon. I politely disagreed and commented why and he reluctantly engaged me in twitter chat.
At a certain point, when i was highlighting the failings of SWFC and how i thought they weren't just having a bad run, but are a bad side, he decided to say "and this is why i don't discuss teams with opposition fans". I wasn't slagging them off for the sake of it, but i was questioning what he was saying, once again. Since then i've not followed him.
I watched the Blades Analytics interview and i think, like when Matt Prestridge was in the studio discussing the sports science side, with the Blades Analytics guy Biggs plays the ignorant old school journalist... at least i hope he plays this role (presumably to allow the guest to explain themselves in laymans terms)
One such example was that Biggs used to get the Opta stats when he was doing commentary and it was like a book so he threw it to the side and just commentated. This has been fine for the likes of Keith Edwards for years as the expert summariser doesn't always need stats, however i think nowadays the audience wants more than to hear that number 5 has passed to number 6 in square 4.
It was mentioned on the interview that Blades Analytics data is used by the likes of Kev Gage in both his articles and his commentary with iFollow. Same can be said for
Danny04
Its quite an american approach, i recently watched 'moneyball' and the approach was dismissed by the old school managers, scouts and coaches.
I think the way that modern, progressive football teams gain success nowadays is finding a blend. Wilder says that he's old school, but his methods at the club are blending old school principles of liking a player along with statistics based on performances and the sports science parts which go hand in hand with fitness.
Something which
Ricky touched on was that whilst Enda Stevens has good stats on paper, the performances that we see don't match up and he's not suddenly going to start producing assists. I think this is where the stats play their part.
The stats can be used to focus on the areas which need improvement, so whilst an immediate impact on teh assists probably won't happen, but this could be seen as something for the coaches to work on, getting Stevens further up the pitch, bringing him into play more so that he can put those balls in from better positions to provide an assist.