Data Methodology
How SnapStats turns football data into readable context
What SnapStats Publishes
SnapStats is designed as a reference layer for football fans. It organizes scores, standings, player leaders, team pages, fantasy-oriented views, matchup context, and postseason information into screens that are easier to scan than raw feeds or box-score tables.
The app does not claim to be an official league record book. Team names, player names, schedules, and statistics are used for identification and informational purposes.
How Raw Data Becomes App Content
When data is available, SnapStats groups it by the way fans usually ask questions: by week, team, player, position, conference, division, and stat category. The app then adds navigation, filters, summaries, comparison views, and labels so the same data can be checked from several angles.
- Score pages focus on game status, teams, timing, records, venues, broadcasts, and detail links.
- Player pages focus on season totals, weekly records, leaderboards, and position-specific categories.
- Team pages focus on schedule context, standings, records, scoring profile, and player connections.
- Fantasy pages group common scoring categories so lineup research is faster.
Fact Data Versus Generated Context
SnapStats separates source-style facts from app-generated context. Scores, records, player names, teams, and statistical values are presented as data fields. Matchup previews, predictions, short explanations, and trend summaries are generated context and should be treated as informational commentary, not guaranteed outcomes.
Generated context can be incomplete or inaccurate, especially when source data is missing, delayed, or changed after a game. Users should verify important decisions with official or primary sources.
Freshness And Missing Data
Football data changes quickly during active weeks. SnapStats may show current, historical, or cached records depending on the screen and available source data. If a record is incomplete, missing, or temporarily unavailable, the app should favor a clear empty state over inventing a value.
This is why some pages may show fewer rows for older seasons, preseason games, recently updated rosters, or categories where the source feed does not provide a complete record.
How To Read The App
Use SnapStats as a fast research companion. Start with scores or standings for the broad picture, move into team and player pages for detail, then use the stats glossary when a stat label needs a plain-English definition.
For questions about accounts, data concerns, deletion, or corrections, use the contact page.