The site also includes sections on
college football and
college basketball, and once included a section on the
Olympics.[3] The sites attempt a comprehensive approach to sports data. For example, Baseball-Reference contains more than 100,000 box scores and Pro-Football-Reference contains data on every scoring play in the
National Football League since
1941.[1] The college basketball section includes data on
NCAA Division I men's basketball, with incomplete data going back as far as 1892—predating the first NCAA divisional split (1956) and the NCAA itself (1906), and only a year after the sport was invented. Division I women's basketball data was added in 2023, initially with full data dating back to the 2009–10 season. On February 15, 2024, Sports Reference announced that it had expanded its Division I women's basketball data set to include player and team statistics dating back to the 1987–88 season.[4]
The company, which is based in the
Mount Airy neighborhood of
Philadelphia, was founded as Sports Reference in 2004 and was incorporated as Sports Reference LLC in 2007.[5][1][6]
On July 11, 2023, the company purchased the baseball trivia game
Immaculate Grid and integrated it with Baseball-Reference.[7][8] Subsequently, the game was expanded to cover Sports Reference's other sites.[9]
Olympics
Sports Reference added a site for
Olympic Games statistics and history in July 2008.[10][11]
The company announced in December 2016 that the Olympics site was to be shut down in the near future due to a change in its data licensing agreement.[12] Since that time, data for the
2016 Summer Olympics has been added,[13] but the site was not updated for the
2018 Winter Olympics.[14][12] Sports Reference closed its Olympic site on May 14, 2020.[15]
The providers of the Olympic data, known as OlyMADmen, launched a new site called Olympedia in May 2020.[16][17][18][19] According to Slate, editing of "Olympedia [was] restricted to about two dozen trusted academics and researchers who specialize in Olympic history."[20] The site is owned by the
International Olympic Committee (IOC).[21] On December 29, 2023, OlyMADmen member
Bill Mallon announced that they would no longer be able to update Olympedia because the IOC declined to renew the contract necessary to permit them to do so.[22][23]
^Mallon, Bill (May 27, 2020).
"Olympedia now open to the public". OlympStats.com.
Archived from the original on June 6, 2020. Retrieved May 27, 2020. the result many years of work by a group of Olympic historians and statisticians called the OlyMADmen
^"About". Olympedia.
Archived from the original on June 14, 2020. The group that has compiled the database refers to itself as MADmen — MAD being an acronym for several of the early members of the group, but also signifies their commitment to the project in another sense.