emptyNedder
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- Jan 17, 2018
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I have already mentioned that my son gave me the idea to create a model for targeting D-men after the first two rounds. The starting point was Pesce, Slavin and their similarities. I called the model PSF (Pesce/Slavin Factor).
I have refined it and tried to check it against past drafts. At this point I am fairly confident that using inter-related statistics can increase the likelihood of identifying mid-to-late round steals among defensemen. A score above 1.0 identifies a great value (Pesce was 1.32. Slavin was 1.35).
2012 is a great draft to use as a test because those players have now mostly reached their potential and an unusual number of d-men drafted in rounds 3-7 have played in the NHL. Here is what PSF looks like for 2012 rounds 3-7.
Four d-men had a PSF above 1.0: Esa Lindell, Shayne Gostisbehere, Jaccob Slavin, and Joey LaLeggia.
Four d-men had a PSF between .80 and 1.0: Daniel Gunnarsson, Christian Djoos, Mikael Wikstrand, and Joakim Ryan.
So 75% on True Positives where the score is 1.0 or higher and 50% on the second tier. (LaLeggia has had a strong AHL career and Wikstrand is a veteran in the SHL).
The model had some big misses: Colton Parayko, Colin Miller, Adam Pelech, Erik Gustafsson and Ben Hutton. It also missed some players who have contributed in the NHL like Matt Benning, Connor Carrick, Brett Kulak, and Jake Dotchin.
So the False Negative is about 17.4%.
I will go into a brief overview of how the model works and the players who it identifies this year in upcoming posts.
I have refined it and tried to check it against past drafts. At this point I am fairly confident that using inter-related statistics can increase the likelihood of identifying mid-to-late round steals among defensemen. A score above 1.0 identifies a great value (Pesce was 1.32. Slavin was 1.35).
2012 is a great draft to use as a test because those players have now mostly reached their potential and an unusual number of d-men drafted in rounds 3-7 have played in the NHL. Here is what PSF looks like for 2012 rounds 3-7.
Four d-men had a PSF above 1.0: Esa Lindell, Shayne Gostisbehere, Jaccob Slavin, and Joey LaLeggia.
Four d-men had a PSF between .80 and 1.0: Daniel Gunnarsson, Christian Djoos, Mikael Wikstrand, and Joakim Ryan.
So 75% on True Positives where the score is 1.0 or higher and 50% on the second tier. (LaLeggia has had a strong AHL career and Wikstrand is a veteran in the SHL).
The model had some big misses: Colton Parayko, Colin Miller, Adam Pelech, Erik Gustafsson and Ben Hutton. It also missed some players who have contributed in the NHL like Matt Benning, Connor Carrick, Brett Kulak, and Jake Dotchin.
So the False Negative is about 17.4%.
I will go into a brief overview of how the model works and the players who it identifies this year in upcoming posts.