Lafleurs Guy
Guuuuuuuy!
- Jul 20, 2007
- 82,134
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I pretty much hate all the"advanced statistics". They're absolutely meaningless. Way too many variables in hockey.
Corsi and Fenwick numbers have been shown to be the most accurate predictors of cup winners. It’s not ‘pinball’ or random.Imo
Hockey prediction is closer to pinball than baseball. Much closer.
Statistical comparison and probabilistic outcomes are not something many of our brains like but the puck is either on edge or flat when the one timer comes through, the goalie perhaps can’t even see that an opponent is shooting, the puck hits a guy in the pants, then a skate and goes in 5 hole.
This is pure chaos.
Compare this to: guy throws his 52nd fastball and guy swings.
One is way easier to model than the other, much more predicable with results that are way easier to measure even in weird ways.
What advanced stats do and are is just a handful of measuring sticks. They attempt to place the same measuring stick on every team, player, and event. They can’t help their job is to define chaos.
The root of your problem is ice hockeys chaotic nature, not the evaluation of it.
Understanding their fundamental source will allow you to recognize them for what they are.
I’d suggest that they’re a great tool that joins others to help describe historic events and predict future ones.
Those stats give you a really good idea of where the play is most of the time. And it’s only common sense that the team that soends most of its time in the opposing zone has a better chance of winning. Nothing magical about that.
All that being said - that doesn’t mean the ‘win-O-meter is going to be valuable for anything on any given game.