a mangy Meowth
Registered Meowth
Yes he has been advocating for head in sand. Look at page 2You're seriously advocating that we treat all shots in a game as equal and that we should ignore the difficulty that each goaltender faces?
Yes he has been advocating for head in sand. Look at page 2You're seriously advocating that we treat all shots in a game as equal and that we should ignore the difficulty that each goaltender faces?
Oh, 100%
That's like saying a skater doesn't deserve a Hart Trophy or Art Ross (or Rocket Richard), due to strength of schedule or calibre of goalie faced.
Still gotta do the work, and some are just better at it than others.
I pretty much hate all the"advanced statistics". They're absolutely meaningless. Way too many variables in hockey.
That's not really a flaw of xG. It's intended. Part of the point of it is trying to determine what the average likelihood of scoring in a given scenario is, absent goaltending or shooting. Like, that is the point. What should I expect on average?Its one of those situations where you make do with what you've got.
The NHL keeps a lot of data private that public models can't access. The teams also hire anyone talented enough to develop better models and data collection methods and then wipe their work from public access.
You've already hit on one of the major flaws of 'expected goals'. The idea that every goalie has average ability and every skater has an average shot.
You have a shot attempt. Based on years of data of how often similar shots are goals, you apply a percentage chance of that shot going in. You convert that percentage to a decimal. That's how many expected goals you get.
There's really not that much to it and it's not particularly voodoo.
I pretty much hate all the"advanced statistics". They're absolutely meaningless. Way too many variables in hockey.
That seems bad.They’re trying to galaxy brain that non-sense
Expected goals are even simpler than that. You expect to score 1 goal on every 10 shots on goal.
32 shots on goal? Expected goals is 3. Less than that and you got goalies, over that and the goalie played like shit.
Done
You are 100% right about the shooting %.My career Is in data analysis.
Baseball and golf are thr brst when it comes tu o individual data.
Both might have some subjective weighting attached tied to situations and weather
Hockey is much harder to do team and individual metrics
Shooting % does not factor in quality of shot
That model doesn’t account for what has actually happened though. 10 weak shots, unscreened from poor angles should have 0 go in.They’re trying to galaxy brain that non-sense
Expected goals are even simpler than that. You expect to score 1 goal on every 10 shots on goal.
32 shots on goal? Expected goals is 3. Less than that and you got goalies, over that and the goalie played like shit.
Done
That seems bad.
I will never understand the take that we should ignore information we have readily available to us. It would be like my trying to find the fastest route to get from point A to point B, but refusing to use traffic data because I already own a map.
That model doesn’t account for what has actually happened though. 10 weak shots, unscreened from poor angles should have 0 go in.
The context is in the shooting position.
The secret is to scream angrily at Google maps when I'm 10 minutes late despite leaving early enough that I should only have been 5 minutes late!But traffic data sometimes has flaws in it! How can you use that?
It's not a goalie stat.It’s what we do with goalie stats.
.900 is baseline, 8xx is shit and .910+ is good/great
As in a goal? Shot placement would be awesome to track, but would be incredibly difficult to manage.The context should be the placement of the shot.
If this is seriously where you're starting from, then there's really no point in trying to convince you otherwise.
Your analogy is shit.
You're introducing a whoooooole lotta difficult number crunching by doing that. Very small errors in shot location (whether the tracking data is wrong or the time is wrong) and where the puck was stopped by the goalie would make massive differences in the supposed shot placement.As in a goal? Shot placement would be awesome to track, but would be incredibly difficult to manage.
It would be cool if the sensor in the puck idea did that tracking. (Idk if that was or is a thing)
I believe expected goals as a predictor for goals are like a 0.36 for correlation.
They're based on historical data, so it means that shots with the same parameters as that one have historically ended up becoming a goal around 16% of the time.
It's a statistical model, they don't actually look at the videos, they just go by the event data.
Also, here the goalie didn't play it correctly at all. If he had moved even a little bit, it wouldn't have looked nearly as free as it was.
Very true. It’s a fun thought though!You're introducing a whoooooole lotta difficult number crunching by doing that. Very small errors in shot location (whether the tracking data is wrong or the time is wrong) and where the puck was stopped by the goalie would make massive differences in the supposed shot placement.
Reliable shot placement data is probably one of the things we're farthest away from realizing.