Has the amount of goals scored with an extra attacker increased as well?
That stat would be less than the points aquired, when pulling the goalie.Actually, goal differential is the tie breaker when it comes to determining position in the standings and can be the difference between getting into the playoffs or not.
An interesting stat would be to look at teams who missed the playoffs due to goal differential vs. the number of empty net goals those teams allowed.
Edit:
I'll go a step further and say that if your team is allowing excess empty net goals at this point in the season, they do not expect to make the playoffs.
One of the main reasons he lost the Hart though...I think it's a positive thing because it makes gamblers mad and my favorite player likes to score empty netters.
On one of the Sharks broadcasts, it was mentioned that the analytics are in favor of shooting for the EN rather than avoiding icings. In the same way the team pulling the goalie is being more aggressive and doing it earlier and earlier, so too are the defending teams taking the long shots to end the game more aggressively.Players seem more apt to shoot from a potential icing position too than ever before. I remember that was a cardinal sin when I played structured hockey, icing while going for an empty net. I think the mindset around this has changed too.
Taken to it's natural conclusion and if the scoring ratios remain the same teams will continue to push the boundaries of how early they pull goalies. Whereas before 1 minute was the norm and seeing how 2 minutes has now become the new norm - eventually 3, 4 or even 5+ minutes will become the future norm once it's become 'acceptable'. I think the only solution would be to place a cap or limit on either exactly when teams can pull a goalie or for how long they can. The latter solution would being more idea because the former would curtail situations where team pull a goalie during a delayed penalty, but the latter option would make things more complicated because then the ref would have to watch teams for that and you might also have to have rules in place for when the limit can be reset.Do you have a solution to this other than making it illegal to remove the goalie in any circumstance?
Because that was in a way an anomaly, even if he was gunning for it. But we're getting to the point where you'll soon see 5 or 10 players scoring 10 or more ENG's per year.This is nothing new, when Pavel Bure scored his 60 goal season 10 of them were into an empty net and no one cried about his numbers being skewed.
Good question. It would take a while to go through the historical numbers but compared to years last season there has been a slight decrease of -6.5% in the number of games going into OT, though the number of ENG's are up far more at +34%. This year 19.5% 36 of 185 games have gone to OT (30 OT wins/loses, 6 SO's) vs last years rate of 20.7%, 272 of 1312 games going to OT(190 OT wins/loses and 82 SO's). For some reason a lot more games are ending in OT than going into shootouts though - the rate for which has dropped by almost 50%!I'm curious whether the percentage of games going to overtime is down this year so far. Seems like it to me.
Not necessarily. It depends on whether pulling the goalie for 3+ minutes will lead to more wins and points. At some point there's too much risk to conceding a goal. Just like how in football, even though teams are going for it more on 4th down, it's not inevitable that there are never any punts, because sometimes you get punished badly for going for it on 4th down too aggressively.Taken to it's natural conclusion and if the scoring ratios remain the same teams will continue to push the boundaries of how early they pull goalies. Whereas before 1 minute was the norm and now 2 minutes has become acceptable - eventual 3, 4 or even 5 minutes will become the new norm. I think the only solution would be to place a cap or limit on either exactly when teams can pull a goalie or for how long they can. The latter solution would being more idea because the former would curtail situations where team pull a goalie during a delayed penalty, but then that would make things more complicated because now the ref would have to watch teams for that and you might also have to have rules in place for when that limit 'resets'.
I don't think it would be that interesting as the data you'd have to look at wouldn't exist. It's never happened in the history of the game.An interesting stat would be to look at teams who missed the playoffs due to goal differential vs. the number of empty net goals those teams allowed.
Maybe, can't say it's impossible, but no single player has EVER scored 10 ENG in a single season.....we're now going to start seeing 5-10 guys do it every year?Because that was in a way an anomaly, even if he was gunning for it. But we're getting to the point where you'll soon see 5 or 10 players scoring 10 or more ENG's per year.
9 were empty netters.This is nothing new, when Pavel Bure scored his 60 goal season 10 of them were into an empty net and no one cried about his numbers being skewed.
I'm not sure what you mean with this. How is taking a risk and desperately trying to tie the game while accepting an objective disadvantage a gimmick? I think that it makes for a much more exciting finish than if the team does not pull a goalie early.Sure, that makes a lot of sense analytically and there’s little doubt pulling the goalie earlier statistically improves a team’s chances of winning. But is it good for the integrity of the sport I wonder?
When the strategy of pulling the goalie first emerged it was clearly meant to be a rarely seen, last-resort gamble rather than a go-to tactic with significant time left. As teams increasingly adopt the approach and analytics push them to pull goalies earlier and earlier - along with potentially other future unorthodox tactics, it could start to feel like an artificial, almost 'gimmicky' aspect of play, much like how many still feel about 3-on-3 overtime and shootouts. Though at least those game time situations while inelegant, were designed to address a legitimate longstanding issue(ties).
If teams routinely pull their goalies earlier it risks detracting from the traditional flow of the game imo. At what point does the game’s authenticity feel compromised just for the sake of 'playing the odds'? Would fans really be fine with situations like Game 5 of the 2023 Finals between Florida and Vegas becoming the norm? Or teams scoring as much as say a quarter of their goals without ever having to beat a goalie?
You're right; 'gimmicky' was not be the best word to describe it since it is making use of a move that has existed for a long time. But it reminds me of how baseball managers were increasingly making use of the defensive shift, which gradually altered the nature of the game. It wasn’t a huge change initially, but over time, it had changed the game to such a degree that the league eventually decided to implement rules to limit defensive shifts. Playing with an empty net for extended periods of time feels similar in that it shifts hockey away from its originally intended structure. Would you agree or disagree that prolonged empty-net play time isn’t quite how hockey was meant to be played? Maybe a couple minutes of EN game time isn't cause for any kind of alarm just yet but the trend is increasing that much is very clear.I'm not sure what you mean with this. How is taking a risk and desperately trying to tie the game while accepting an objective disadvantage a gimmick? I think that it makes for a much more exciting finish than if the team does not pull a goalie early.
And comparing it to 3on3 overtime is pretty forced.
That makes sense to me and it would be easy enough to be track and list those totals. But will there be a consensus about which stat counts for the Art Ross? Unlikely. They'll be strong views on either side of that argument.As for ENGs diluting the value of a goal, that's simple. Just don't count ENGs when counting player goals, have those as extra stats. Have the main stat as something like "goals scored against a goaltender."
That makes sense to me and it would be easy enough to be track and list those totals. But will there be a consensus about which stat counts for the Art Ross? Unlikely. They'll be strong views on either side of that argument.
For sure, but is it a bad thing for the last minutes of a game to be on a different flow than the rest of it, that something that happen in some sports and it feel anti-dramatic, say in soccer when the last "2 minutes"/ we never know how much of team that behind by just a goal feel like normal play almost.If teams routinely pull their goalies earlier it risks detracting from the traditional flow of the game imo. At what point does the game’s authenticity feel compromised just for the sake of 'playing the odds'? Would fans really be fine with situations like Game 5 of the 2023 Finals between Florida and Vegas becoming the norm? Or teams scoring as much as say a quarter of their goals without ever having to beat a goalie?