VoluntaryDom
Formerly DominicBoltsFan / Ⓐ / ✞
punch broadbent is a hell of a nameat least since 1922:
PUNCH BROADBENT (2) , ASSISTS: JACK DARRAGH (1), GEORGES BOUCHER (3)[TBODY] [/TBODY]
1922020004 19221220 TSP 2 - 7 SEN
punch broadbent is a hell of a nameat least since 1922:
PUNCH BROADBENT (2) , ASSISTS: JACK DARRAGH (1), GEORGES BOUCHER (3)[TBODY] [/TBODY]
1922020004 19221220 TSP 2 - 7 SEN
theres a reason people do these studies confined to even strength
because the thing you were describing is PP, where systems have a major effect on who gets the benefit of the points from those PPs. while at ES, offense is less system based, and players points (at least primary ones) are generally skill-based.What specifically is that reason?
Just came across such a situation. Game 1934020010, Eagles - Bruins (how fitting these days), 11/17/1934. The lone goal in the boxscore is credited to Babe Siebert, assisted by Eddie Shore and Nels Stewart. However Hap Emms is also credited with an assist in the roster summaries, obviously tertiary.I haven't come across an actual rule that would have prevented the awarding of secondary assists in the first few years of the NHL but the first time a goal was credited with two assists happened in 1922-23 season (happened seven times that season).
You're right that there was even years when tertiary assists were allowed and even awarded but it happened in the 1930's, not 20's. Per the rules apparently tertiary assists were possible from 1930-31 season onwards but they were actually awarded only during two years:
1934-35 (57 tertiary assists awarded)
1935-36 (65 tertiary assists awarded)
Since 1936-37 season only a maximum of two assists per goal were allowed.
Great thread and work but I wanted to bump because I can't really wrap my head around why Points would vary less than Primary Points do year to year, since goals and primary assists have much higher correlations than second assists do.
Shouldn't adding the much more random (relatively speaking) 2nd assists to Goals and Primary Assists (much higher inter-year correlation) make them (points) vary more year to year (than primary points)?
Hopefully it's not too dumb a quesiton....
Not a dumb question at all. What I found is secondary assists are, on their own, nearly useless in predicting secondary assists in the following year. Primary assists are decent (but not great) in predicting primary assists in the following year (the same is true for goals - so this tells me what I already knew, which is hockey isn't an overly predictable sport from year to year). But looking at total assists - so taking primaries and secondaries together - are stronger still at predicting total assists in the following year.
I think your question is - if secondary assists don't have much informational value, why does adding it to the mix give us better results? It's because secondary assists do have informational value. They don't have much informational value at predicting themselves, but they have informational value in predicting other things.
All things being equal, a player who gets a secondary assist was probably more involved in the play than someone who recorded nothing. Sure, on average they were less involved than the player actually scoring the goal, or directly setting it up, but if I'm assessing who's a productive talented forward, I'd rather have a player partially involved through a secondary assist, rather than not at all. That's why the correlation is higher - a player recording a secondary assist was at least indirectly involved in the play and, all things being equal, we'd expect someone with partial involvement in the future to score more than someone with no involvement.
I wonder if your weighted points (G+A1+0.66 A2) ranking would show more correlation than points?
In theory, if one was to kept adjusting the weight of A2 until you maximized the R^2 value, would that A2 value be a good estimate at the true value of a secondary assist?
Here's an idea (to further look into the value of secondary assists) - looking for feedback before I spend the time running the numbers.
I think the issue is, ultimately - are secondary assists indicative of a player contributing to their team's offense? Or is it just statistical noise?
What may be useful is a prediction exercise. Let's say we've defined a certain population (say, all forwards over X seasons with at least XXX minutes, at even strength). We know how many goals their team scores per 60 minutes when they're on the ice (the dependent variable) and their personal rate of scoring goals, primary assists, and secondary assists per 60 minutes (the independent variables).
If secondary assists are just statistical noise, if I were to put together a model, then we would expect that a model with just G+1A would be at least as good at predicting their team's offensive output as a model with G+1A+2A. Another way of testing this - if I put together a model using all three variables, and secondary assists are just statistical noise, we'd expect the predictive power of the secondary assists variable to be much less than that of goals and primary assist variables.
Why this makes sense to me - what we ultimately care about is how much a player helps their team score goals (even if they're not the ones scoring the goals themselves). So, if we compare two players, and their goal and primary assist rates are the same, but one records far more secondary assists - does the player generating more secondary assists actually contribute to his team scoring more goals overall? Comparing two players, of course, is meaningless, but looking at a sample of several hundred players over several years might be interesting/useful.
Does this approach make sense? I can run the numbers, but open to feedback before I invest the time in doing this.
Great thread and nice work.
One thing I'm thinking of: Often when there's a 2-on-1 or 2-on-0, the goal scorer is effectively making the play and makes what in theory should be a secondary assist. Like this goal yesterday.
In this case, Ehlers showed great offensive skills, speed, puckhandling and passing with one hand. But a player obviously can't get assists too when he scores. So no secondary assists were given in this case.
Another example - also from yesterday - was Draisatl's goal against Toronto. He was moving the puck almost from his own goal line to the red line before he passed the puck, got it back, and scored. In both these cases, the goal scorers were contributing significantly in setting up the plays but this is ignored in the secondary assists stats. And this is probably one of the reasons why secondary assist stats are more "noisy" than goals or primary asists stats. Secondary assists are either ignored or sometimes given to the player with the tertiary assist and thus moved even further from the action in setting up the play. The latter was the case with the Draisaitl goal I just mentioned.
Even the first Oilers goal yesterday was such a case when the secondary assist happened pretty far (action-wise) from the goal. Here is the passing sequence leading up to the goal: McDavid-Klefbom-Larsson-Andersen(save)-Larsson-Klefbom. McDavid got the secondary assist although the puck was touched 5 times after him.
Goals and primary assists are never skewed this way. They are always given to the players touching the puck the last and second last time before it crosses the goal line. All this is probably terribly obvious, but I'm new here, and I did't see it mentioned in the 2011 article on page 1 in the thread.
Another thing is that secondary assists are somewhat rarer than goals or primary assists (this was mentioned in the 2011 article). Using the numbers posted on page 1 suggests that out of all the points scored by the top 50 players, 41 % were goals, 36 % primary assists, and only 22 % secondary assists. I'm not sure though how or if this smaller sample size affects the correlation from year to year.
Interesting thread and well done work.
I've been away from this board and advanced hockey stats for 4-5 years, so I'm not so up to date.
Could HockeyOutsider or someone else summarize the conclusions made so far?
You only looked at 5 vs 5 play? Does that include empty net goals at even strength (6 skaters vs 5 skaters + 1 goalie)? Perhaps you would like to compare if EN goals differ from other goals?
Your conclusions are that goals and primary assists are stable, while secondary assists is more unstable and is influenced more by environment?
I saw some value here, like 0.65 or similar. Do you mean that secondary assists could be multiplied with that number in order to get a "fairer" Pts total? (Instead 1+1+1 for G, A1 and A2, you suggest 1+1+0.66?)
What's the use of all this excellent work? What difference does it make? What have we learnt?
Isn't handling out points rather arbitrary anyway?
Guys who obscures the goalie's view don't get a point, but may have been crucial in the goal happening?
Guys who takes defensive responsibility so that others can go "all in" offensively doesn't get a point? Without their defensive responsibility there might not have been a goal anyway?