Stamkos pre-injury was known as a speedster and his skating was his strongest attribute, but post-Titanium rod Stamkos at the age of 34 being #2 in NHL?
This mainly makes me question the validity of these measurements.
MacKinnon being at the top for most frequent speed bursts does make perfect sense, though. It's his trademark. And in general, the lists for those two attributes look more sensible than the ones for max speed. Hintz being near the top, and probably the best pound-for-pound skater for his size, also matches the eye test.
I wonder what the error margin is on these. The top speed ones likely are wacky, but the burst ones probably cancel out via sample size.
Tracker chips have error margins to them. That's what I was talking about.They're tracked via chips on jerseys. I'm sure they've done data analysis to remove short sample sizes from taking hits or falling down.
Top speed is probably the least relevant stat from the three. The other two are much better indicators of how players use their speed in games, and Stamkos isn't on the top 20 in either of them.Stamkos pre-injury was known as a speedster and his skating was his strongest attribute, but post-Titanium rod Stamkos at the age of 34 being #2 in NHL?
This mainly makes me question the validity of these measurements.
Top speed is probably the least relevant stat from the three. The other two are much better indicators of how players use their speed in games, and Stamkos isn't on the top 20 in either of them.
He’s number 2 in terms of one time max speed, but he’s not on either of the lists for highest amount of speed bursts above 20 mph and 22 mph. This means his max speed is still very fast but his acceleration isn’t very good so he can rarely utilize his speed in an actual game.Stamkos pre-injury was known as a speedster and his skating was his strongest attribute, but post-Titanium rod Stamkos at the age of 34 being #2 in NHL?
This mainly makes me question the validity of these measurements.
MacKinnon being at the top for most frequent speed bursts does make perfect sense, though. It's his trademark. And in general, the lists for those two attributes look more sensible than the ones for max speed. Hintz being near the top, and probably the best pound-for-pound skater for his size, also matches the eye test.
I wonder what the error margin is on these. The top speed ones likely are wacky, but the burst ones probably cancel out via sample size.
Maroon being the slowest forward is the least surprising stat I've seen.
Should be doable. The tracking chips operate in an x,y,z space.Now start tracking falls per 60 and everyone can finally understand that Mikko Rantanen spends more time flailing on the ice than actually skating.
Maroon being the slowest forward is the least surprising stat I've seen.