BlueMed
Registered User
- Jul 18, 2019
- 2,912
- 3,495
Do last year's playoffs not count?
Looking at just road games where the opposition could exploit last change against him, he had a CF% of 62.66, a FF% of 61.15, a GF% of 56.25, and xGF% of 53.07, a SCF%% of 64.55, a HDCF% of 56.60, and a HDGF% of 60%. Those numbers are absolutely fantastic.
Makar's numbers vs Dallas on the road: 54:37 even strength TOI over 3 games and 52.63 offensive zone start %. CF% of 59.17, FF% of 59.42, GF% of 54.55, xGF% of 55.38, SCF% of 61.54, HDCF% of 55.56, and a HDGF% of 55.56. Again, fantastic despite a very good team being able to use last change to exploit his perceived defensive liabilities. In fact, he was drastically better vs Dallas than Hedman was.
Hedman's numbers vs Dallas on the road: 56:25 even strength TOI over 3 games and a 70% offensive zone faceoff %. CF% of 56.25, FF% of 56.96, GF% 33.33, xGF% 46.43, SCF% 44.90, HDCF% of 28.57, HDGF% 0.00
Makar was sheltered significantly less than Hedman and drastically outperformed Hedman when Dallas had last change.
Advanced possession stats hold by far the most predictive value of any hockey stat. Teams and players that consistently dominate time and quality of possession consistently succeed more than teams that don't.
I suggest you stay out of topics asking you to compare the Blues to other teams if you aren't interested in discussions about the quality of other teams. There is just no way to discuss whether the Blues are a favorite/contender/bubble team without an honest look at the teams we are directly competing with.
You have lost the forest for the trees, bud. Advanced statistics are great for static sports like baseball and golf, but not so much for dynamic sports like hockey. They are pretty useless when it comes to making future predictions in large part due their inability to integrate qualitative data accurately. The same advanced stats predicted Tampa sweeping Columbus, but the reality was completely the opposite.
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