Peat
Registered User
- Jun 14, 2016
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I didn't even click on the original NST link. Just took @Tom Hanks word.
Anyways, thanks. That makes sense.
1/4 shots blocked seems pretty significant. Then you have to factor in all the misses too.
It looks pretty significant compares to the other Penguins.
Filter out all the misses by subtracting shots from iFF. Geno has 44 shots off of 56 unblocked chances. Since Rust and Guentzel are at 49 out of 72 and 59 out of 86 respectively, that feels good.
Of course, you could just go by goal per iCF. Geno had 9 from 77. Rust had 9 from 82. Then it keeps going down - Crosby 8 from 87, Jake 7 from 103, ERod 7 from 66... Geno was our most efficient goalscorer going by raw chances.
He looks even more efficient when you compare his tally to individual expected goals. Rust was expected to score 9.78, Guentzel 11.31. Crosby 7, ERod 5.18...
Geno was expected to score 5.03 goals, and scored 9.
So from that angle, Geno was our most ruthlessly efficient goalscorer compare to his chances by a country mile. And while I know people doubt chance location metrics' reporting values, I think this is a case where their usefulness and correlation to the eye test seems pretty obvious. We all knew Guentzel and Rust were getting a ton of in close chances, and that Geno was taking a lot of shots from the point already. We also all know it's generally easier to score from in close than from the point, and making a mockery of that assertion requires talent (or gross unsustainable luck).
And we also all know that blasting from the point/circles will get you blocked a lot, and that happens less with in close chances but getting the elevation hard is right so missing a lot is to be expected.
Which means that while this was a good comparison for how much the PP relies on Geno, it's bad for whether Geno gets blocked a lot for what he does.
So the obvious answer is to find players around the league who have a similar shots and ixG rate to Geno and look at how often they get blocked. Kyle Connor is by far the closest match for that I can find. Connor had 145 chances, 108 unblocked chances, for 25.5%. McDavid is also a close match, and closer if you consider individual high danger chances. 24.4% of his shot attempts were blocked.
I should do more matches before declaring this to be definitely true, but I am lazy, so I'm going to say it looks like there's a solid chance that Geno's block rate is just the price of doing business when you shoot from Geno's position and given how many goals he scored doing it, it was good business. I am also too lazy to fix that run on sentence. Sorry.