DMaximus 1,046 Posted September 25, 2019 Share Posted September 25, 2019 (edited) VHLM S68 Advanced Metrics I wrote a similar post for the VHL here. Here I’ll be presenting the same Corsi, Fenwick, and PDO statistics for the VHLM. You can read my previous post for a brief description of what these advance metrics are or just ask here if you have any questions. Here are the current standings when I ran the report. Team GP W L OTL P GF GA Diff Streak Minnesota 21 15 3 3 33 76 44 32 W1 Houston 20 15 5 0 30 65 37 28 W6 Las Vegas 21 14 6 1 29 75 53 22 W2 Yukon 21 12 8 1 25 57 53 4 L1 Mexico City 21 11 8 2 24 54 58 -4 W1 Mississauga 21 11 8 2 24 67 61 6 L1 Halifax 21 11 9 1 23 77 79 -2 W1 San Diego 20 9 10 1 19 71 79 -8 W3 Philadelphia 20 6 11 3 15 66 79 -13 L2 Saskatoon 21 6 12 3 15 60 89 -29 L2 Ottawa 21 4 14 3 11 48 84 -36 L5 Corsi CorsiFor is the shot attempts taken by your team CorsiAgainst is the shot attempts allowed by your team Corsi is CorsiFor minus CorsiAgainst. A positive number means you’ve taken more shot attempts than allowed. Negative means you’ve allowed more than taken. CorsiForPct takes your team’s CorsiFor number and uses it to make a percentage of the total shot attempts in the game. A CorsiFor% of over 55% is elite. Team Name Average of CorsiFor Average of CorsiAgainst Average of Corsi Average of CorsiForPct Halifax 21st 49.905 45.429 4.476 51.740 Houston Bulls 47.650 35.350 12.300 57.482 Las Vegas Aces 55.333 37.905 17.429 59.426 Mexico City Kings 44.857 56.476 -11.619 44.553 Minnesota Storm 46.905 40.762 6.143 53.658 Mississauga Hounds 45.762 45.571 0.190 50.007 Ottawa Lynx 32.000 53.524 -21.524 37.964 Philadelphia Reapers 43.950 44.700 -0.750 49.375 San Diego Marlins 57.500 51.350 6.150 52.135 Saskatoon Wild 45.667 55.476 -9.810 45.217 Yukon Rush 46.762 48.905 -2.143 48.871 Grand Total 46.899 46.899 0.000 50.000 Fenwick The exact same as Corsi, just that shots that are blocked are not counted as an attempt. Row Labels Average of FenwickFor Average of FenwickAgainst Average of Fenwick Average of FenwickForPct Halifax 21st 42.762 39.190 3.571 51.692 Houston Bulls 40.350 30.450 9.900 56.905 Las Vegas Aces 46.952 32.095 14.857 59.639 Mexico City Kings 38.238 47.619 -9.381 44.724 Minnesota Storm 40.571 35.333 5.238 53.724 Mississauga Hounds 39.429 38.476 0.952 50.376 Ottawa Lynx 26.571 45.857 -19.286 37.343 Philadelphia Reapers 37.700 38.250 -0.550 49.481 San Diego Marlins 48.300 44.700 3.600 51.328 Saskatoon Wild 39.905 47.190 -7.286 45.828 Yukon Rush 40.476 41.476 -1.000 49.329 Grand Total 40.088 40.088 0.000 50.000 PDO Row Labels Average of PDO Halifax 21st 97.969 Houston Bulls 103.698 Las Vegas Aces 98.205 Mexico City Kings 101.133 Minnesota Storm 105.301 Mississauga Hounds 98.962 Ottawa Lynx 99.841 Philadelphia Reapers 98.231 San Diego Marlins 99.470 Saskatoon Wild 96.558 Yukon Rush 100.697 Grand Total 100.000 20 games played is a little more than a quarter of the season. This means the data here is a relatively small sample set that may be heavily skewed by strength of schedule. The other caveat I’d like to add is I run these numbers for the entire game, not just when it’s even strength. That may skew the numbers as well. With the caveats written above in mind, some interesting details appear through these numbers. - San Diego is leading the league in shot attempts per game, but they are 4th overall in goals for. More time is needed to tell if they are just a poor shooting team, missing the net or serving up easy saves or if they’ve just started the season running into better than average goalies. They allow the 4th most shot attempts against, which explains their 4th most goals for and their current position of 8th place in the standings. As the season goes on, look for San Diego to rise in the standings and soundly make the playoffs. - Mississagua may be the perfect measuring stick for all other VHLM teams to judge themselves against. They are almost exactly at a 0 for Corsi and Fenwick totals and they are smack dab in the middle of the standings. If you’re wondering if your team is going to finish in the top half or bottom half of the standings, check your team’s record against Mississauga. - Minnesota’s PDO of 105.301 indicated they have been extremely lucky this season. Or it could be their top-notch goal keeping. Their 3rd best Corsi and Fenwick numbers indicate they are definitely a top tier team, but their luck may run out at the wrong time. - Mexico City’s numbers should be a major worry to all their supporters. They have a slightly elevated PDO at 101.133, but more concerning is their 2nd worst Corsi and Fenwick percentage, with only bottom-dwellers Ottawa worse than them. Expect Mexico to drop in the standings and maybe miss the playoffs entirely. - Even though they are currently in 3rd place, Las Vegas appears to be the best overall team. They have a 59%+ Corsi and Fenwick percentage. That puts them in the high elite category. Smart money would start placing bets on the Aces to win it all. Edited September 28, 2019 by DMaximus added over 300 words to claim as a media spot. Elmebeck and Gustav 2 Link to comment https://vhlforum.com/topic/70054-vhlm-s68-advanced-metrics-12/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
STZ 5,360 Posted September 25, 2019 Share Posted September 25, 2019 ColeMrtz 1 Link to comment https://vhlforum.com/topic/70054-vhlm-s68-advanced-metrics-12/#findComment-671653 Share on other sites More sharing options...
ColeMrtz 574 Posted September 25, 2019 Share Posted September 25, 2019 The Hounds are astoundingly average on paper I guess Link to comment https://vhlforum.com/topic/70054-vhlm-s68-advanced-metrics-12/#findComment-671691 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cxsquared 455 Posted September 26, 2019 Share Posted September 26, 2019 19 hours ago, ColeMrtz said: The Hounds are astoundingly average on paper I guess We're just a well rounded team. ColeMrtz 1 Link to comment https://vhlforum.com/topic/70054-vhlm-s68-advanced-metrics-12/#findComment-672003 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Renomitsu 934 Posted September 28, 2019 Share Posted September 28, 2019 Review Okay, so I'm still learning hockey in general, let alone advanced statistics, but it seems as though Fenwick is a more defense-dependent measure of shot quality than Corsi (as blocked shots aren't counted with Fenwick - thus a large difference in Corsi & Fenwick indicates excellent defense??), and Corsi can be used to measure goalie workload/approximate time of possession. At any rate, as I try to understand what exactly these stand for from a complete novice's perspective, I'm enjoying these articles you write. Thanks for making an attempt to explain them! Link to comment https://vhlforum.com/topic/70054-vhlm-s68-advanced-metrics-12/#findComment-672475 Share on other sites More sharing options...
DMaximus 1,046 Posted October 1, 2019 Author Share Posted October 1, 2019 On 9/28/2019 at 6:18 PM, Renomitsu said: Review Okay, so I'm still learning hockey in general, let alone advanced statistics, but it seems as though Fenwick is a more defense-dependent measure of shot quality than Corsi (as blocked shots aren't counted with Fenwick - thus a large difference in Corsi & Fenwick indicates excellent defense??), and Corsi can be used to measure goalie workload/approximate time of possession. At any rate, as I try to understand what exactly these stand for from a complete novice's perspective, I'm enjoying these articles you write. Thanks for making an attempt to explain them! The only difference between Fenwick and Corsi is that Corsi includes shot attempts that were blocked by an opposing player. Fenwick thinks that shot blocking is a skill and teams should receive credit for blocking a shot (by not having that shot attempt count against them). The difference between the Corsi number and their Fenwick number is simply the number of shots blocked by the team during the game. What statisticians have found is that Corsi/Fenwick is a better predictor of future success than focusing on something like shots on goal or goal differential. And yes Corsi/Fenwick can indicate possession time, because if you're taking more shot attempts, you probably have the puck more. Corsi Against does track goalie workload (which is the origin of Corsi) because the goalie needs to react to all shot attempts, not just the ones that land on goal. Link to comment https://vhlforum.com/topic/70054-vhlm-s68-advanced-metrics-12/#findComment-673366 Share on other sites More sharing options...
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