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Bill Barnwell snipes at Allen, and gets shredded in response


dave mcbride

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For those curious:

 

“Total QBR was developed by a team at ESPN Stats & Information Group including Jeff Bennett, Dean Oliver, Alok Pattani, Albert Larcada, and Menlo College professor Ben Alamar. The group also received input from ESPN analysts Trent Dilfer, Jon Gruden, and Ron Jaworski. Total QBR was developed based on analysis of 60,000 NFL plays between 2008-2010, and was unveiled on August 5, 2011. The formula was modified in 2012 and again in 2013.”

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8 hours ago, DC Tom said:

 

Because QBR is garbage.

 

Any "statistical measure" that includes "clutch-weighted expected points added on penalties" is a joke.  What the hell does that even mean?  Clutch expected penalties?

It's a meaning less stat that allows TB12 to look good when the Pat*s get a favorable PI call on 3rd and forever every damn game.  

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1 hour ago, JoPoy88 said:

For those curious:

 

“Total QBR was developed by a team of dumb*sses at ESPN Stats & Information Group including Jeff Bennett, Dean Oliver, Alok Pattani, Albert Larcada, and Menlo College professor Ben Alamar. The group also received input from ESPN analysts Trent Dilfer, Jon Gruden, and Ron Jaworski. Total QBR was developed based on analysis of 60,000 NFL plays between 2008-2010, and was unveiled on August 5, 2011. The formula was modified in 2012 and again in 2013 to make it even more worthless.”

Fify. This is the ESPN version of a LAMS (look at me stat)

Edited by Hapless Bills Fan
edited quoted material without some indication
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12 hours ago, HappyDays said:

 

That's honestly insane. Wow.

 

I forget what game it was, but there was a game in the Bronco's Tebow days, 2011, a loss to Minn I think, where he threw 10-15 for 202 yds and 2 TDs, 0 INTs.  His play was clearly not enough to help his team win.  The Pack barely won over the Giants and Rodgers threw 28-47 for 369 yds and 4 TDs, 1 INT.    His play was clearly key to the win.

 

It might have been a different game but similar disparity - and Tebow had a higher QBR. 

 

They asked Aaron Rodgers about it and he just shook his head.

 

9 hours ago, Sammy Watkins' Rib said:

Not when he was in Buffalo from what I recall. Maybe after he left?

 

The QBR stat is an odd one that doesn't make sense this year. How is it that Allen, a QB that has so much value added by running, which QBR is supposed to account for in its rating, has a lower QBR ranking than he does traditional passer rating ranking? Allen is ranked 24th in QBR and 22nd in passer rating.  I mean honestly, how is that even possible?  

 

It's not just this year, that was the first year (2011) and it didn't align with what people could meaningfully, and by direct, easy to measure statistics, consider as a QB's contribution to the game (passing yards, rushing yards, TDs by any means, fumbles, INTs, sacks etc).  Calling total QBR a statistic is a stretch to me

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17 hours ago, HappyDays said:

If I recall correctly, Barnwell had Jackson and Allen as his lowest rated QBs of the 1st rounders taken that year. Take his opinion for what it's worth.

Lowest rated in terms of what? Barnwell doesn't do draft scouting.

16 hours ago, youngjebrey said:

I laugh so hard at QBR. The list is great with jameis Winston always in the top 10 

Jameis has been top 10 once; last year when he only played half the season.

14 hours ago, MDH said:

All I need to understand what a trash statistic QBR is is that Josh Allen has a higher QBR last year than this.

 

If a stat doesn’t show the huge improvement to his game then that stat isn’t even worth considering.

 

FWIW, Allen's QBR over the past 7 games would slot him in at 13th in the league. It's just that he was bad for the first few games and it's weighed his overall ranking down.

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9 hours ago, Sammy Watkins' Rib said:

 

Not when he was in Buffalo from what I recall. Maybe after he left?

 

 

The QBR stat is an odd one that doesn't make sense this year. How is it that Allen, a QB that has so much value added by running, which QBR is supposed to account for in its rating, has a lower QBR ranking than he does traditional passer rating ranking? Allen is ranked 24th in QBR and 22nd in passer rating.  I mean honestly, how is that even possible?  

Passer rating basically just focuses on completion percentage, passing TDs, and INTs. He hasn't thrown INTs outside of the first few games, so his passer rating has increased a ton.

 

It doesn't factor in the fumble woes he had earlier in the year, the dropped INTs, etc. that QBR factors in.

 

He also hasn't added THAT much value as a runner this year. He's only 7th in the league in that regard. He's been good at running it in at the end of the drives, but QBR is all about expected points added, so the fact that he hasn't used his running ability all that much up until they actually get to the end zone results in his rushing value not being as high as you might expect.

Edited by DCOrange
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17 hours ago, Phil The Thrill said:


I’ve called Bill Barnwell the most biased reporter out there, right up up there with Cian “Begging for $ on Patreon” Fahey.  
 

When people try to cite Barnwell, the lose credit with me.  
 

Barnwell’s a real coward much like Fahey.  Both blocked me when I challenged their opinion.  A sign of a true coward who puts out a controversial take and can’t handle criticism. 

Both blocked me as well. They can’t take criticism.

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11 hours ago, Success said:

People in the punditry will generally never give up on whatever their original evaluation of a player was.

 

I've seen that a lot with Allen.  So many "experts" had him as the classic big-armed guy who certain scouts fell in love with but always failed in the NFL.  All of the "accuracy can't be taught" stuff that people just repeat without thinking about it.  And they say it so much that they convince themselves it's immutable fact. They don't allow themselves to consider another possibility.

 

I swear, Allen will be hoisting the Lombardi over his head, and a lot of those guys will still be calling him an inaccurate bust.


Im finding that a lot of analysts who were down on Allen HAVE in fact admitted they were wrong.  Benjamin Albright did recently and several others have as well.  
 

It’s the self-important, ultra sensitive writers that have not - names Bill Barnwell or Cian Fahey.  Both have me blocked on Twitter for challenging their opinions of Tyrod.  

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Here is barnwell the clowns latest article.

"Don't count out the Dallas Cowboys yet: Why they could make an NFL playoff run" 

espn

Shocking view point, I know...

ETA a little relevant snippet,

Quote

a 26-15 loss to the Bills at home on Thanksgiving ruined dinners across America.

 

Against the Bills, too, the game might have gone differently if the Cowboys' specialists had done better. Maher saw a 35-yard field goal attempt blocked just before halftime and later missed a 47-yarder. The Bills weren't much better -- Stephen Hauschka missed a field goal attempt, an extra point attempt and saw another field goal bounce in off an upright -- but if Maher makes those two early field goals attempts, the Cowboys aren't in desperation mode and don't (necessarily) have to go for it on each of their two failed fourth-down tries in the fourth quarter.

:lol:What a clown.

Edited by stosh64
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2 hours ago, DCOrange said:

FWIW, Allen's QBR over the past 7 games would slot him in at 13th in the league. It's just that he was bad for the first few games and it's weighed his overall ranking down.

 

He was terrible against the Pats but clearly better than last year in every other game. In every other conceivable stat - passer rating, YPG, ANY/A, DVOA, YPA, sack percentage, TD%, INT%, completion % - he has improved this year. The only thing that has gotten worse is his rush YPG and YPC. This leads me to believe that QBR way over values rushing from a QB. There is no other explanation for that metric saying he is worse this year than last year. Mind boggling stuff.

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2 hours ago, DCOrange said:

Passer rating basically just focuses on completion percentage, passing TDs, and INTs. He hasn't thrown INTs outside of the first few games, so his passer rating has increased a ton.

 

It doesn't factor in the fumble woes he had earlier in the year, the dropped INTs, etc. that QBR factors in.

 

He also hasn't added THAT much value as a runner this year. He's only 7th in the league in that regard. He's been good at running it in at the end of the drives, but QBR is all about expected points added, so the fact that he hasn't used his running ability all that much up until they actually get to the end zone results in his rushing value not being as high as you might expect.

Passer rating is imo about as bad a stat as QBR. 

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12 hours ago, Sammy Watkins' Rib said:

 

Not when he was in Buffalo from what I recall. Maybe after he left?

 

 

The QBR stat is an odd one that doesn't make sense this year. How is it that Allen, a QB that has so much value added by running, which QBR is supposed to account for in its rating, has a lower QBR ranking than he does traditional passer rating ranking? Allen is ranked 24th in QBR and 22nd in passer rating.  I mean honestly, how is that even possible?  

Because it is a really stupid system.

36 minutes ago, HappyDays said:

 

He was terrible against the Pats but clearly better than last year in every other game. In every other conceivable stat - passer rating, YPG, ANY/A, DVOA, YPA, sack percentage, TD%, INT%, completion % - he has improved this year. The only thing that has gotten worse is his rush YPG and YPC. This leads me to believe that QBR way over values rushing from a QB. There is no other explanation for that metric saying he is worse this year than last year. Mind boggling stuff.

His ypc is down in large part because of the increased rate of kneel downs. For real.

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1 hour ago, RaoulDuke79 said:

This Twitter thing sounds like a real hoot. Maybe I should sign up to see if I can get blocked by Barnwell.

A quick read through of this thread shows six TBD-TSW contributors have been blocked by Barnwell.  A ‘journalist / blogger’ running around stamping out brush fires instead of writing about sports.  Awfully ‘thin skinned’ of him.  ESPN’s Timmah?

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6 hours ago, JoPoy88 said:

For those curious:

 

“Total QBR was developed by a team at ESPN Stats & Information Group including Jeff Bennett, Dean Oliver, Alok Pattani, Albert Larcada, and Menlo College professor Ben Alamar. The group also received input from ESPN analysts Trent Dilfer, Jon Gruden, and Ron Jaworski. Total QBR was developed based on analysis of 60,000 NFL plays between 2008-2010, and was unveiled on August 5, 2011. The formula was modified in 2012 and again in 2013.”

It's not a very good measure, but I actually applaud the effort. Folks: don't be so defensive about Josh! He's moving up in all of these rating systems.

-Traditional QB rating: now 22nd overall as Barnwell says, but look who's in a virtual tie with him: none other than Mr. Brady himself.

-ESPN's Total QBR: now 24th. The formula obviously puts way too much weight on completion percentage and way too little on rushing yardage - Mahomes is basically tied with Lamar Jackson for the lead. 

- fivethirtyeight.com's ELO rating: Josh is ahead of TB12!  OK, this is my favorite "one stat captures everything" metric, and not just because Josh is in the lead. Overall he ranks behind only Jackson, Mahomes, Rodgers, Wilson, Prescott, Stafford, Watson. Generally fits with my eyeball test ...

 

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3 hours ago, HappyDays said:

 

He was terrible against the Pats but clearly better than last year in every other game. In every other conceivable stat - passer rating, YPG, ANY/A, DVOA, YPA, sack percentage, TD%, INT%, completion % - he has improved this year. The only thing that has gotten worse is his rush YPG and YPC. This leads me to believe that QBR way over values rushing from a QB. There is no other explanation for that metric saying he is worse this year than last year. Mind boggling stuff.

Nah, that's frankly incorrect. The Jets game was terrible. Eagles and Titans were bad. Bengals was pretty bad. And the Patriots he pretty much singlehandedly lost the game. He was also quite good when he returned from his injury last season.

 

He's certainly been better statistically this season, and the past 7 games for him have been a significant step up from what he's previously been, but the beginning of the year still happened and he was bad/sometimes terrible then.

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30 minutes ago, DCOrange said:

Nah, that's frankly incorrect. The Jets game was terrible. Eagles and Titans were bad. Bengals was pretty bad. And the Patriots he pretty much singlehandedly lost the game. He was also quite good when he returned from his injury last season.

 

He's certainly been better statistically this season, and the past 7 games for him have been a significant step up from what he's previously been, but the beginning of the year still happened and he was bad/sometimes terrible then.

 

This isn't far off from your Calvin Ridley take, just FYI.

 

And I only reference it because it's the only other time where I remember you being just way out in left field 

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32 minutes ago, DCOrange said:

The Jets game was terrible. Eagles and Titans were bad. Bengals was pretty bad.

 

I don't agree with any of this. There were games last year, especially early on, where he looked like he didn't belong in the NFL. He looked like that once this year. You're not going to convince anyone who has watched every snap he's taken that he is overall worse this season than he was last season. It's an indefensible position both statistically and on the tape. I never paid much attention to QBR but this seals it for me. I don't trust any stat that gets it that wrong.

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3 hours ago, dave mcbride said:

 

His ypc is down in large part because of the increased rate of kneel downs. For real.

 

 

And dives for short yardage.   They have been numerous and have had them on back-to-back plays in the Dallas game(though the second wasn't intended to be one).

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15 hours ago, DC Tom said:

 

Because QBR is garbage.

 

Any "statistical measure" that includes "clutch-weighted expected points added on penalties" is a joke.  What the hell does that even mean?  Clutch expected penalties?

 

It's such a stupid statistical measure that I just described it to my wife, whose math skills don't go beyond "2+2=potato," and her response was "What????"

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19 minutes ago, HappyDays said:

 

I don't agree with any of this. There were games last year, especially early on, where he looked like he didn't belong in the NFL. He looked like that once this year. You're not going to convince anyone who has watched every snap he's taken that he is overall worse this season than he was last season. It's an indefensible position both statistically and on the tape. I never paid much attention to QBR but this seals it for me. I don't trust any stat that gets it that wrong.


If you took just his past 7 games, he’d be slotted in as the 13th best QB in the league. I think that’s an accurate barometer of how he’s playing right now. But those first few games in which he either cost the team the game or tried to lose it for 3 quarters before saving the day still happened and that’s weighing his rating down at the moment. If he continues playing the way he has recently, his QBR will be much higher this season than it was last year. 

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16 hours ago, DC Tom said:

 

Because QBR is garbage.

 

Any "statistical measure" that includes "clutch-weighted expected points added on penalties" is a joke.  What the hell does that even mean?  Clutch expected penalties?

The concept isn't stupid at all. Let's say QB A, over the course of a season (beware small sample sizes!), draws defensive PI penalties at a higher than QB B. Let's say that this amounts to one additional PI call per game, with the average PI penalty being for 20 yards. At the end of the season, it's as if QB A passed for 16 x 20 = 320 more yards than QB B. (Notice how easy I kept the math ... even your wife would get this.) That's significant, and that's not being measured by traditional "counting" stats (total passing yards, etc.) or even by some rate stats (completion percentage; after all, QB A essentially "completed" 16 more passes in the season). 

The execution is a different matter. Here football stats are in their infancy compared to baseball stats; part of that is the inherently individualistic nature of baseball (hitter vs. pitcher) as opposed to football. So the question then is this: "is drawing PI penalties a repeatable skill for QBs, or is it essentially luck, or a combination of luck and having good receivers?" That's what we find out when measuring things year-by-year. If QB A consistently draws defensive PI penalties at a significantly higher rate year after year after year, we call that a "skill." A good example from baseball is "pitch framing" stats for catchers in baseball. We've learned that certain catchers are way, way better (or worse) than average in "stealing" called strikes from umpires; it's not sheer luck; it's a skill. It changed how MLB GMs evaluated catchers; guys that were significantly better than average at pitch framing add value, sometimes the equivalent of a few wins a year when compared to their poorer competitors, and free agent salaries began to reflect that.

Math anxiety is not your friend; it is something to be overcome.

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2 minutes ago, The Frankish Reich said:

The concept isn't stupid at all. Let's say QB A, over the course of a season (beware small sample sizes!), draws defensive PI penalties at a higher than QB B. Let's say that this amounts to one additional PI call per game, with the average PI penalty being for 20 yards. At the end of the season, it's as if QB A passed for 16 x 20 = 320 more yards than QB B. (Notice how easy I kept the math ... even your wife would get this.) That's significant, and that's not being measured by traditional "counting" stats (total passing yards, etc.) or even by some rate stats (completion percentage; after all, QB A essentially "completed" 16 more passes in the season). 

The execution is a different matter. Here football stats are in their infancy compared to baseball stats; part of that is the inherently individualistic nature of baseball (hitter vs. pitcher) as opposed to football. So the question then is this: "is drawing PI penalties a repeatable skill for QBs, or is it essentially luck, or a combination of luck and having good receivers?" That's what we find out when measuring things year-by-year. If QB A consistently draws defensive PI penalties at a significantly higher rate year after year after year, we call that a "skill." A good example from baseball is "pitch framing" stats for catchers in baseball. We've learned that certain catchers are way, way better (or worse) than average in "stealing" called strikes from umpires; it's not sheer luck; it's a skill. It changed how MLB GMs evaluated catchers; guys that were significantly better than average at pitch framing add value, sometimes the equivalent of a few wins a year when compared to their poorer competitors, and free agent salaries began to reflect that.

Math anxiety is not your friend; it is something to be overcome.

 

You're an idiot.  Not the least of which for telling a physicist he has math anxiety.

 

I'll point out the considerable flaw in your above "analysis" later, when I'm not typing on a phone.  Or maybe I won't, and just let you live with your head up your ass.  

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2 minutes ago, DC Tom said:

 

You're an idiot.  Not the least of which for telling a physicist he has math anxiety.

 

I'll point out the considerable flaw in your above "analysis" later, when I'm not typing on a phone.  Or maybe I won't, and just let you live with your head up your ass.  

Well maybe it's statistical analysis anxiety. I eagerly await your full keyboard response.

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26 minutes ago, The Frankish Reich said:

The concept isn't stupid at all. Let's say QB A, over the course of a season (beware small sample sizes!), draws defensive PI penalties at a higher than QB B. Let's say that this amounts to one additional PI call per game, with the average PI penalty being for 20 yards. At the end of the season, it's as if QB A passed for 16 x 20 = 320 more yards than QB B. (Notice how easy I kept the math ... even your wife would get this.) That's significant, and that's not being measured by traditional "counting" stats (total passing yards, etc.) or even by some rate stats (completion percentage; after all, QB A essentially "completed" 16 more passes in the season). 

The execution is a different matter. Here football stats are in their infancy compared to baseball stats; part of that is the inherently individualistic nature of baseball (hitter vs. pitcher) as opposed to football. So the question then is this: "is drawing PI penalties a repeatable skill for QBs, or is it essentially luck, or a combination of luck and having good receivers?" That's what we find out when measuring things year-by-year. If QB A consistently draws defensive PI penalties at a significantly higher rate year after year after year, we call that a "skill." A good example from baseball is "pitch framing" stats for catchers in baseball. We've learned that certain catchers are way, way better (or worse) than average in "stealing" called strikes from umpires; it's not sheer luck; it's a skill. It changed how MLB GMs evaluated catchers; guys that were significantly better than average at pitch framing add value, sometimes the equivalent of a few wins a year when compared to their poorer competitors, and free agent salaries began to reflect that.

Math anxiety is not your friend; it is something to be overcome.

 

11 minutes ago, DC Tom said:

 

I've published five papers on statistical physics.  :lol:

ImpossibleAcademicClingfish-small.gif

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30 minutes ago, The Frankish Reich said:

The concept isn't stupid at all. Let's say QB A, over the course of a season (beware small sample sizes!), draws defensive PI penalties at a higher than QB B. Let's say that this amounts to one additional PI call per game, with the average PI penalty being for 20 yards. At the end of the season, it's as if QB A passed for 16 x 20 = 320 more yards than QB B. (Notice how easy I kept the math ... even your wife would get this.) That's significant, and that's not being measured by traditional "counting" stats (total passing yards, etc.) or even by some rate stats (completion percentage; after all, QB A essentially "completed" 16 more passes in the season). 

The execution is a different matter. Here football stats are in their infancy compared to baseball stats; part of that is the inherently individualistic nature of baseball (hitter vs. pitcher) as opposed to football. So the question then is this: "is drawing PI penalties a repeatable skill for QBs, or is it essentially luck, or a combination of luck and having good receivers?" That's what we find out when measuring things year-by-year. If QB A consistently draws defensive PI penalties at a significantly higher rate year after year after year, we call that a "skill." A good example from baseball is "pitch framing" stats for catchers in baseball. We've learned that certain catchers are way, way better (or worse) than average in "stealing" called strikes from umpires; it's not sheer luck; it's a skill. It changed how MLB GMs evaluated catchers; guys that were significantly better than average at pitch framing add value, sometimes the equivalent of a few wins a year when compared to their poorer competitors, and free agent salaries began to reflect that.

Math anxiety is not your friend; it is something to be overcome.

 

It's not about "math anxiety", it 's about applying statistical & mathematical analysis to a chaotic system.  The three biggest issues involving the use of analytics as a tool in football compared to baseball are:

 

*  the enormous variability involved in EVERY NFL play.  The fact that on any given play there are a minimum of 40 human beings involved (22 players; 5 refs; 10 - 15 coaches) creates a huge # of potential outcomes.

 

*  the much smaller sample size in football means that the impact of the variability is magnified.  There are over 160 baseball games in a season compared to 16 football games. 

 

*  the number of subjective measurements involved.  When conducting controlled clinical trials or running lab experiments most of the data subjected to statistical analysis is obtained either through objective measurement or at least highly controlled subjective measurement.

 

Given these facts, it's particularly foolish to apply analytics to young players where the sample size is ridiculously small.

 

 

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5 hours ago, stosh64 said:

Here is barnwell the clowns latest article.

"Don't count out the Dallas Cowboys yet: Why they could make an NFL playoff run" 

espn

Shocking view point, I know...

ETA a little relevant snippet,

:lol:What a clown.


Exactly..,

 

And if the game is closer than maybe the Bills keep trying to score instead of killing clock in the last quarter..

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2 minutes ago, CincyBillsFan said:

 

It's not about "math anxiety", it 's about applying statistical & mathematical analysis to a chaotic system.  The three biggest issues involving the use of analytics as a tool in football compared to baseball are:

 

*  the enormous variability involved in EVERY NFL play.  The fact that on any given play there are a minimum of 40 human beings involved (22 players; 5 refs; 10 - 15 coaches) creates a huge # of potential outcomes.

 

*  the much smaller sample size in football means that the impact of the variability is magnified.  There are over 160 baseball games in a season compared to 16 football games. 

 

*  the number of subjective measurements involved.  When conducting controlled clinical trials or running lab experiments most of the data subjected to statistical analysis is obtained either through objective measurement or at least highly controlled subjective measurement.

 

Given these facts, it's particularly foolish to apply analytics to young players where the sample size is ridiculously small.

 

 

 

And it doesn't help that many of those subjective measures aren't subject to accurate modeling.  How should it impact a QB's rating when an obvious PI that saves a TD isn't called, is challenged, overturned, but still doesn't grant the TD?

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26 minutes ago, DC Tom said:

 

And it doesn't help that many of those subjective measures aren't subject to accurate modeling.  How should it impact a QB's rating when an obvious PI that saves a TD isn't called, is challenged, overturned, but still doesn't grant the TD?

 

That is pretty simple.  Teams get rated on zebra friendliness (I did not say it was a number but probably a multi value polynomial formula including things such as market size, income to NFL, ratings, number of cameras in game, etc) and that that factors into weight of failed calls.   Some teams definitely train players to play to the limit of zebra team.

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1 hour ago, DC Tom said:

 

And it doesn't help that many of those subjective measures aren't subject to accurate modeling.  How should it impact a QB's rating when an obvious PI that saves a TD isn't called, is challenged, overturned, but still doesn't grant the TD?

With all due respect (hey, maybe you scored an 800 on the GRE verbal section), I don't think you read my post.

I noted that first we need to determine whether a particular stat measures a skill as opposed to randomness. That's why I used the example of pitch framing in baseball. We thought it was random -- the ump, the reputation of the pitcher (Greg Maddux always got the close ones), etc., etc. But when some smart analysts looked at it more closely, they recognized a pattern. It was repeatable. Every year Bengie Molina (an otherwise pretty much replacement level catcher) far exceeded expectations on called balls/strikes. The same thing happened with the great Batting Average on Balls in Play theory -- we discovered that pitchers have an extremely limited ability to avoid base hits on balls put in play. What we thought was a skill was, in fact, just noise.

EDIT: by the way, that response -- amounting to "what about bad refereeing" -- was rather underwhelming ...

 

Edited by The Frankish Reich
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