![]() |
Quote:
|
I didn't read thru the thread but I can tell you that punter from texas can win a game for you. When you drop 27 punts in one game on the 1 yard line your defense should get at minimum 3 safetys. 6-0 wins every time.
|
Quote:
|
lol this thread got fun
|
say that to my face ****er not online and see what happens
|
I've skipped a lot of posts in here because of all the shade being thrown, but I was just wondering if a punter has as much value as a holder for kicks as he does for punting.
I doubt there are stats correlating missed kicks with blame on the kicker/holder/snapper though to be able to dig into this? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I'm not sure those are the right things to be measuring.
To really determine the effectiveness of a good punter you'd have to measure the effect he has on the defense, not directly correlating a team with good defense to the quality of their punter. Does having a top five punter in the league v. a replacement level punter keep points off the board, does it make teams have to drive more of the field to score? A good defense doesn't need a great punter to be good, but how much better does having a great punter make a good defense? That's the question that needs to be asked. Anecdotally, I would point to the Texas v. Mizzou bowl game last year for what an elite punter can do to a teams offense. If you want to tell me that Mizzou starting over 1/2 of their drives inside their own 15 yard line didn't have an affect on that game I have a bridge in New York I'd like to sell ya. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Post your data up in a google drive spreadsheet. |
Quote:
|
Just so you know, I did correlate the number of punts inside the 20 versus points per game and yards per game by defenses. The data you want is there.
|
Quote:
Which is how much better does a top 5 punter v. a replacement level punter effect the game. Simplistically posting points and ypg and then the correlation between that and the number of times a punter puts the ball inside the 20 is a poor metric. A very basic take down of that metric is the fact that teams with poor offenses will tend to have a higher usage rate of their punter, giving that punter, regardless of his quality, more chances to knock down punts inside the 20 yard line. The Jets had the most punts in the NFL in 2017 and the 3rd most punts knocked down inside the 20. The Jets also had one of the poorest offenses in the NFL in 2017. The Jets also had one of the lowest % of punts inside the 20 in the NFL last season. Your metrics are way too basic to be evaluating the impact a great punter has on a team. Which, is why the formula needs to be built to determine the effect that a great punter over replacement level has on a team. You can't directly marry punting average/IN 20, net, etc., to defensive rankings and call it a day. A more compelling measurement would be the % of punts inside the 20 yard line. From a high level 8 of the top 10 teams in the NFL last year in that statistic were in the top 15 in the league in defensive points per game. 6 of the top 10 in PPG were also top 10 in % of total punts inside the 20. You need to determine how much better or worse a team would be with a great punter. Does having a great punter mean instead of giving up 21.3 points a game the team now gives up 20.5? If so, what value does that give to the teams over the course of a season. Your simplistic tables and expression of the statistics don't get the job done. |
Quote:
Here is PTS/G and %IN 20 Rank Sorted Low to High
Spoiler!
Here is YDS/G and %IN 20 Ranks Sorted Low to High Team Yds/G %IN 20 Rank
Spoiler!
I also ran the correlations on PTS/G to %IN 20 and YDS/G to %IN 20 and they are here:
Spoiler!
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:29 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.