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- Phil
According to the graphic you posted, no.Saw this on ESPN site, and I can't believe it is accurate. Is it really OK to go for it on 4th and 2 yards from your own 10 yard line? Holy carp, Batman.
Thoughts?
View attachment 64082
In some cases, yes. Like if your kicker sucks and you know that you will need all of them points you can get.Saw this on ESPN site, and I can't believe it is accurate. Is it really OK to go for it on 4th and 2 yards from your own 10 yard line? Holy carp, Batman.
Thoughts?
View attachment 64082
That is true, the QBR is a black boxESPN likes to show you its results (ie their “total QBR”) while keeping their methodology secret. To me, that’s worthless. As my 4th grade math teacher used to say, “show your work.”
I can understand the math just fine - if the equations are provided. Not a fan of the “trust me, it’s all in there” assertions.That is true, the QBR is a black box
But with analytics, there are lots of places you can see the math. There is a real-time bot on Twitter that says what their recommendation is. And all the math is different --- slightly.
Also, when I look at it I get the logic ... if you go and miss, percentages tell you that you will gain more points by going for it than kicking FG or punting ... but I have looked at the math and it is way over my head. Not by a little ...
Mina Kimes is one of the biggest proponents ... and I like her fine, but she's so committed she does not like to budge when challenged. With the comment, Nick Saban made about going for it---he said roughly that analytics don't tell you about what happens if you go and fail.
She rightly pointed out that is the one thing that it does. It takes into consideration all possible outcomes if you go for it and fail. It is baked into the cake. So in that specific case, Saban was wrong. But I think well, he's a legend coach, so he pretty much knows what he's doing
The problem for me is these folks don't like it when coaches don't follow the "advice". They will mock the coaches, there is even a bot that rates every punt on a "Coward index". That was the "93rd percentile of cowardly punts since 1999". That is overboard ... not sure them calling a coach's decision cowardly is more of a projection than anything.
Then you can explain it to me ... I think the equation is in there ... but this is a couple of years old ... I think the right chart may look different nowI can understand the math just fine - if the equations are provided. Not a fan of the “trust me, it’s all in there” assertions.
The equation uses abbreviations that are undefined, so I can’t evaluate it from what is in the article.Then you can explain it to me ... I think the equation is in there ... but this is a couple of years old ... I think the right chart may look different now
View attachment 64137Math Says Go For It on Fourth Down
We’re in week 16 of the NFL season and playoffs are close on the horizon. We’re also in college bowl game season. With that in mind, let’s consider a key decision that faces coaches multiple times a game: should they go for it when faced with fourth down? On fourth down, a coach has three […]johnmjennings.com
According to this graph no. I don't think it's an option until 87 yards to go. So that's a 13.Saw this on ESPN site, and I can't believe it is accurate. Is it really OK to go for it on 4th and 2 yards from your own 10 yard line? Holy carp, Batman.
Thoughts?
View attachment 64082
I will try and find another one with more detail ... that was just first one I found.The equation uses abbreviations that are undefined, so I can’t evaluate it from what is in the article.