Analysis of seasons past- results surprise

jirskyr

Well-known member
This is an essay.

Whilst becoming tired of the “impression”-based comments on the forum, I decided to do an analysis of exactly how the team / coach has performed over the seasons, with an emphasis on comparing 2015 to previous years.

The results surprised in many ways.

Rather than being the defensive disaster that is often suggested (including by me), 2015 is actually:
- 6th best season as measured by points conceded per game
- 5th best season as measured by average loss margin
- 3rd best season as measured by points conceded per loss
- Best season as measured by points conceded per win

In 2015, it is the attack figures that are not so good:
- 3rd worst season as measured by points scored per game
- 7th worst season as measured by for/against margin per game and by points scored per loss
- 5th worst season as measured by points scored per win

But there is a strange up-side to the attack in 2015:
- 3rd best season for average win margin
- best ever season for points conceded (lowest) during a win.

Specifically for JT, we are definitely improving when it comes to scoring points and keeping the opposition out. There are no doubts the attack and defence are both improved over anything experienced during the Potter years.

For example, JT is:
- 2nd best coach as measured by points conceded per game
- 2nd as measured by for/against margin per game
- best as measured by 4 other metrics: average win margin, average loss margin, average points conceded during wins, average points condeded during losses.

Which raises the question - if the attack and defence aren’t the worst ever, and the coach is comparably well-placed, how is it that 2015 is a strong chance of being our first ever wooden spoon? 2015 is the 4th-worst for win percentage of all seasons, and also 4th-worst for average placing on the table. We have only ever fallen to last place once before: season 2013 (5 weeks at 16th).

It appears that the answer is quite subtle.

Firstly: coming last may be a measure of how even a competition is. In other words, if there are no easy-beats, there might not be an obvious candidate to save you from coming last, and the bottom-placed teams may share a decent amount of wins. Parra saved us from coming last in 2013.

But specifically for Tigers in 2015, our issue appears to be with the Jekyll/Hyde nature of our performances. When we win, our defence goes to another level, and the winning margin is very strong (even taking into account that we had a 1-point win in Rd 1). In other words, our winning scores aren’t special, but our winning defence is easily the best we’ve ever had – only 9.6 points conceded per win and an average win margin if 17.4.

In contrast, when we lose, we aren’t conceding lots of points and we aren’t copping many hidings (losing margins are modest). Instead, we are losing because we are not scoring enough points – 14.5 points scored per loss, whilst conceding 27.92

It seems that for some reason, our performances are either really good (i.e. both attack and defence click) or they are poor without being dreadful. There does not appear much in-between, such as many hard-ground wins or absolute floggings. If the game is close, we invariably lose, which is not surprising, given the age and inexperience of our side.

This speaks to me as being two issues. Firstly: mental; we can be flat-track bullies or easy-beats in consecutive weeks. Secondly, we probably have a few key weaknesses, such as lack of centres depth, that hamstring our attack and stop us making the most of a decent defensive record.

What the results don’t tell you is whether our wins occur because good defence sets a platform for improved attack, or because good defence is irrelevant if you can’t score points. Should we attack more and hope the defence comes on, or work more on defence to make up for attacking deficiencies?

To answer this, you’d need to review the tapes to see the flow of games – whether good attack results in best defence, or whether best defence permits good attack. We’ve certainly had games where we both blew the opposition away early (Dragons) and late in the match (Eels). It’s a bit too chicken-egg for me at this stage.

Now don’t go off half-cocked and say “I told you JT was spending too much time on defensive structures”, because there is no specific evidence in the results that says we can’t attack and defend at the same time. Our wins are almost exclusively made up of our best defence and bestattack.

It may simply be true that our attack is not mature enough or sophisticated enough to trouble the good sides, and our defence is still not good enough to cover that deficiency.

Also bear in mind that all this analysis is being done against previous seasons, which for the most part are losing seasons. These are comparisons against previous Tigers sides, so saying defence is better, is not necessarily saying the defence is good enough to trouble the best sides. Similarly, attack may only be down compared to the very flamboyant Tigers sides of the mid 2000s.
 
I don't need a damn spreadsheet to tell me why we are coming dead last even though stats indicate our defence may be better.

We haven't won enough games!

Nuff said

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.2.0_
 
Thanks for the analysis…Good effort and interesting read.

Some people on here surprise me, I can't believe the ordinary/ thoughtless post made next
 
A couple of times each season, wests-tigers lose games they shouldn't, and come back to bite them on the bum. This year already two glaring ones, bulldogs & raiders.
Would like to eliminate this from wests-tigers game from ever repeating.
Also somehow instil the " killer instinct", so when ahead they don't back off, or put the cue in the rack.
 
Stats from a club that has been crap in 13 seasons out of 16 means very little. You can put any amount of spin you like on it but it doesn't take away the fact that they are going to 'win' the wooden spoon this season and more than likely the next.
 
@jirskyr said:
This is an essay.

Whilst becoming tired of the “impression”-based comments on the forum, I decided to do an analysis of exactly how the team / coach has performed over the seasons, with an emphasis on comparing 2015 to previous years.

The results surprised in many ways.

Rather than being the defensive disaster that is often suggested (including by me), 2015 is actually:
- 6th best season as measured by points conceded per game
- 5th best season as measured by average loss margin
- 3rd best season as measured by points conceded per loss
- Best season as measured by points conceded per win

In 2015, it is the attack figures that are not so good:
- 3rd worst season as measured by points scored per game
- 7th worst season as measured by for/against margin per game and by points scored per loss
- 5th worst season as measured by points scored per win

But there is a strange up-side to the attack in 2015:
- 3rd best season for average win margin
- best ever season for points conceded (lowest) during a win.

Specifically for JT, we are definitely improving when it comes to scoring points and keeping the opposition out. There are no doubts the attack and defence are both improved over anything experienced during the Potter years.

For example, JT is:
- 2nd best coach as measured by points conceded per game
- 2nd as measured by for/against margin per game
- best as measured by 4 other metrics: average win margin, average loss margin, average points conceded during wins, average points condeded during losses.

Which raises the question - if the attack and defence aren’t the worst ever, and the coach is comparably well-placed, how is it that 2015 is a strong chance of being our first ever wooden spoon? 2015 is the 4th-worst for win percentage of all seasons, and also 4th-worst for average placing on the table. We have only ever fallen to last place once before: season 2013 (5 weeks at 16th).

It appears that the answer is quite subtle.

Firstly: coming last may be a measure of how even a competition is. In other words, if there are no easy-beats, there might not be an obvious candidate to save you from coming last, and the bottom-placed teams may share a decent amount of wins. Parra saved us from coming last in 2013.

But specifically for Tigers in 2015, our issue appears to be with the Jekyll/Hyde nature of our performances. When we win, our defence goes to another level, and the winning margin is very strong (even taking into account that we had a 1-point win in Rd 1). In other words, our winning scores aren’t special, but our winning defence is easily the best we’ve ever had – only 9.6 points conceded per win and an average win margin if 17.4.

In contrast, when we lose, we aren’t conceding lots of points and we aren’t copping many hidings (losing margins are modest). Instead, we are losing because we are not scoring enough points – 14.5 points scored per loss, whilst conceding 27.92

It seems that for some reason, our performances are either really good (i.e. both attack and defence click) or they are poor without being dreadful. There does not appear much in-between, such as many hard-ground wins or absolute floggings. If the game is close, we invariably lose, which is not surprising, given the age and inexperience of our side.

This speaks to me as being two issues. Firstly: mental; we can be flat-track bullies or easy-beats in consecutive weeks. Secondly, we probably have a few key weaknesses, such as lack of centres depth, that hamstring our attack and stop us making the most of a decent defensive record.

What the results don’t tell you is whether our wins occur because good defence sets a platform for improved attack, or because good defence is irrelevant if you can’t score points. Should we attack more and hope the defence comes on, or work more on defence to make up for attacking deficiencies?

To answer this, you’d need to review the tapes to see the flow of games – whether good attack results in best defence, or whether best defence permits good attack. We’ve certainly had games where we both blew the opposition away early (Dragons) and late in the match (Eels). It’s a bit too chicken-egg for me at this stage.

Now don’t go off half-cocked and say “I told you JT was spending too much time on defensive structures”, because there is no specific evidence in the results that says we can’t attack and defend at the same time. Our wins are almost exclusively made up of our best defence and bestattack.

It may simply be true that our attack is not mature enough or sophisticated enough to trouble the good sides, and our defence is still not good enough to cover that deficiency.

Also bear in mind that all this analysis is being done against previous seasons, which for the most part are losing seasons. These are comparisons against previous Tigers sides, so saying defence is better, is not necessarily saying the defence is good enough to trouble the best sides. Similarly, attack may only be down compared to the very flamboyant Tigers sides of the mid 2000s.

While I can understand the reason for a comparison , I went through in a previous post , the number of variables that are present in such a comparison,
Just a few were: did we play more or less night games.
We're there a lot of wet weather games.
What injuries did we have in comparison, or what injuries did the opposition have
were the opposition better or worse in those years
Were rep players out Of our team or theirs
What suspensions did we or the opposition have
That's just a few things that can and do effect how a team plays on any specific day
It's not scientific , but shows how hard it is to compare even two seasons and be any where accurate in any findings
I'm not knocking your comparison.
Just pointing out the difficulty in getting answers
 
Good analysis, much appreciated.

That said - I wouldn't mind seeing a rolling average of our average points against. My concern is that this trend is going the wrong way, after a pretty decent start.

Also, comparing a 2015 team to previous years is somewhat useless, and we should be comparing ourselves to the NRL in general in 2015 only. I say this for two reasons:
* WT have traditionally been, well, shit.
* The NRL changes significantly from year to year, let alone over a 15 year period. Rules are interpreted differently, teams copy successful teams strategies - on the cycle goes.
End result - the game today is paddocks away from, say, the 2004 equivalent, and thus comparing statistics in isolation between the two is somewhat irrelevant.

The NRL has become more and more defensive year by year, and thus 2015 is arguably the most defence-first season we've ever had. In this environment, we have the 5th worst defensive record in the competition (on points conceded), so we're still miles away from where JT wants us to be, and where we need to be.
 
Yes we are the 12th best / worst in attack and 12th best / worst in defence ,yet are running last

Thank you for the massive effort Jirskyr, very interesting read
 
While the stats do show some over all improvement to our defense it does suggest that this has come at the expense of other equally important issues. Most notably winning.

The stats also show.

Taylor needs at least 2 more wins to avoid being the coach who has won the least games in a season.

Taylor also has the clear worst winning percentage of all coaches. A mighty achievement at a football club that has been consistently bog average.

Stats are very subjective, id prefer to judge a coach based on how his players respond to his style of coaching and if players improve their game under his coaching.
 
@ricksen said:
Good analysis, much appreciated.

That said - I wouldn't mind seeing a rolling average of our average points against. My concern is that this trend is going the wrong way, after a pretty decent start.
.

Id like to see this also Ricksen.

Even just a direct comparison Taylor v Potter rounds 1 to 19 2014 v 2015.
 
Can you do my tax jirskyr? Should be a six figure return if we send in a similar spreadsheet to the ATO!
 
@goldcoast tiger said:
@jirskyr said:
This is an essay.

Whilst becoming tired of the “impression”-based comments on the forum, I decided to do an analysis of exactly how the team / coach has performed over the seasons, with an emphasis on comparing 2015 to previous years.

The results surprised in many ways.

Rather than being the defensive disaster that is often suggested (including by me), 2015 is actually:
- 6th best season as measured by points conceded per game
- 5th best season as measured by average loss margin
- 3rd best season as measured by points conceded per loss
- Best season as measured by points conceded per win

In 2015, it is the attack figures that are not so good:
- 3rd worst season as measured by points scored per game
- 7th worst season as measured by for/against margin per game and by points scored per loss
- 5th worst season as measured by points scored per win

But there is a strange up-side to the attack in 2015:
- 3rd best season for average win margin
- best ever season for points conceded (lowest) during a win.

Specifically for JT, we are definitely improving when it comes to scoring points and keeping the opposition out. There are no doubts the attack and defence are both improved over anything experienced during the Potter years.

For example, JT is:
- 2nd best coach as measured by points conceded per game
- 2nd as measured by for/against margin per game
- best as measured by 4 other metrics: average win margin, average loss margin, average points conceded during wins, average points condeded during losses.

Which raises the question - if the attack and defence aren’t the worst ever, and the coach is comparably well-placed, how is it that 2015 is a strong chance of being our first ever wooden spoon? 2015 is the 4th-worst for win percentage of all seasons, and also 4th-worst for average placing on the table. We have only ever fallen to last place once before: season 2013 (5 weeks at 16th).

It appears that the answer is quite subtle.

Firstly: coming last may be a measure of how even a competition is. In other words, if there are no easy-beats, there might not be an obvious candidate to save you from coming last, and the bottom-placed teams may share a decent amount of wins. Parra saved us from coming last in 2013.

But specifically for Tigers in 2015, our issue appears to be with the Jekyll/Hyde nature of our performances. When we win, our defence goes to another level, and the winning margin is very strong (even taking into account that we had a 1-point win in Rd 1). In other words, our winning scores aren’t special, but our winning defence is easily the best we’ve ever had – only 9.6 points conceded per win and an average win margin if 17.4.

In contrast, when we lose, we aren’t conceding lots of points and we aren’t copping many hidings (losing margins are modest). Instead, we are losing because we are not scoring enough points – 14.5 points scored per loss, whilst conceding 27.92

It seems that for some reason, our performances are either really good (i.e. both attack and defence click) or they are poor without being dreadful. There does not appear much in-between, such as many hard-ground wins or absolute floggings. If the game is close, we invariably lose, which is not surprising, given the age and inexperience of our side.

This speaks to me as being two issues. Firstly: mental; we can be flat-track bullies or easy-beats in consecutive weeks. Secondly, we probably have a few key weaknesses, such as lack of centres depth, that hamstring our attack and stop us making the most of a decent defensive record.

What the results don’t tell you is whether our wins occur because good defence sets a platform for improved attack, or because good defence is irrelevant if you can’t score points. Should we attack more and hope the defence comes on, or work more on defence to make up for attacking deficiencies?

To answer this, you’d need to review the tapes to see the flow of games – whether good attack results in best defence, or whether best defence permits good attack. We’ve certainly had games where we both blew the opposition away early (Dragons) and late in the match (Eels). It’s a bit too chicken-egg for me at this stage.

Now don’t go off half-cocked and say “I told you JT was spending too much time on defensive structures”, because there is no specific evidence in the results that says we can’t attack and defend at the same time. Our wins are almost exclusively made up of our best defence and bestattack.

It may simply be true that our attack is not mature enough or sophisticated enough to trouble the good sides, and our defence is still not good enough to cover that deficiency.

Also bear in mind that all this analysis is being done against previous seasons, which for the most part are losing seasons. These are comparisons against previous Tigers sides, so saying defence is better, is not necessarily saying the defence is good enough to trouble the best sides. Similarly, attack may only be down compared to the very flamboyant Tigers sides of the mid 2000s.

While I can understand the reason for a comparison , I went through in a previous post , the number of variables that are present in such a comparison,
Just a few were: did we play more or less night games.
We're there a lot of wet weather games.
What injuries did we have in comparison, or what injuries did the opposition have
were the opposition better or worse in those years
Were rep players out Of our team or theirs
What suspensions did we or the opposition have
That's just a few things that can and do effect how a team plays on any specific day
It's not scientific , but shows how hard it is to compare even two seasons and be any where accurate in any findings
I'm not knocking your comparison.
Just pointing out the difficulty in getting answers

Two good posts with interesting points in each.
 
Always appreciate detailed analysis so well done on that front.

But seriously, you can spin stats any way you want. You can include some and leave out others that might not support the arguement with any stats comparison.

How about compare our injuries to the last 10 years? I reckon you will find this is our best year in that regard, so to have our worst result (last) is really bad. How about the fact our draw was ranked the 3rd easiest in the NRL, went last year our draw was ranked in the top 4 hardest? How many games have we lost against teams outside the Top 8 compared to previous years??

How about this year we played Canterbury twice when they had 5-6 players out rather then at full strength?? What about our record at former fortress Leichhardt compared to other years??

Plus would't it make sense to have a bit closer losses when your number 1 priority and only priority accordinf to Taylor was defence?? You might cop a few less blow outs, but some of those games we were no closer to winning if you know what I mean. In soccer tersm we were playing for a 0-0 and went down 1-0, without having a shot on goal. Is that really progress>?? I am not sure.

Its like when the losing manager in football (soccer) be moans the fact they had more of the ball and more of the chance.

Nice try and appreciate the effort, End of the day is we are last for a reason, and that is because we are the worst team in the competition for performance. That is the only real stat that matters. The even competition argument is garbage. There are have and have nots in this league, its not even at all. The top 8 is all but settled and there are only 5 teams that can win the comp.

By the way how do we rank for Saturday 5.30pm games away from home when the temperature is bettween 6-10 degrees and we lose the coin toss??
 
By the way i think you hve just provided enough ammo for JT's next 8 Press conferences.

They should be called - 101 different ways say were improving despite coming last
 
wow absolutely amazing analysis there!

very insightful, gives me a bit of hope for the future. your average supporter primarily looks at the scoreboard of the previous week and the ladder (hence why this forum will go from euphoria against souths or dogs to calls for JT to be axed within 10 days quite easily).

this is some really interesting stats that prove that inexperience and a couple of deficiencies in positions are primarily to blame (like you said, and has been apparent all year) but that we're also not that far off being an alright team!
 
@pHyR3 said:
wow absolutely amazing analysis there!

very insightful, gives me a bit of hope for the future. your average supporter primarily looks at the scoreboard of the previous week and the ladder (hence why this forum will go from euphoria against souths or dogs to calls for JT to be axed within 10 days quite easily).

this is some really interesting stats that prove that inexperience and a couple of deficiencies in positions are primarily to blame (like you said, and has been apparent all year) but that we're also not that far off being an alright team!

Taylor might tell them all this and he might be right.

However you can have all the stats you want.

I agree 100% with Tiger Tim from the Gong. I judge coaches on how players respond. Do you think Wayne Bennett rattles on about stats? I reckon he just knows how to man mange each individual and create a environment where everyone wants to run through a brick wall for one another. Taylor could have the best game plan and structure in the world. However as he draws his drawings on the chalk board at half time if the players are thinking "here he goes again the p…." then your in trouble as a coach.

We have not seemed like a very motivated side in games this year. At least under Potter there was some real fire in our forwards before the injuries set in
 
As the saying goes "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics". I have a feeling that these type of statistics are part of the Key Performance Indicators our coach may have in his contract
 
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