Category Archives: G Money

Oilers at Sharks Preview – A classic Lottery vs Playoffs matchup

Screen Shot 2016-03-24 at 3.56.43 PM

TALE OF THE TAPE:

Game: Edmonton Oilers (76 gp, 29-40-7, 65 pts, DFL in the Pacific Division, 4-6-0 in their last 10) at San Jose Sharks (73 gp, 41-26-6, 88 pts, 3rd in the Pacific Division, 6-4-0 in their last 10)
Location: SAP Centre, San Jose, CA
Time: 8:30 PM MT
Where to find it: TV: Sportsnet Oilers – Radio: 630 CHED

Edmonton Oilers Preview:

Hey, another 40 regulation loss season!

Coming off a hard-fought but seemingly inevitable loss to Bettman’s Pet Puppies, there are three interesting threads to tonight’s game:

  • How many scraps will Darnell Nurse be in?  The Sharks have brought up their minor league enforcer Mike Healey for the game, but with Nurse joined by Kassian, Maroon, Cracknell, and Reinhart, the Oilers have no shortage of thorned beef.
  • Will the Oilers finish in 30th?  Or can they scrape themselves out?
  • The Sharks can clinch a playoff spot with a win.

Nurse had this to say about the incident with Polak:

“It was a heat of the moment thing,” said Nurse. “Obviously, you don’t want to ever see guys hurt or anything like that. It was probably crossing the line, but it’s over now. You guys are worried about what’s going to happen tonight. We’ll see. Both teams are looking for wins, so I’m looking forward to going out there and playing.”

A good starting point for the Oilers would be to score a goal, which they were unable to do the last time they faced James Reimer, who gets the start.

The injury bug remains the story for the Oilers, as the Golden Nuge is once again on the shelf, this time with a mild concussion.

Jordan Oesterle and Griffin Reinhart had a terrific game against Arizona; the Sharks represent a major step up in competition, so it will be interesting to see if the two can achieve similarly good results tonight.

Nurse and Clenden were torched against the Yotes – don’t think we can reasonably expect better against the Sharks … but then again, Nurse will probably be on high alert the whole game, so what effect might that have on his overall game?

Cal-Bot 3000 (19-25-4, 2.51 GAA, 0.919 sv%, 3 SO) starts for the Oilers.  Expect a rough and tough game tonight, and Cam will need to be at the top of his game for the Oilers to have a chance.

GOILERS!

Nurse quote from oilers.nhl.com.

Oilers Projected Lineup (from LeftWingLock):

Patrick Maroon – Connor McDavid – Jordan Eberle

Taylor Hall – Leon Draisaitl -Zack Kassian

Lauri Korpikoski – Mark Letestu – Nail Yakupov

Matt Hendricks – Adam Cracknell – Iiro Pakarinen

Andrej Sekera – Mark Fayne

Griffin Reinhart – Jordan Oesterle

Darnell Nurse – Adam Clendening

Sharks Projected Lineup (from FearTheFin):

Tomas Hertl – Joe Thornton – Joe Pavelski

Melker Karlsson – Logan Couture – Joonas Donskoi

Patrick Marleau – Chris Tierney – Joel Ward

Dainius Zubrus – Nick Spaling – Tommy Wingels

Paul Martin – Brent Burns

Dylan DeMelo – Justin Braun

Brenden Dillon – Roman Polak

Fancy Stats Bonus Material:

OilersNerdAlert player dashboards for the Oilers and Sharks (click to embiggen – click here for an explanation of how to read this chart).  Damn these Sharks are dangerous, and Jumbo Joe is ridiculously good – period – never mind “for his age”.

The Scourge of the Goalposts

During yesterday’s Vancouver game, I watched Yak City blast a nice shot right off the post.

Which led me to think, I wonder how many goalposts he’s hit?

Which led me to think, I wonder how many goalposts the Oilers have hit?

Which led me to think, I wonder how that would compare to other teams?

So this post, I wander into factoid territory to ask (and answer) the burning question: which team hits the most goalposts?

First Up

The answer is: Dallas! As of last night’s games, Dallas led the league, having clanged it off the iron 41 times.

The Oilers are in 24th with 31 clangers, while Columbus trails with 25.

By Game by Jove

Those of you on your toes are waggling their fingers at me and saying “hang on a sec pal!”

Because you know that not all the teams have played the same number of games, so comparing the numbers straight across ain’t entirely cool.  To really compare them, you gotta equalize the numbers by game.

So let’s do that and see what happens. (drum roll please)

The answer this time is: Washington!

They lead the league at .571 goalposts per game, just a hair ahead of Dallas at .569.

Edmonton, having played more games than anyone else in the league by far, falls to 28th (0.419), while Columbus continues to be in last at a mere 0.357.

Hang On a Sec Pal!

You sez again, keeping me honest!

There’s a suspicious pattern here, which is that the two top teams in goalposts also take a sh*t ton of shots in general, while two of the bottom feeders also happen to be not so good in the shots department.

Maybe it’s just a simple matter of more shots, more goalposts?

Let’s test that. Here’s a chart of unblocked shots per game compared to goalposts per game:

It should be pretty clear from looking at it that there isn’t much of a relationship at all.

If you look down in the bottom left corner, you’ll see a number R^2 = 0.1152 … that’s mathematical proof that there’s basically no relationship.  You can read that to mean “the unblocked shots explain a little shy of 12% of the amount of goalposts”.  That’s not much!

Before we move on, let’s note a few other interesting things:

→ See that dot WAY on the left? That’s NJD. Talk about sucking the life out of the game.

→ And take a look at the three teams WAY over on the right. Are they who we think they are?  Dallas? Yes. Washington? Yes. Toronto!? WTF?!  Toronto. Huh.

Oh well, either way – the shot rate for all those three doesn’t strongly match the goalposts count.

Given that, and given that the overall relationship visually and mathematically is all over the map, the best guess at this point is that (at least at the team level), goalposts are mostly just bad luck.

Factoid City

Let’s summarize our newly created factoid:

  • Dallas leads the league in goalposts.
  • But on a per game basis, Washington leads the league in goalposts – Dallas is second.
  • Yet surprisingly, there appears to be a very weak relationship between goalposts hit and shot rates. It looks like they really are mostly just bad luck.

Factoid high-five!  CLANG!

Data for this mini-study was pulled from my own database, scraped directly from NHL data, thereafter chugging through some nightmarish Python scripts and ending up in Excel. I therefore blame all errors on bad luck.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m7YJWCnZstA

Analog Kid vs Digital Man

The other day, my colleague Zach Laing at BLH tweeted out the following:

Which I found really interesting, because I know for a fact (from multiple Twitter conversations) that Zach isn’t by any means an ‘anti-stats’ guy.

That got me thinking on a few statsy “controversies” that are out there, and now that I’ve got this cool new beer-soaked platform at my beck and call, this seems as good a time as any to explore!

“All these stats are really taking the fun out of the game”

Have you heard that one? I see some variation of it posted every few weeks. Putting myself in the mind of someone who posts that, I find I can both 100% agree with the sentiment and 100% disagree with it.

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I’ll talk about the 100% disagree first – my third point will look at the 100% agree side.

Now, why would I 100% disagree with the idea of stats taking the fun out of the game?

Are you a numbers person? I sure as hell am! I have a PC dedicated to hockey. I run stats between periods and after every Oiler game. I write a post game analysis based heavily on the numbers I generate.

Funny thing though – watching the Oilers play, whether on TV or live – is a 100% visceral experience for me.

I do not think of or track *any* numbers while I’m watching. My heart races, and I tend to swear and shout a lot (my kids have had the ‘driving and watching sports is a swearing exemption’ theory explained to them multiple times). I leap out of my seat and fist pump when a big goal is scored, sulk when the team loses, and curse the Hockey Gords when yet another Oiler goes down to injury.

Other than goals, I’m not thinking about numbers at all. I’ve been watching this team since they joined the NHL, long before I jumped into the hockey stats game, and that aspect hasn’t changed a bit.

So If I’m not thinking numbers during the game, why the heck are you?

Watch the game. Enjoy it. Live and die by the team – just as you always have.

There are no numbers (other than the score) that should be able to sap your enjoyment.

If that’s actually happening, if the existence of hockey stats is somehow affecting your hockey experience, trust me: you’re doing it wrong.

Big Saps

You know what IS taking the enjoyment out of the game?

In no specific order, here’s my list:

Gary Bettman – for crushing so much of the spirit and competitiveness of the game in favour of fake parity;

Daryl Katz, Steve Tambellini, Kevin Lowe, and Craig MacTavish – because even today, we’re stilling watching a team struggling to dig out of years of incompetence at their hands;

grotesque reffing – let it go or call everything, refs, I don’t give a crap, just CALL A CONSISTENT AND FAIR GAME for sh*ts sake (and if you can’t, get people who can);

and a dishonourable mention to the Sportsnet panel (especially Remenda) – I swear I’ve lost five IQ points in the last year just because I couldn’t reach the mute button fast enough.

Want to blame something for taking the enjoyment out of hockey for you?

Blame them.

“Why do we need a number for everything?”

This speaks more directly to Zach’s question. His question actually has two parts:
– do we need numbers for everything?
– just because something doesn’t have numbers, should it get treated as a ‘farce’?

My general philosophy in this area (I won’t pretend it is everyone’s, but I do think it applies to a lot of the people in the hockey stats community) is summed up in this tweet:

It’s a tweet poking fun at the anti-intellectual attitude that sometimes pervades the discussion.

But it also speaks to this idea: “I enjoy the game so much, I’m going to research what factors have supporting evidence that they drive the game and differentiate good teams/players from bad teams/players.”

That’s the process. Note the word evidence highlighted. This is what it’s all about.

Evidence!

In the end, we want evidence because hockey is like so many other human endeavours:

Where does that leave Zach’s question? Frankly, the question of whether some specific aspect of the game *needs* numbers is almost a rhetorical question. Someone will either look at the topic or someone won’t. (Someone probably already has)

But understand, if there are no numbers to provide evidence around that aspect of the game – then whatever thoughts you have on that aspect are opinions. Farce?  Hell no, I sure wouldn’t use that word.  There’s nothing wrong with having an opinion. [You know the old saying…]

As a stats guy, I’m absolutely fine with that. Everyone has an opinion.  Everyone is entitled to an opinion.

It’s only when someone espouses their opinion as fact that things start to get dicey.

Which leads naturally to my last point.

Yes, for certain people, stats really do suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck

Here’s the big thing that has changed over the last decade.

Back then, you’d watch a game with your buds, then discuss serious hockey sh*t after.

Like who really won the game within a game, who was good, who was bad, who got overplayed and who got underplayed. But you’d do it all of it without a shred of evidence, and usually heaped with a liberal dose of trash talk.

Now if you try the same thing these days – if you proferr opinion as fact to someone who actually has the facts – chances are you’re going to lose that exchange.

Click the pic! Get this kick-ass shirt!

And dammit, who likes losing**?

If stats are not your thing, but you used to win hockey arguments based on opinions (because you’re louder, or bigger, or more sober, or have a media platform), ouch, these days have gotta hurt.

And it’s 10x as true in the modern age where instead of just arguing with a couple of co-workers at lunch over whether Mats Sundin is a perimeter player (true story from 10 years ago), you now go online and your opinion is read by hundreds or thousands of people you don’t know.

People who have no reason to preserve your feelings or ego. And are armed with reams and reams of facts.

It can get ugly fast.

I get that. So … I 100% get why those folks are so anti-stats.

But I won’t offer many words of comfort.

After all, isn’t it just a tad ironic that people can jump onto any of dozens of social media platforms, running on sophisticated computing devices, connected with millions of other devices over the technical marvel that is the internet – and complain that the nerds with computers are taking over the game of hockey?

This magic day when super-science mingles with the bright stuff of dreams.

If stats are definitely not your thing, maybe find a group of like-minded fans and have it out instead.

Science!

Meantime, even if I wasn’t personally working to move the state of the hockey stats game forward, I still would appreciate what the last 10 years have brought – which is, in the end, just basic science.  To separate fact from fiction, opinion from reality.

On that note, I will leave you with a few of my favourite “picture quotes” on science.  Just replace the word ‘nature’ with ‘hockey’ and you’re good to go. I think you’ll like them – because if you aren’t the kind to like them, I bet you stopped reading a long time ago!

 

**You know why I got into fancystats in the first place? Because I found myself losing arguments to those damn nerds.  (they just happened to be fellow nerds)  True story.

The Curious Case of Leon Draisaitl

Welcome everyone, to what is my first analytics post here at BeerLeagueHeroes.  I go by the pen name “G Money”, and for the past year I’ve been building up some pretty cool analytic data and visualizations and publishing them on my personal blog, OilersNerdAlert

The subliminal messages I embedded in those visualizations finally tricked, er I mean convinced, the folks here at BLH into thinking I have mad stats skillz, and so here I am!

(Rather than bore you now, I’ve put a bit more biographic info at the end of the post – so I can bore you later)

My plan here at BLH is to do some deep dives into aspects of the game we all know and love, on topics that are amenable to an investigative/analytic approach … and in so doing, hopefully entertain, educate, and enlighten.

Famous last words!  So on to the topic of this post … one Mr. Leon Draisaitl

Dr. Drai’s Forgettable February

Much (virtual) ink has been spilled of late about Leon Draisaitl’s recent slump.  Since late January or so, he hasn’t been as effective as he was prior to that, and by extension, neither has his entire line.  You can see this by eye, by scoring, and by the stats.

Why?

Here are the most common of the theories that I’ve heard floated:

  • He’s wearing down from a long season of facing first line duty in Nuge’s absence
  • He’s fatigued (which is really just the same as wearing down) because he’s young and not used to this much TOI for this long a season
  • He’s injured

Short of putting a listening device in the trainer’s room, is there anything we can use to help figure out which of these it could be?

Why yes, I do believe there is!

Fatigue

Specifically, let’s see if we can test the idea of whether or not Dr. Drai is fatigued or otherwise wearing down.  How would we do that?

Let me float this hypothesis: if Dr. Drai is fatigued, he’s going to become less and less effective over the course of the game.  Fair?  Even tired people can start strong.  It’s in the later periods (or rounds, or whatever) that fatigue tends to assert itself.

So, here’s the idea: let’s look at how effective Draisaitl was at driving shot metrics over the course of the game before February, and how he does during February, and see if there’s a difference.

If he really is fatigued or worn down, we should see that he gets weaker over the course of games in the month of February than he did before February.

If on the other hand it’s just (ha ha – “just”) his overall effectiveness that is compromised, we’d expect that his pattern will show him struggling over the entire course of the game, rather than weakening in the later stages of the game

Does that make sense to you?

It does to me.  So let’s test that.

Relativity

But wait!

We can’t just look at Leon’s trace over the month of February vs the rest of the season. What happens if the entire team went into a funk in February (which it kind of did for a while)?  What if the entire team was tired? In that case, we’d see a weakening in King Leon’s shot metrics over the game, but it would be reflective of the entire team’s weakness, not his.

So we have to look at Draisaitl’s relative shot metrics – how he did compared to the rest of the team during those two different time periods. That way we can isolate Draisaitl from the overall team trends.

Isolating February

But wait! One more wrinkle!

Is February really the right comparison timeframe? If we don’t pick the right timeframe, we could end up with mixed data, where we don’t adequately separate the good and the bad timeframes.  That might be enough to hide differences in the data, so it would be good to confirm whether we have the right timeframe.  So let’s take our first quick look at some Draisaitl data:

* Click to embiggen

What is this strange looking duck of a chart?

What I’ve done is looked at three datasets: shot metrics, shot metrics relative to team, and scoring rate.  There’s both the raw data and a smoothed version showing for each.  Highlighted in purple are the points where it looks like a downturn could be argued to have started, at a peak on either the raw or the smoothed data.  In orange are some points where that downtrend might have ended.

It’s not cut and dried (it never is, despite the precision with which we often associate numbers-based analyses), but it does look like February is a separating factor for “good Draisaitl” and “bad Draisaitl”.

Using February vs ‘not February’ as our basis for comparison seems like a reasonable choice.

* Data for this chart was downloaded from war-on-ice.com

Draisaitl, before the walls fell

Here’s the centrepiece chart for this analysis:

This is visualization of Draisaitl’s shot metrics over the course of games excluding February. These are ‘score and venue adjusted’, meaning they try to account for the score state in each game and whether it’s a home or away game.

It’s “Corsi over the course of the game”, so of course I’m calling it Coursi, as a matter of course. What else could I call it?

First impression?  Man, is Draisaitl a strong player!  Every period, the team is better with him than without him.  And apart from a couple of short letdowns early in both the first and second periods, he remains strong throughout.  In fact, 51 to 56% means the Oilers are pretty much an elite team when he’s on the ice.  Quite encouraging.

Now, let’s temper this a little bit – Draisaitl has spent most of this season with Taylor Hall.  We already know Taylor Hall is elite.  We already know Taylor Hall drags pretty much every single player on the Oilers above breakeven when he’s on the ice. But the good news is that Drai was with Hall throughout February, so fortunately we don’t have to worry too much about that particular teammate effect biasing our comparison.

The key chart in some ways is the third one – the purple smoothed line shows Draisaitl’s results when compared to the team as a whole.  We’ll get back to that line later!

* Data for this chart was scraped by my own scripts directly from NHL data.  Corsi calculations use score and venue adjustment factors provided by Micah Blake McCurdy (hockeyviz.com).

Draisaitl on the ocean

Here’s Drai just in the month of February:

That’s quite a contrast, yes? You can very clearly see that Drai is not doing nearly as well in February.  That’s true on an absolute basis, AND on a basis relative to the team – the purple line on the rightmost chart dips below the breakeven line a lot more often than it did outside of February.

Hang on a sec, though.  That’s not what we were looking for.  We were already pretty sure that Drai had a tough February. What we wanted to see is any evidence of fatigue.

Do you see one?  I don’t. There is no noticeable downward slope on that purple line.

Looks to me like our man Drai’s issues, whatever they are, are something that stay more or less steady throughout the game.

Direct Comparison

We can see that effect even more clearly if we isolate the two smoothed ‘CoursiRel’ lines on a single chart:

Again, I’d say it’s pretty clear.  February is lower overall (more time below breakeven).  It is also more volatile. But it’s not sloping downward over the course of the game.

I’m going to go out on a limb here and suggest to you that whatever is ailing Leon Draisaitl – it’s probably not fatigue.

One More Control

One last chart for you.  When we look at the chart above, we see quite a difference in character between the two curves.   Enough that, while it doesn’t appear to be fatigue, it certainly implies something.

Or does it?  What if it’s a data artefact?

We are comparing a fairly large data set (all the games played outside of February) with a small one. Maybe it’s just that the small dataset is inherently more volatile.

So let’s look at a comparison dataset. It was suggested to me that Matt Hendricks, who plays primarily as defensive third/fourth line guy facing mostly similar competition through the season, might make a nice comparison. So here’s exactly the same pair of lines for Matt Hendricks:

Certainly, you can see a difference between the two, as you’d expect. February is more volatile, indicative of a smaller sample size.

The overall character of the two curves, though, is similar.  In other words, over the course of the game, Matt Hendricks has been pretty much the same player in February as he was prior to February.

And for our purposes, that’s good. That at least provides some reason to believe that the difference we’re seeing with Draisaitl is a real one.

Conclusion

So the evidence doesn’t indicate fatigue.  So what could the issue be?

My opinion?

I think Drai is injured.  Not enough to keep him out, but enough to impair.  He took some vicious (uncalled … naturally) cross checks and a few shot blocks in January that visibly hurt him.  That would be consistent with the overall reduction in his game, and also what appears to be a recent improvement in March (7 games in 11 days doesn’t seem like the ideal circumstances to address a fatigue issue!)

Or maybe, just maybe, it’s a garden variety slump!  Those happen too.

Either way – I’d say it’s unlikely it was ‘wearing down’.  It’s not definitive, certainly.  No single study is, especially a relatively casual one like this.

But I feel comfortable in saying that this analysis suggests we should look elsewhere.

What say you?

Post Script and Bio

There you have it – my first article for BLH. I hope you enjoyed it.  My plan is to average about one a week.  Some lighter, some heavier, but hopefully always at least somewhat interesting!

A quick word about me for those not yet asleep: I’ve been an Oilers fan for uncountably many years – including the glory years.  Maybe that’s what has kept me going, even as I’ve spent so much time living in the land of the bovine enemy.

I’m unquestionably a numbers guy, but just FYI, I “watched the game” for about 35 years before I ever got into the whole fancystats thing.  I do this stuff as a hobby, but when I’m not watching hockey or talking hockey online (my wife calls them “my imaginary friends”) I’ve got the aforementioned wife, plus three kids and a cabin in the mountains to keep me hopping.

P.S. I’m a huge Rush fan, so a lot of my posts will have a Rush lyric easter egg embedded – though today I went with Star Trek.

Beer League Hereos sign free agent bloggers

As the Editor of the site, I recently sat back with BLH and there was one thing we both realized: There are a lot of people out there with great opinions, but little to no means to express them.

With that in mind, Beer League Heroes has decided to bring on Johnny Potts (Kosmic Burrito), Micah Kowalchuk and Three Points Dave, who some of you may know from calling in on the 630 CHED Overtime Open Line.

While 3PDave is handling vlogging for the site, KB and Micah are working on some great blogs in their own right. These guys already have got some posts and vlog’s up recently, so I would recommend checking some of it out.

On top of that, we made the move to bring over Oilers Nerd Alert, who some of you may know as G Money from the comments of Lowetide’s blog. ONA is going to be doing some analytics driven posts and has some stuff coming up that is seriously going to blow your mind. While he already had a mean to express his information through his analytic driven posts on his wordpress blog, he has graciously agreed to contribute on this website as well.

Serious, it’s really freakin cool.

BLH and I are really happy with the guys we have brought on board, so make sure to stick around and read some of their upcoming work.

If you aren’t already, you can follow the BLH team on twitter here.


We are still looking for new writers to join the website. If you are interested in contributing on the website, you can send BLH an email (beerleagueheroes@gmail.com), or me an email (zjlaing@gmail.com).

We can also be reached via DM on twitter. Mine are always open to anyone wanting to chat.

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