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		|  07-04-2018, 11:15 AM | #1 |  
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				 WAR Model and an Updated Roster 
 
			
			WAR Model and an Updated Roster
Another shorter story looking at the changes to the Flames roster and the correlation between the Manny WAR model and the standings.
 
I adjusted all the WAR data to WAR/60 to make contributions weighted by ice time.
 
Comments welcome as always
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		|  07-04-2018, 12:12 PM | #2 |  
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			My first comment is simple. This doesn't take into account goaltending. I think if you looked at a better WAR value for goaltenders, you would understand the difference in the WAR and standings.
 For example:
 
 Anaheim's WAR is listed as 17th, but their standings was 9th. That's because of John Gibson. He covers up a lot of problems on that team, and I'm surprised he wasn't given more Vezina votes. He was that good.
 
 In fact, in the Corsica rankings his rating was the highest of all goalies at 81.32, and was the only goalie in the top 30 player rankings.
 
 Then Vegas, another outlier, goes from the 15th ranked WAR to the 5th spot in the standings. The reason? Marc Andre Fleury who was 4th best goalie last year with a 79.62 ratings.
 
 The Kings as another outlier? Jonathan Quick who was the 9th ranked goalie at 76.08
 
 How about the other way?
 
 Montreal went from 14th in WAR to 28th in the standings...well guess what. Price had a bad year ranked as the 30th best goalie with just a 72.61 rating just ahead of such excellent goalies such as Michael Neuvirth and Brian Elliott.
 
 St. Louis goes from 7th to 18th. Well Jake Allen was pretty awful all year with a rating of  70.30 and ranked 47th in the NHL. Carter Hutton was much better ranked 22nd, but he only had 32 starts despite being the far better goalie, so he didn't change their position in the standings that much.
 
 The only weird one is Dallas as Ben Bishop had a very solid year ranked 15th with a rating of 75.15. Is it possible that Lehtonen was that bad as the back up? Well, he's still looking for a job, so probably.
 
 Going forward, I would definitely look at the impact of goaltending on team numbers if you're going to do this.
 
				__________________"You know, that's kinda why I came here, to show that I don't suck that much" ~ Devin Cooley, Professional Goaltender
 
				 Last edited by Cali Panthers Fan; 07-04-2018 at 12:18 PM.
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		|  07-04-2018, 12:16 PM | #3 |  
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				Join Date: Feb 2018 Location: Chocolah      | 
 
			
			I have read on this forum a bit that Derek Ryan is a more offensive type player, but his DWAR is second behind Smith. Honest question - how come that is the case?
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		|  07-04-2018, 12:18 PM | #4 |  
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Cali Panthers Fan  My first comment is simple. This doesn't take into account goaltending. I think if you looked at a WAR value for goaltenders, you would understand the difference in the WAR and standings.
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I included goaltending.
 
Mike Smith is the Flame's highest rated defensive player.
 
Here are the top 31 goaltenders based on their dWAR contribution /60 minutes
 
RYAN.MILLER	0.136 
ANTTI.RAANTA	0.135 
CARTER.HUTTON	0.134 
JUUSE.SAROS	0.130 
COREY.CRAWFORD	0.118 
JONATHAN.QUICK	0.108 
MARC-ANDRE.FLEURY	0.101 
JOHN.GIBSON	0.098 
PHILIPP.GRUBAUER	0.090 
CASEY.DESMITH	0.087 
CONNOR.HELLEBUYCK	0.086 
SERGEI.BOBROVSKY	0.079 
CURTIS.MCELHINNEY	0.077 
PEKKA.RINNE	0.074 
ROBERTO.LUONGO	0.066 
DARCY.KUEMPER	0.066
MIKE.SMITH	0.065 
SEMYON.VARLAMOV	0.055 
MARTIN.JONES	0.046 
ONDREJ.PAVELEC	0.045 
ANTTI.NIEMI	0.041 
FREDERIK.ANDERSEN	0.031 
BRADEN.HOLTBY	0.026 
HENRIK.LUNDQVIST	0.026 
STEVE.MASON	0.026 
JAMES.REIMER	0.025 
CHARLIE.LINDGREN	0.025 
KEITH.KINKAID	0.025 
CORY.SCHNEIDER	0.024 
CAM.TALBOT	0.024 
JIMMY.HOWARD	0.024
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		|  07-04-2018, 12:21 PM | #5 |  
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by MrButtons  I have read on this forum a bit that Derek Ryan is a more offensive type player, but his DWAR is second behind Smith. Honest question - how come that is the case? |  
Shot suppression.
 
He's elite in keeping shot rates against down when he's on the ice. Much like Matt Stajan having a high suppression number it makes you wonder, but the weightings are the weighting and they both stick out.
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		|  07-04-2018, 12:25 PM | #6 |  
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Bingo  I included goaltending.
 Mike Smith is the Flame's highest rated defensive player.
 
 Here are the top 31 goaltenders based on their dWAR contribution /60 minutes
 
 RYAN.MILLER	0.136
 ANTTI.RAANTA	0.135
 CARTER.HUTTON	0.134
 JUUSE.SAROS	0.130
 COREY.CRAWFORD	0.118
 JONATHAN.QUICK	0.108
 MARC-ANDRE.FLEURY	0.101
 JOHN.GIBSON	0.098
 PHILIPP.GRUBAUER	0.090
 CASEY.DESMITH	0.087
 CONNOR.HELLEBUYCK	0.086
 SERGEI.BOBROVSKY	0.079
 CURTIS.MCELHINNEY	0.077
 PEKKA.RINNE	0.074
 ROBERTO.LUONGO	0.066
 DARCY.KUEMPER	0.066
 MIKE.SMITH	0.065
 SEMYON.VARLAMOV	0.055
 MARTIN.JONES	0.046
 ONDREJ.PAVELEC	0.045
 ANTTI.NIEMI	0.041
 FREDERIK.ANDERSEN	0.031
 BRADEN.HOLTBY	0.026
 HENRIK.LUNDQVIST	0.026
 STEVE.MASON	0.026
 JAMES.REIMER	0.025
 CHARLIE.LINDGREN	0.025
 KEITH.KINKAID	0.025
 CORY.SCHNEIDER	0.024
 CAM.TALBOT	0.024
 JIMMY.HOWARD	0.024
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Sorry, I meant to say a better WAR model for goalies in my post. I don't think this works particularly well. Goalies are on the ice all the time, and both good and bad goalies can change team success quite a bit. The contributions get diluted on a per 60 minute basis, but they are the major difference between goals being scored against or not.
 
I mean, can you look at the above list and tell me the best 4 goalies in the league were all back ups? Ryan Miller is the best goalie in the league in terms of WAR? That's ludicrous. 
 
And look at the difference in numbers. Miller's is a 0.136, but Bobrovsky is only a 0.079, and cup winner Holtby is only 0.026. Doesn't that seem a little off to you if you're going to calculate team WAR?
 
I think if you blended the Game Score and WAR models for these players, you'd probably get a better representation. and exclude backups because unless it's a 1B situation, they don't have much impact on the standings.
		 
				__________________"You know, that's kinda why I came here, to show that I don't suck that much" ~ Devin Cooley, Professional Goaltender
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		|  07-04-2018, 12:57 PM | #7 |  
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			Thank you Bingo & Cali, some good posts in here about Bingo's write-up (well done btw).  Very appreciated.
		 
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		|  07-04-2018, 01:21 PM | #8 |  
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			There is an expression that hockey could be renamed “goalie’ because they have that big an impact.  Open to debate but you simply can not win with bad goaltending IMO.
 Flames hot streaks and cold streaks over last few years have directly correlated to goaltending it seems.
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		|  07-04-2018, 02:09 PM | #9 |  
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			Good article and good contribution to discussion.
 But according to WAR, Matt Stajan was the most valuable Flame last year.  There is no recovering from that.
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		|  07-04-2018, 02:58 PM | #10 |  
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			How can JG and Frolik have the same offensive WAR last season....
 
 Something seems... Off?
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		|  07-04-2018, 08:32 PM | #11 |  
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Jason14h  How can JG and Frolik have the same offensive WAR last season....
 Something seems... Off?
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For what it's worth ...
 
Frolik 
4th on team in shot rates for 
25th in shot quality for 
Zero for shooting 
21st in penalties drawn
 
Gaudreau 
9th in shot rates for 
2nd in shot quality for 
Zero for shooting 
1st in penalties drawn
 
But the differential in shot rates is huge in Frolik's favour and the model favours guys that put pucks on net in their OWAR calculation
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		|  07-04-2018, 08:51 PM | #12 |  
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				Join Date: Jun 2015 Location: Calgary      | 
 
			
			It does appear that shot metrics are valued too high compared to on ice results. It pushes Stajan and Frolik up too high and the star players too low.
 Would you be able, as an example, to give up the oWAR and dWAR for a top team, like Tampa or Vegas for example? I'd like to see how their metrics look vs our team side by side.
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		|  07-05-2018, 08:49 AM | #13 |  
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				Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: SW Ontario      | 
 
			
			
	http://corsica.hockey/war/Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Hockey-and_stuff  It does appear that shot metrics are valued too high compared to on ice results. It pushes Stajan and Frolik up too high and the star players too low.
 Would you be able, as an example, to give up the oWAR and dWAR for a top team, like Tampa or Vegas for example? I'd like to see how their metrics look vs our team side by side.
 |    There's the link to do whatever you want.
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		|  07-05-2018, 09:04 AM | #14 |  
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			A great example is Tampa.
 Kucherov, Stamkos and Point are all great in oWAR but don't give that value away defensively sot they stay hugely positive.
 
 Gaudreau has to bone up on his own zone play if he and Calgary want to go to that next level. He's too important a player to be terrible defensively.
 
 Gaudreau is the 110th ranked oWAR player from last year, but in that 110 he's the 9th worst defensively.
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		|  07-05-2018, 11:12 AM | #15 |  
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				Join Date: Oct 2014 Location: Springbank      | 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by Bingo  A great example is Tampa.
 Kucherov, Stamkos and Point are all great in oWAR but don't give that value away defensively sot they stay hugely positive.
 
 Gaudreau has to bone up on his own zone play if he and Calgary want to go to that next level. He's too important a player to be terrible defensively.
 
 Gaudreau is the 110th ranked oWAR player from last year, but in that 110 he's the 9th worst defensively.
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He should grab video of small wingers who are good defensively.  Marchand, Schwartz, Cogliano.
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		|  07-05-2018, 11:22 AM | #16 |  
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				Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: SW Ontario      | 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by GioforPM  He should grab video of small wingers who are good defensively.  Marchand, Schwartz, Cogliano. |  
Last year was an outlier for Gaudreau.  He's been pretty neutral in his dWar most years.  Nothing to get worried about.
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		|  07-05-2018, 11:26 AM | #17 |  
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by PeteMoss  Last year was an outlier for Gaudreau.  He's been pretty neutral in his dWar most years.  Nothing to get worried about. |  
Sure, but he can improve defensively - it's easily the weakest part of his game.  He's good at takeaways - he should be buzzing around the d-zone more.  He cheats out of the zone a fair bit.
 
Now adding a better defensive winger on the other side would also help.  Ferland's defensive play was not a strength.  If you put Lindholm or Neal there I think the line's numbers jump.
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		|  07-05-2018, 09:21 PM | #18 |  
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by GioforPM  He should grab video of small wingers who are good defensively.  Marchand, Schwartz, Cogliano. |  
Just watch allot of Pavel Datsuk . Led the league in takeaways for several years. 
Man he was something else
 
We’ve had some good ones 
 
Fleury, Mullen, Loob, StLouis .......all small players that stripped pucks very well.
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		|  07-05-2018, 09:45 PM | #19 |  
	| #1 Goaltender | 
 
			
			I've got zero issues with Gaudreau's game.  I've seen it live, on highlight videos and heard coaches like Blashill talk about how hard he tracks back, how he breaks up plays in the defensive zone.
 Yes he cheated at times but with the struggles of the team to score last year I can see why he did it - in fact I'd want him to do it in that circumstance.
 
 If the Peters plays that uptempo system, the forwards are in fact deeper and the D are more involved, I think the pressure to score will be lessened on Gaudreau and he will return to those type of hustle defensive plays he demonstrated in the past.
 
 He was flat out great last year - I was very impressed with his effort - that 100pt pace was not a hot streak, I have no doubt he can get that marker.
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		|  07-06-2018, 12:06 AM | #20 |  
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by EVERLAST  Just watch allot of Pavel Datsuk . Led the league in takeaways for several years.Man he was something else
 
 We’ve had some good ones
 
 Fleury, Mullen, Loob, StLouis .......all small players that stripped pucks very well.
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I would have said Datsyuk except he's a centre, so different responsibilities.
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