Quote:
Originally Posted by Enoch Root
Yes, sometimes, more complex isn't better (but sometimes it is)
And yes, sometimes it becomes an issue of what people want it to measure, as opposed to what it does measure.
But this stat measures HD chances. Yes, it defines that as shots from home plate. But that doesn't mean that is should. Sometimes the design of the stat can be flawed, or too simplistic. Again, Coronato's goal against the Kraken was a very high danger scoring chance in any rational person's mind. But it wasn't a stat, by the way it is counted. That isn't a problem of the viewer (wanting the stat to be what they want it to be), it is a shortcoming of the stat. Full stop.
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Well, no, it is 100% wanting the stat to be something different.
Again, that stat measures
the area of the ice the shot is taken from, assigning values based on the probably of a shot from that area going in.
It is not, nor does it pretend to be, a measurement of the danger of that shot or its probability of going in in totality. It is literally JUST a measure of location, based on the probability of a shot (any shot) from a shooter (any shooter) going in, based on how often goals go in from those areas historically.
Saying Coronato had a “high danger scoring chance” is fine, if those are just words you’re using to describe how the shot came together. But the reason it is not qualified as one by the stat is because
that is not what the stat measures nor claims to measure.
Full stop. Or whatever.
HD also has nothing to do with the card that people took issue with so not sure why this is the topic but oh well. I’m still interested in why the stats behind that card which set out to measure a single game aren’t representative of a single game. What I’m hearing is general sentiment that stats don’t tell the whole story which… of course they don’t, that isn’t what’s being argued. But not telling the whole story =/= garbage.