tm3
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When football is played by robots your theory will apply. Until then, I like the human version. But then again, I suppose I am old enough to have witnessed enough numerically proven sure bets fall flat on their face.
When there are strings of heads, there are going to be strings of tails. I think people are often as hot as they are cold.
This is of course assuming that all other variables are the same.
Absolutely, I usually like dry material, but zig is a great storyteller. He is great at using analogies to make his points. I should see if I can get you the actual study sportscasting and those books use. It's absolutely crazy.
C) Tennessee punts and pins Bama inside the 5. The defense holds Bama to three and out Bama shanks punt tennessee scores in 6 plays.
D) Tennessee punts Bama fumbles punt, tennessee scores in 6 plays.
C) Tennessee punts and pins Bama inside the 5. The defense holds Bama to three and out Bama shanks punt tennessee scores in 6 plays.
D) Tennessee punts Bama fumbles punt, tennessee scores in 6 plays.
I feel like going for it on 4th down would be an advantage to your team. If you expect to go for it every time then you can play call accordingly for 4 downs instead of 3, a 33.3% increase in chances of achieving your goal, to get a first down. You see the pressure and importance put on an offense to convert a 3rd down conversion. What if the emphasis was only to get even closer to that 1st down marker instead of HAVING to make it at that point.
Look at rushing stats for an example. Say a team averages 3 yards per rush, which isn't very good. Averaging 3 downs per drive you aren't averaging a first down. However, if you are going for 4 downs every time the chances of you picking up a first down greatly increases.
Obviously there will be circumstances in which it will be downright idiotic to still go for it on 4th down, such as on your own 5 yard line with 15 yards to pick up the first. But if you have the mindset throughout the entire game that you have 4 downs instead of 3 then I believe going for it on 4th would prove to be an advantage .
Go back and look at the UT/Bama game last year. It didn't matter if UT went for it or punted on 4th down, the result was the same. Palardy's 1st 3 punts resulted in TD drives for Bama. The last 2 were pretty inconsequential as the score was 45-10 and Bama's last 2 drives were clock killers.
OK i am 25% into the book, and i have to echo what daj says = read it.
or, for the bama fans who hang out on VN, get someone to read it to you.
the analysis of belichek coaching cleveland vs belichek coaching new england is very illuminating.
the discussion of risk aversion and hindsight bias should be required reading for everyone who believes that fulmer should still be coaching UT.
I'm old school. I like books. The e-readers aren't the same, for me anyway.
I actually don't believe in momentum, either (not at least in the way fans throw it around). The authors studied it. For instance they looked at having a "hot hand" in basketball and found that making x numbers of shots in a row does not increase the chances of making the next (based off of years of historical data).
They explain this simply by stating that most people completely misunderstand probability. The example they use is a stats teacher who tells his students to flip a coin hundreds of times and record the results. He says, "don't cheat and if you do I'll catch you." Every year some students cheat and he catches them. How?
Students believe in the law of averages, insofar as 100 flips of a coin should have roughly 50 heads and 50 tails, and there would be no long strings of either heads nor tails.
In reality, the students who cheat make up a string of figures that play to this very real misunderstanding and avoid long connections of heads or tails. It is very likely that there will be strings of heads (or tails), and that because each event is completely unaffected by the preceeding event, no matter how many times you hit heads before, the next flip is still 50% likely to be heads.
So, fans ultimately view shooting the basketball the same way they do coin tosses, insofar as they don't believe a long runs of heads is likely(when it is), they believe that making a bunch of shots in basketball is very unlikely which is the same way of saying that fans believe each shot is effected by the previous (when numbers show it isnt).
That's just one example, football kickers would be another, and so on.
I love technology. Love it. I have android phones, iPads, Android tablets, windows laptops, internet integrated blu-ray players. All that, and I tend to agree that when I read, I want the actual book.
I get a little silly though, because I will buy the book and download the digital copy. Then, I will put the book on the shelf and read the digital book while I'm in bed (because I can have the lights off and not disturb the wife). That is mostly true except for books like this where I tend to need to flip back and forth to reconsider figures and arguments (or my law school texts). Then, exclusively, I read the hard copy and totally avoid the digital copy. So I see both sides of this debate, and how ridiculous I can be about hording volumes of paper books.
I am seriously considering buying an ascot, a smoking jacket, and a pipe, just so I can sit among, and on top of, piles of my books, and condescend. lol
Speaking strictly from a statistical, probability-based perspective, I agree. However, if one were, for example, to poll the crowd in attendance for the 1990 Tennessee-Florida game, I doubt you would find anyone who would deny that Neyland Stadium was positively engulfed by a palpable tsunami of momentum, one initiated when Dale Carter returned the second-half kickoff for a touchdown and unleashed a withering 38-0 barrage during the final two periods of play.
Success, particularly electrifying success, feeds players' confidence and provides emotional fuel, especially when the home crowd is stoking the proverbial fire.
Solid thread daj and good discussion. I plan on picking up a copy of the book.
