Re: Patty Kazmaier 2014
Except that they don't. Coaches consistently use the same players against opponents' top lines and to take defensive zone face-offs. One thing that hockey analytics has shown conclusively is that you must take the quality of opposition faced and where a player starts their shifts into consideration if you want to approximate an individual player's value to their team.
None of the commonly available stats, no. Then again, +/- doesn't do a very good job of tracking that, either.
Those things are true of goals and assists, however, goals and assists are not as dependent upon which teammates you play with as +/- is. For all of their flaws as stats, goals and assists require some sort of affirmative action on the part of the player credited with them. +/- does not. All it tracks is whether you were on the ice when something happened, not whether you had anything to do with it happening.
That's the theory. In practice it doesn't work out that way.
Over the course of the season, many of the things you cite will average themselves out over time.
Except that they don't. Coaches consistently use the same players against opponents' top lines and to take defensive zone face-offs. One thing that hockey analytics has shown conclusively is that you must take the quality of opposition faced and where a player starts their shifts into consideration if you want to approximate an individual player's value to their team.
Unlike the other stats, it at least rewards players who forecheck and back check and are more likely to be where they should be when without the puck, and takes into account that at times the other 4 players on the ice with you are not always exactly the same even if your line mates or D partner is consistent. No other stat does that.
None of the commonly available stats, no. Then again, +/- doesn't do a very good job of tracking that, either.
The arguments you make could equally be said for goals and assists.
Those things are true of goals and assists, however, goals and assists are not as dependent upon which teammates you play with as +/- is. For all of their flaws as stats, goals and assists require some sort of affirmative action on the part of the player credited with them. +/- does not. All it tracks is whether you were on the ice when something happened, not whether you had anything to do with it happening.
They are largely a function of your total minutes, which line you play on, and the strength of your line mates. If you happen to be paired on a line with a Kaz nominee, your production is going to benefit dramatically versus someone used as a third line checker. Both players may be equally capable of posting similar scoring stats given the same situation. In the latter case, the + / - can show the true overall value of both players to the team although their roles are different.
That's the theory. In practice it doesn't work out that way.