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Stat Relevance Watch: Part Ten - Bowl Games

There are, as they say, lies, damn lies, and statistics. The numbers mean something, yet often we're not sure what. Here SMQ will look at the final regular season statistics in more than a dozen major categories to suss out who succeeded in what and how that statistical success correlated to overall success in terms of final record. SMQ does not have the luxury of a high-powered supercomputer or degree-type qualification in mathematics or statistics, but his analysis will be driven as deep as his egghead, tinfoil cap curiosity and cell phone calculator will take it. That is to say, quasi-scientific at best

Part One: Which stats most closely correlate with success?
Part Two: What do the best teams do best?
Part Three: ACC Game-by-Game Results
Part Four: Big East Game-by-Game Results
Part Five: Big Ten Game-by-Game Results
Part Six: Big XII Game-by-Game Results
Part Seven: Pac-Ten Game-by-Game Results
Part Eight: SEC Game-by-Game Results
Part Nine: Non-Conference Game-by-Game Results


Part Ten: Bowl Game-by-Game Results

The Method: SMQ used ESPN box scores to pull out specific numbers from all 32 bowl games played last postseason, and developed a winning percentage for each of eleven major statistical categories. That is, if the winning team outgained its opponent running the ball, that game was marked as a "victory" for the rush offense category; if the loser had a higher conversion rate on third down, the game was marked as a "defeat" for the third down efficiency category (the stats below are listed in offensive form, but the records are identical as from a defense-centric point of view). And so on for each of the categories in each game until the supply of competitive examples was dry. After which each category's "record" was added up to determine its correlation to victory among the group as a whole.

Another note on the process: the last two editions of "Stats Relevance Watch" have been compiled while watching old episodes of "Freaks and Geeks" on YouTube, which has essentially the entire series in four or five parts per episode, all uploaded in easily-indexed form during the last month or so. So blame anything you find wrong on the distracting genius of Bill Haverchuck, then check it out before NBC or whoever tries to get the clips blocked.

The quick and dirty, portable results:

Rank Category Win %
1. Turnover Margin .870 (20-3)
2. Yards Per Pass .839 (26-5)
3. First to Score .688 (22-11)
4. Time of Possession .645 (20-11)
Yards Per Carry .645 (20-11)
6. Rush Offense .625 (20-12)
7. Total Offense .613 (19-12)
Pass Offense .613 (19-12)
3rd Down Efficiency .613 (19-12)
10. Penalty Yards .385 (10-16)

OCD version and analysis:

Stat Category Win % Stat Category Win %
Total Offense .613 (19-12) Yards Per Carry .645 (20-11)
> 500 .714 (5-2) > 6.0 .600 (3-2)
450-499 .714 (5-2) 5.5 - 5.9 .400 (2-3)
400-449 .636 (7-4) 5.0 - 5.4 .500 (2-2)
350-399 .417 (5-7) 4.5 - 4.9 .714 (5-2)
300-349 .444 (4-5) 4.0 - 4.4 .429 (3-4)
250-299 .333 (3-6) 3.5 - 3.9 .625 (5-3)
< 250 .333 (3-6) 3.0 - 3.4 .600 (3-2)
Pass Offense .613 (19-12) < 3.0 .286 (6-15)
> 400 1.000 (2-0) Yards Per Pass .839 (26-5)
350-399 .600 (3-2) > 12.0 1.000 (2-0)
300-349 .667 (6-3) 10.0 - 11.9 .429 (3-4)
250-299 .385 (5-8) 8.0 - 9.9 .800 (12-3)
200-249 .643 (9-5) 6.0 - 7.9 .542 (13-11)
150-199 .333 (3-6) 4.0 - 5.9 .133 (2-13)
< 150 .333 (4-8) < 4.0 .000 (0-1)
Rush Offense .625 (20-12) Third Down Efficiency .613 (19-12)
> 300 .500 (1-1) > 70% 1.000 (1-0)
250-299 - 60 - 69% 1.000 (1-0)
200-249 .625 (5-3) 50 - 59% .692 (9-4)
150-199 .583 (7-5) 40 - 49% .467 (7-8)
100-149 .579 (11-8) 30 - 39% .500 (10-10)
50-99 .417 (5-7) < 30% .400 (4-10)
< 50 .300 (3-7) Turnover Margin .870 (20-3)
> +3 1.000 (5-0)
Fewest Penalty Yards .385 (10-16) + 2 .857 (6-1)
+ 1 .818 (9-2)
Time of Possession .645 (20-11) 0 .500 (9-9)
-1 .182 (2-9)
First to Score .688 (22-10) -2 .143 (1-6)
< -3 .000 (0-5)

Discrepancies in some totals are due to ties or virtual ties in a couple games per category. Sometimes inconsistent time of possession results were listed for every bowl game. No home team in the postseason, so that category is eliminated here.

Two notcieable trends continue: the strong results of teams that finish with higher averages per pass attempt (a measure of both completion percentage and big play ability) and the awful record of less-penalized teams. As was the case in non-conference games, the theory that penalties have a stronger relationship with offense, and therefore time of possession, gains a little ground because of the similarity of those numbers (in inverted form, of course). Now, it shouldn't be a surprise that a lot of the other numbers are closer to the middle than in conference play at large, bowl games being played among better teams on the whole playing generally closer games, or that it's turnover margin much more than any other factor that makes the difference in such close games. Virtually everywhere else, we see weaker correlations than in regular season games we've already covered, except in one area: first to score. Taking an early lead meant just that little bit more in bowl games than  converting third downs or racking up any but the most outrageousyardage. Of course, there were also at least four fairly wild comebacks (Texas Tech against Minnesota, Oregon State against Missouri, Georgia against Virginia Tech and West Virginia against Georgia Tech), so take that for what it's worth. Of that group, Georgia actually led Virginia Tech early, 3-0.

Part Eleven: Series wrap-up.

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F&G
Best. Show. Ever. I bought the DVDs the day they came out.

by Jack on Feb 9, 2007 1:06 PM EST   0 recs

Pretty close.
Yeah, Jack, I was concerned about pulling them up because it's been so long since I watched the show, I was afraid my tastes had changed and I would be disappointed and that little personal torch for 'Freaks and Geeks' would be extinguished. But definitely not. It's a much better show than I remember it. (I was disppointed in one scene that I had remembered, which I had once considered among the best I had ever seen: when Sam catches Neil's dad with another woman, and he's talking to Lindsey about it, and he asks "Do you think dad would ever have an affair?" And they get this terrified look for a second until Joe Flaherty walks by in his underwear and then wonders why they can't stop laughing. It's just a pretty good scene, not as great as I recalled).

Anyway, watching some of the later episodes of that first season (have seen the very last one way back, but it's not up yet at YT as far as I can tell), the show only got better as it hit episodes 10-13. That seems to be when they began playing it for the sake of the full arc rather than individual episodes. Which is probably why it has such a cult following - someone who caught on late would probably be turned off without the buildup, especially the tension between Lindsey and her old and new personas.

But because of that, I don't know if it could have sustained another season or not, so in that sense, I'm not sorry it was cancelled. The last few episdes were great, but only as an ending, because the entire dynamic of the show was changed in a way I think would have killed it if they tried to come back to it and the geeks couldn't be so geeky any more (not after kissing Vicky/i and Cindy Sanders). Plus kids get older and have to move away, etc. NBC didn't give it a chance, but a show like that, based around the traumas of high school, only has that very short shelf life anyway. So I think the writers knew they only had their little window and decided to go ahead and wrap it up and nail the whole series in one season. The Office (British) did the same thing in two very short seasons that amounted to about the same number of episodes (and it was only 30 mins, as opposed to an hour for 'Freaks and Geeks').

Agreed, great, great show, while it lasted. I have looked for the DVDs for a long time, but now I feel more justified trying to get them online.

by SMQ on Feb 9, 2007 2:46 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

Sweet merciful crap
First "Freaks and Geeks" and now the UK "Office." Two of my favorite three shows of all-time (along with, somewhat obviously, "The Simpsons.") I know it seems out of place for a footballcentric blog, but I think it's worth noting that the first two listed there, as you said, told tight, fully-contained stories in a small (compared to most popular American TV fare) number of episodes. Completely different from the way most series get dragged-out and toothless.

I agree that Apatow & co. probably knew they were gonna get cancelled, and while the series is technically left open-ended, it's such a satisfying, poignant conclusion that I can't imagine the story ending any other way. Part of me trusts that they could have come up with fantastic storylines, but part of me is glad that they didn't. And another part of me realizes, as they point out in the extras on the DVDs, that the kid who played Sam Weir immediately shot up to like 6'2" right after they stopped filming.

On a sidenote to the sidenote, do you watch Gervais's "Extras"? The recent David Bowie cameo was one of the funniest things I've seen in a long time...

by Jack on Feb 9, 2007 10:31 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

OK, let's get nuts
I've seen a couple of the latest episodes of 'Extras,' one with Orlando Bloom and one with the kid from Harry Potter and the dwarf from Willow. It's fine and I've been trying to catch it more often because I do like it, but I certainly don't like it nearly as much as I did 'The Office.' The 'Extras' humor seems very broad (in a talky, British sort of way, though at least they aren't in drag) and more based on politically incorrect shock (for example, there was a lengthy joke in one episode that consisted entirely of a guy being homophobic. That basically was it). This was also true to a lesser extent of the second season of 'The Office,' but the first season of that show remains among the absolute best ever on TV.

Best show on TV now: The Wire. This will turn into one epic thread if I get started on that. The only 'cop show' I have ever or probably will ever watch.

by SMQ on Feb 10, 2007 2:12 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

For archiving purposes...
Not sure if you've got an ipod/iTunes or not, but if you want to keep the YouTubed episodes for posterity's sake, look for a little program called iTube that will allow you to download stuff from YouTube.  Takes a few minutes per clip, but well worth it if you're worried about NBC putting the kibosh on what's out there.

by Beatuofa on Feb 9, 2007 3:59 PM EST   0 recs

Penalty Yards
Interesting thing about all this. In part two you said penalty yards were "utterly meaningless". Yet study after study shows the team with the fewer penalty yards has a losing record. So can we deduce that getting more penalties correlates to winning more games? Or is it just certain kinds of penalties? The so-called "being aggressive" penalties. Obviously there is no value in jumping offsides or clipping on a punt return. But how about committing pass interference to prevent a touchdown? Or holding a DE to prevent a sack? Sounds like something worth studying.

by Mike on Feb 9, 2007 4:28 PM EST   0 recs

'Worth studying'
Maybe so. Penalties could be the negative but ultimately benign byproduct of other factors that help winning; you suggest aggressiveness, others have drawn the correlation to time of possession (offenses are more likely to draw flags for offsides, delay of game or holding than defenses). I have read a suggestion that better offensive schemes, I guess because the writer considered them more complicated and requiring more motion or pre-snap direction from the QB, result in more delay of game penalties. I don't buy the last one, but the other ideas could explain some of the effect, especially the correlation to time of possession. But then, time of possession is generally considered a byproduct, too.

Or it could be a coincidence. It is strange that more penalties consistently correlate to winning, but in most of these games, the difference is very close. If the two teams are within five yards of one another, I call it a tie, but some of the margins between the 'winner' and 'loser' in lost yardage aren't much larger than that.

by SMQ on Feb 9, 2007 4:57 PM EST to parent up   0 recs

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