Kalimantan Gull
Well-known member
This post, made a few days ago in the 'Potter's flaw' thread, and others in the same thread, got me thinking. I thought I'd make a new thread on it because I find it interesting how previous narratives can be hard to shift.
Last season this happened a lot, no doubt at all, we scored, sat back immediately and inevitably conceded. So I'm not picking on this poster, but wanted to point out how that narrative is actually far weaker this season. The reality is that Saturday against Newcastle was the very first time this season in 14 league and cup games that we have lost the lead when ahead. The first time. We have only conceded two goals while in front the entire season.
I've started to attribute our better results this season to not doing dropping back after scoring anywhere near as quickly as we did last year, to staying on the front foot for far longer, keeping our shape better even when the opposition is trying to push us back. In 4 of our 11 league games we have scored two goals in a row without the opposition scoring, yet two (or more) unanswered goals only happened 5 times in the entirety of last season.
Last year we lost leads on 15 occasions in league and cup, once every 3 games on average. Its clear how the narrative developed, we all saw it happen over and over again. So once in 14 games is a significant improvement - yet old narrative can be hard to shift. Saturday brought it all back and can make us feel like nothing has changed.
On the other side of the coin we have equalised when behind 5 times already in league and cup , winning 1 and drawing 3 of the four games that happened in. Compare that to the whole of last season when we came from behind just 10 times, only winning 1 of those games, drawing 4 and ending up losing 5 anyway. On those occasions, we worked hard, scored an equaliser and sat back soon after, eventually conceding again and putting the hard work to naught. This year that hasn't happened yet.
True, it was hard for Palace to get back in front after our 95th minute equaliser, but there is another stat. This season we've scored 3 and conceded 0 'significant' goals in the last 15 minutes plus injury time (i.e. not considering either of the two late goals in the City game as 'significant' to the result as they held a three goal lead at the time). Last season we scored late goals at about the same rate, 9 significant goals at that stage of the game - one every five games or so - but conceded more than we scored, 12 goals by the opposition. On three occasions we scored in the last five minutes or injury time only for the opposition to score again even later. So far this year, none conceded.
It all collectively suggests more resilience and less of the falling back into defence when we are ahead or have just equalised, which can often lead to complete backs to the wall defending in the final stages of a game. Getting ahead and staying there. Not conceding late goals. Scoring twice unanswered. Coming from behind and getting rewards for that. All of which we're doing better than last season. Saturday may have felt like the continuation of our narrative from last season, but the stats suggest it could just be more of a blip* - and may speak to the more subtle ways that Potter is changing our fortunes.
*I am fully aware that the football gods will frown at this thread, and ensure it will be bounced when we concede an equaliser or late winner against Villa. And Leeds. And West Ham. And Southampton. And Spurs. But I hold out hope they will instead applaud the statistical trawling I've done, and reward us with a win again - it's been a while. Wolves?
..... we do seem ultra vulnerable after taking a lead in games, we seem to almost instantly revert to a different set of rules which must be down to the boss I suppose, the amount of times we fail to score that 2nd goal is astonishing considering how on top we usually are when we go one up.
I get you try to keep it tight for a bit after scoring but we often sink so far back we just invite the inevitable, I doubt Potter knows this and will be over the moon I've pointed his flaw out ready for our next game.
Last season this happened a lot, no doubt at all, we scored, sat back immediately and inevitably conceded. So I'm not picking on this poster, but wanted to point out how that narrative is actually far weaker this season. The reality is that Saturday against Newcastle was the very first time this season in 14 league and cup games that we have lost the lead when ahead. The first time. We have only conceded two goals while in front the entire season.
I've started to attribute our better results this season to not doing dropping back after scoring anywhere near as quickly as we did last year, to staying on the front foot for far longer, keeping our shape better even when the opposition is trying to push us back. In 4 of our 11 league games we have scored two goals in a row without the opposition scoring, yet two (or more) unanswered goals only happened 5 times in the entirety of last season.
Last year we lost leads on 15 occasions in league and cup, once every 3 games on average. Its clear how the narrative developed, we all saw it happen over and over again. So once in 14 games is a significant improvement - yet old narrative can be hard to shift. Saturday brought it all back and can make us feel like nothing has changed.
On the other side of the coin we have equalised when behind 5 times already in league and cup , winning 1 and drawing 3 of the four games that happened in. Compare that to the whole of last season when we came from behind just 10 times, only winning 1 of those games, drawing 4 and ending up losing 5 anyway. On those occasions, we worked hard, scored an equaliser and sat back soon after, eventually conceding again and putting the hard work to naught. This year that hasn't happened yet.
True, it was hard for Palace to get back in front after our 95th minute equaliser, but there is another stat. This season we've scored 3 and conceded 0 'significant' goals in the last 15 minutes plus injury time (i.e. not considering either of the two late goals in the City game as 'significant' to the result as they held a three goal lead at the time). Last season we scored late goals at about the same rate, 9 significant goals at that stage of the game - one every five games or so - but conceded more than we scored, 12 goals by the opposition. On three occasions we scored in the last five minutes or injury time only for the opposition to score again even later. So far this year, none conceded.
It all collectively suggests more resilience and less of the falling back into defence when we are ahead or have just equalised, which can often lead to complete backs to the wall defending in the final stages of a game. Getting ahead and staying there. Not conceding late goals. Scoring twice unanswered. Coming from behind and getting rewards for that. All of which we're doing better than last season. Saturday may have felt like the continuation of our narrative from last season, but the stats suggest it could just be more of a blip* - and may speak to the more subtle ways that Potter is changing our fortunes.
*I am fully aware that the football gods will frown at this thread, and ensure it will be bounced when we concede an equaliser or late winner against Villa. And Leeds. And West Ham. And Southampton. And Spurs. But I hold out hope they will instead applaud the statistical trawling I've done, and reward us with a win again - it's been a while. Wolves?