We'd be slightly better off, but it seems Newcastle have ridden their luck somewhat...
Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/50822875
Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/50822875
I was having a bit of a row about xG on saturday with a Liverpool supporting friend. I argued it was an absolute load of complete rubbish - just a stat for the sake of another stat, but doesn't really give you anything of any great value. He argued that it's the most representative stat of how good a team is at creating chances. The underlying point he made was that Leicester have been incredibly lucky this season having scored so many goals from difficult/low percentage chances. I argued it means nothing - if Vardy wants to spank one in the top corner from his only chance every game, he will. Good lad.
I think any stat that gives a side an 18 point swing against another (Man City -> Liverpool, -14 to +4) must be complete and utter balderdash
Not really.Just nonsense isn't it
Palace seem to have gone full circle. In previous seasons they've been a team which creates a lot of chances before Benteke spanks it in to Row Z. Now they seem to be riding their luck, especially against us.
Not really full circle is it though.
Benteke is still sticking it in row Z
Not really.
Last year it showed we were way above where we should be at the half way point, predicting our fall off the cliff in the second half of the season.
Perhaps Newcastle will suffer a similar collapse this season
We'd be slightly better off, but it seems Newcastle have ridden their luck somewhat...
Snip
Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/50822875
These are the rules - or assumptions - used by Opta to compile the table:
For the purposes of the above table a number of rules were set by Opta: If both teams have an xG of 0.5xG or less: 0-0 DrawIf the highest scoring team (in terms of xG) has more than 0.5xG and less than 1.1xG, they win if the xG difference is bigger than 0.3xGIf the highest scoring team (in terms of xG) has more than 1.1xG but less than 1.5xG, they win if xG difference is bigger than 0.4xGIf the highest scoring team (in terms of xG) has more than 1.5xG, they win if the xG difference is bigger than 0.5xG.
Tweaking these assumptions will almost certainly produce different final tables - including some that are closer to the actuality and therefore less newsworthy - but that's no reason to dismiss the underlying principle out of hand. Anyone who argues that xG is all complete hogwash is essentially claiming that all chances are created equal, and that there is no appreciable difference between a speculative shot from 30 yards and a tap-in from 3. Which seems a bit daft.
I think any stat that gives a side an 18 point swing against another (Man City -> Liverpool, -14 to +4) must be complete and utter balderdash