DeadsetAce
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- May 31, 2004
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gotcha...thanks. if i was in town, woulda been cool to attend, even tho im not a huge stat guy. god damn work tripOriginally Posted by True Blues
Basically, that's it. WAR is a great omnibus statistic for assessing a player's value. In hockey, however, its a bit more difficult to estimate "wins" per se; so given that the team with the most goals wins, the logic is to substitute wins with goals. (I talked to Michael Schuckers briefly about it after the Hockey Analytics panel, and he used a different term than WAR, but I cannot recall what it was exactly-- something to do with Average Goals). Perhaps an easier way to think about it is, "How many goals per 60 minutes does player X add to his team?" or "How many goals per 60 minutes does player X subtract from his team?" This, then, can lead to the creation of an Adjusted Plus/Minus.Originally Posted by frink85
if its the same as baseball, WAR is Wins Above Replacement and im assuming GAR is Goals Above ReplacementOriginally Posted by DeadsetAce
can you explain what this is?
basically if you remove a player from the lineup and replace him with a benchwarmer or minor leaguer its a number that tells you how much better that player is than the lesser player at his position
edit: i was thinking of VORP for replacing a player with an average player.
Brian Macdonald presented a paper at the conference attempting to do this ("An Expected Goals Model for Evaluating NHL Teams and Players"), but there is some disagreement in the literature as to how to best operationalize expected goals. From what I understand, several others have, or are in process of, constructing their own models.