0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Breaking down and comparing the average possession we have compared to the final results is interesting. In games we have won our average possession is 50%In games we have lost it is 59%In games we have drawn it is 52%N.B I have taken the Chesterfield numbers out of this as that game was so distorted by the red cards. Fairly clear where our strengths and weaknesses are from that cross section.
Quote from: GazLaz on December 16, 2024, 09:59:53 amBreaking down and comparing the average possession we have compared to the final results is interesting. In games we have won our average possession is 50%In games we have lost it is 59%In games we have drawn it is 52%N.B I have taken the Chesterfield numbers out of this as that game was so distorted by the red cards. Fairly clear where our strengths and weaknesses are from that cross section.I think that means nothing.It’s all about goals scored and goals conceded.Football matches are won and lost in both penalty areas.The number of stats now are quite unbelievable. The only 2 that really matter are the 2 above. It doesn’t matter one jot how much possession you have or don’t have.It is simply how you find a way not to concede goals and how to score goals. Football is a very simple game of pass and move. It seems in the modern day there are people trying to make out it is far more complex than that. Well imo it isn’t.
Quote from: Campsall rover on December 16, 2024, 10:36:49 amQuote from: GazLaz on December 16, 2024, 09:59:53 amBreaking down and comparing the average possession we have compared to the final results is interesting. In games we have won our average possession is 50%In games we have lost it is 59%In games we have drawn it is 52%N.B I have taken the Chesterfield numbers out of this as that game was so distorted by the red cards. Fairly clear where our strengths and weaknesses are from that cross section.I think that means nothing.It’s all about goals scored and goals conceded.Football matches are won and lost in both penalty areas.The number of stats now are quite unbelievable. The only 2 that really matter are the 2 above. It doesn’t matter one jot how much possession you have or don’t have.It is simply how you find a way not to concede goals and how to score goals. Football is a very simple game of pass and move. It seems in the modern day there are people trying to make out it is far more complex than that. Well imo it isn’t. I don't understand why some folk are so against statistics. Would you refuse to look at the sky before going out for a walk and deciding what to wear? Stats work in the same way. They add detail to the thought process.Here the issue is obvious. We are set up to hit teams in the transition. We break quickly and skilfully, and hit sides hard.When we have lots of possession, we are ponderous and don't have a clue how to get into an organised defence.These stats back that up. It's not just a stylistic thing. It's having a bad effect on our results too.
It looks to me like a lot of our possession consists of walking football, passing to the feet of static players who trap the ball before releasing it in a dead ball, free-kick fashion, to another static player who traps the ball and releases it in a dead ball situation to another static player. Often during our games, nobody runs with the ball! That is probably where our high percentage of possession comes from.When players run with the ball, they are a different team and are consistently on top.
In my opinion people are getting a bit brainwashed by all the statistics and this is due to the media harping on about it, they’ve turned it to American sport with the possession stats. The worse one is the assists column, when a player has passed it someone else, it could a two foot back heel or a 60 yard punt down the field. Players are supposed to pass the ball. On a slight tangent it’s like the statistic for appearances and goal scored, an injury time substitute appearance counts as much as a full game, which is wrong, it should be minutes per goal
Quote from: Draytonian III on December 16, 2024, 01:14:07 pmIn my opinion people are getting a bit brainwashed by all the statistics and this is due to the media harping on about it, they’ve turned it to American sport with the possession stats. The worse one is the assists column, when a player has passed it someone else, it could a two foot back heel or a 60 yard punt down the field. Players are supposed to pass the ball. On a slight tangent it’s like the statistic for appearances and goal scored, an injury time substitute appearance counts as much as a full game, which is wrong, it should be minutes per goal There's a stat for that!Goals/901. Mathew Stevens • AFC Wimbledon; 0.742. James Berry • Chesterfield; 0.703. Harry Smith • Swindon Town; 0.664. Will Grigg • Chesterfield; 0.625. David McGoldrick • Notts County; 0.616. Michael Cheek • Bromley; 0.597. Nathan Lowe • Walsall; 0.588. Andy Cook • Bradford City; 0.579. Alassana Jatta • Notts County; 0.5410. Cole Stockton • Salford City; 0.53
Opta have an interesting 'Zones of Control' feature which highlights which areas of the pitch a team has the majority of touches, https://theanalyst.com/competition/english-league-twoI've attached a picture of ours
Quote from: JDRovers on December 16, 2024, 02:43:52 pmOpta have an interesting 'Zones of Control' feature which highlights which areas of the pitch a team has the majority of touches, https://theanalyst.com/competition/english-league-twoI've attached a picture of oursIt just comes up with a blank pitch for me JD, which isn't very encouraging!
Quote from: Pancho Regan on December 17, 2024, 07:52:48 amQuote from: JDRovers on December 16, 2024, 02:43:52 pmOpta have an interesting 'Zones of Control' feature which highlights which areas of the pitch a team has the majority of touches, https://theanalyst.com/competition/english-league-twoI've attached a picture of oursIt just comes up with a blank pitch for me JD, which isn't very encouraging!Where it shows AFC Wimbledon, choose Doncaster