Our centre bounce combinations against the dees
I wonder who called them. Captain Chaos? Absolutely amazing.
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Our centre bounce combinations against the dees
Our centre bounce combinations against the dees
I probably should've mentioned this in my original comment, but I didn't include centre bounces where there were ruck infringements (as no first touch occurred), nor where a ruck just belted the ball out of the area of the mids into general play. So this would account for a number of the missing centre bounces from my data. But yes it would also assume Melbourne had their share of first touches at centre bounces.I'm curious about this data, and the earlier data posted by caesar88 .
First question: is there any significance to the order the names are listed in the columns in this table e.g. does it represent ruck-rover, centre, rover or something like that OR is it just a random order for the three players listed?
Second question: by my calculations, there were about 24 centre bounces (including ball ups after a failed first bounce): 4 at the start of quarters plus another 20 after goals (21 goals except one of them was after the siren). According to the data posted, we got first touch on 6 of these and then successfully converted that into a clearance 5 times. Does this mean Melbourne got first touch the other 18 times?
Third (not sure if this is a question or an observation), it is tempting to infer that because Warner attended more centre bounces than Heeney (18 to 14), but Heeney got more first touches than Warner (9 to 2) that Heeney was vastly more effective at getting his hands on it first (and/or they just had different roles and Warner was playing a really outside role). Except that the first stat applies only to CBAs and the second stat applies to all stoppages and so this could be wrong. Might be useful to know where individuals got their first touches and the proportion of those that were successful so that we can judge how successful a player was at winning a first touch relative to the number of opportunities they had to do so.
Depends on how much bench time each of them plus Grundy has, assuming McLean rucks during Grundy's bench. On Friday TOG%Fair bit of debate in the last few weeks here about whether to play two or three tall forwards. I'm curious to find out how much of a game all the three of them are in the forward line together. When you take into account the time spent on the bench for any one of the three, or the time that McLean spends in the ruck.
I would guess it's only 40 to 50 percent of game time that all three are playing forward at the same time. Not sure how simple it would be for someone smarter than me to find the answer for the first two games this year? or maybe games late last season after Buddy had finished up?
I have a vague memory of someone posting about it but can't recall where?
Press play on this:
And then read these numbers about our handball game the last two weeks:
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Did you know that Nick Daicos has 0 contested marks after 50 games?
Context:What am I looking at here Millky
Why are there nine graphics and what do the blue and red lines mean?
Matt Roberts has a kicking efficiency of 92.3% this season - the second-highest of the top-50 kicks in the AFL.
I've got the app but I can't find the article, Grim. What is the headline? All I can find in his personal stats is a disposal efficiency of 87%.From the Footy Live app
It’s not the article. In every game’s section (before the match) there is a KPI tab. It usually contains a gem or two in there. i always make sure to check it outI've got the app but I can't find the article, Grim. What is the headline? All I can find in his personal stats is a disposal efficiency of 87%.
Might be his graph in the Dream Team but it’s really difficult to read.
Thanks so much, Grim. Found it!It’s not the article. In every game’s section (before the match) there is a KPI tab. It usually contains a gem or two in there. i always make sure to check it out