threenewpadlocks
Brownlow Medallist
Game theory is a beautiful thing.Just to bounce off you.
What I took from your analysis - ignoring the larger issues the paper was actually about - was that a lot of center bounce results are about luck. So if as a coach you set up knowing that you can get a small, but consistent, advantage over an opposition that doesn't recognize this. The message isn't that contested ball, or center bounce wins are unimportant. It is quite clear from your paper that they are (+1.06). But, it is that thinking in a deterministic way provides an advantage to the coach that thinks probablistically. So what I took is that the analysis can help coaches and players think more clearly about how the game actually works, compared to how we traditionally think about it.
Thus, knowing that center bounce clearances = advantage, a coach would naturally focus a lot of attention on obtaining center bounce clearances. They would play more, and better quality players, in the center bounce area. They would set up for how best to take advantage of winning to center bounce. But, if you accept luck is probably more important you would set up to try and nullify the center bounce as much or more than trying to win it. And you would set up more and better quality players to 1) take advantage of a randomly bouncing ball, and 2) you would bias your structure a bit more toward losing the center clearance, knowing that because the ball will come in fast, the opposition will not have a good structure if you can get the ball and bring it out. You can tilt the (nominal) field of play in your direction. But, what you wouldn't do is to give up the center bounce entirely because then the opposition would change their set up knowing they would have control of the ball. Then you would essentially have a game style of playing in your defensive half and hoping to stop ball coming in fast and cleanly, then rebounding. The opposition coach would structure accordingly, boosting the center clearance and playing extra guys behind the ball. But, if you just adjusted a little bit you would still get some center clearances and force the opposition to set up to win the center clearance as priority, allowing you to tilt advantage your way.
Is that the right way to think about this sort of thing??
It's funny because there's a lot of game theory that goes on in coaching and development of game styles where clubs fight to a sort of arms race and it becomes a zero sum effort.
Take contested possessions. They're important, and the Hawks were rank 18 in that category and routinely criticised for that. But what they probably realised is that there's no point gunning to win contested possessions when 17 other clubs are also doing that.
There's also a lot of wank about clearance numbers and contested possession numbers when a lot of it is just noise or a result of the balance of the 22 you play.
Clearance win differential theoretically should correlate with more success, but it doesn't because it's just one small part of the wider game of footy. The Bulldogs' great clearance success this year is probably less to do with any philosophical success and simply our list has a lot of players with an inside midfield skillset so we rotate more players more often through midfield therefore we have fresher legs and unique matchups the opposition adjusts to.




