You might want to have a talk with about 95% of the hockey statistics community. They wrongfully use the word "luck" to describe variance in team SH% & SV% because they don't understand what is really going on there. Hockey analytics are such ridiculously lazy math, that that crowd has fallen into the trap of explaining away anything that doesn't fit neatly into their very basic math formulas.
Well don't put me in with that crowd.
Hockey analytics are useful tools.... tools that can be used to augment traditional eyeball scouting. They are not the be all and end all and I've never said they are. They are useful though.
You'll never find me in either the pro-analytics (SB Nation style)or the anti-analytics (Steve Simmons style) crowd. I don't believe things are so black and white. I think there are some very useful metrics out there. Metrics that when used, with context, can be very informative. But context is key.
I don't want to get into a semantics argument, but "luck" doesn't exist. Probability exists. Certain interactions lead to higher probabilities of certain outcomes. PDO is a measurement of probability, and skill can absolutely effect those interactions.
First of all...a PDO 10% higher than average? With a .930sv% and 11.8%? I call bullshit. That's a 1045 max.
Yes I had a typo... as you can see above I said, "when we start talking about being above 104.0 as the leafs were earlier in the year (ie December), you have to see that some of that is luck."
I know it should have been 104.8, not 110.
Yes, but the expected regression should be to the mean. You're no more likely to be a 1100 than you are a 900, and if you are a 1100, regression to the mean, means performing at something much closer to 1000 from that point onward.
Yes, and look at the Leafs record from December onward. A team that from that point forward was a 500 hockey club, propped up by an unrealistic number of shootout victories and eventually even that collapsed on them.
The first thing to go was the goaltending dropping from 940 levels (first with Reimer, then with Bernier, who while still playing well and above average for an NHL goalie, wasn't playing the mind numbingly insane he was in october november) .... then we saw shooting percentages completely fall of the map in recent weeks.
This is based more on the composition of a team though and not on some mystical levelling effect of "luck". If you constructed a team that received elite .930+ goaltending, and had high talent level forwards shooting 10%+, you're going to be around a 1030 or higher every year. That's not luck at work, that's elite levels of skill at work. There will be variance in performance, even among elite athletes, but that's a group of players that will out perform average, every year.
Theoretically could you assemble a team with enough high level talent forwards shooting 10%+? Yes you probably could. In today's NHL with a salary cap and the draft set up to favor weaker teams, and all the other mechanisms for parity? Good luck with that.
You're preaching to the choir, though blindly believing in possession as the cure all is as wrong as Randy's nonsense.
Cure all? No... But a more possession system would have got this roster into the playoffs IMO.
Winning the cup? No, they didn't have the talent for that.
Its more than just Randy... its roster construction too.