LapDawg said:
But what numbers are you running? Just Peattie's or do you actually have NCAA stats ready to show that 45-49 is a <50% conversion rate on avg.? If so...please present them. Since you're so interested in Peattie...shouldn't you recognize that in your famed 45-49 zone he was 2-for-2 last year?
Maybe college kickers aren't as inaccurate as you suggest.
Heh, you found the same stat sheet I did. Unfortunately I wasn't able to find any stat sheet breaking down the attempts into 5-yard increments.
That stat sheet only lists the top 100 kickers and of course there are 119 1-A teams I believe, but just running those sheer numbers produces a 57% conversion rate from 40-49, and 47% conversion rate from 50+.
Now given that the 19 or so worst kickers in those ranges are excluded from the sample (that stat sheet is sortable, thankfully), would it not be fair to eliminate the stats of some of the kickers from the top of the bell curve, say, the top 7 or so? I suggest only the top 7 instead of the top 19 because given that the worst 19 from those ranges were probably a good bit less likely to have been utilized by their teams in longer distance situations, eliminating the top 19 would unfairly skew the results imo...and I'd much rather be found to be just flat out wrong than for it to be bandied about that I wasn't more than fair in attacking your assertion, or that I was *gasp* a stat masseur.
Now when you eliminate the top 7 kickers' stats, the 40-49 conversion rate drops to 54%. Tellingly though, the 50+ conversion rate drops to 37%.
Now given that most teams are unlikely to attempt 55+ field goals because of the lower probability of conversion AND the surrender of excellent field position, isn't it fair to assume that most of those 50+ attempts occurred, say, in the 50-54 range?
Similarly, just by the percentages alone, isn't it also fair to assume that
more of the
successful 40-49 attempts
probably fell in the lower yardage range of that category, and further, that the conversion rate for 45-49 yarders probably fell somewhere in between the overall 40-49 conversion rate and the 50+ conversion rate? And isn't it further fair to assume, if you grant me the assumption in the paragraph above about the probable length of most 50+ attempts, that the 45-49 conversion rate is closer to the 50+ stat than the overall 40-49 conversion rate?
You're gonna argue to me that even though these college kickers are far more skilled than I apparently thought them to be, despite this far greater skill they're somehow magically "spooked" by the addition of one measly digit, to the extent that that one measly digit increment drops their conversion probability a whopping 17% or more?
What, is it a superstition like not stepping on foul lines in baseball? Do they rub a chicken foot on their holders' hands just before they kick 50+ yarders to ward off those "evil voodoo 50 yard spirits"?
"Coach, I can't go out there and kick that 50+ yarder today, the moon is in the second house and I forgot my lucky chicken foot! Those evil 50 yarder voodoo spirits will have their evil way with me for sure today!"
You've got to see the inherent contradiction in your argument here. "Kickers at the college level are far more skilled than you apparently thought, GB, but oh wait, the mental addition of one digit to their attempts magically and instantaneously produces a whopping 17% reduction in efficiency." I would grant you that the mental aspect may contribute to as much as an instantaneous 5-10% drop in conversion probability, but 17%? C'mon dude, if these kickers are as skilled as
you're arguing, that just doesn't equate.
I stand by my assertion that the conversion rate most likely crosses over into <50% somewhere in the 45-49 range. I think it's far more logical to assume that the statistical progression is more uniform than suggested by your "voodoo economics" proposition.
I will grant you that the stat sheet indicates Peattie is a below average college kicker, though.