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- Dec 14, 2015
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- AFL Club
- Essendon
- Moderator
- #101
Been working on this for a little while. This chart is of our clearances in 2017.
Stuff it tells us:
- They're represented as a percentage of total clearances per game, so that thin black line straight through the middle at 50% is the pass mark, effectively.
- You can look up in the data sheet (or mouse over any point on any players' line) to find the actual number of clearances by that player in that game.
- Players who average 2 or more clearances per game have their own section, if they average 1-2 they're in a different section, and the rest are in the third section.
- These sections are stacked so together the coloured ones are all of Essendon's clearances, with the grey section that covers the top of the graph being the oppositions' clearances in that week.
- Total clearances are at the bottom of the data sheet if you want absolute figures.
- Players are sorted by their average clearances, except the ruckmen who are clumped together instead of mixed in with the mids.
- The black line charted over the entire graph is the hit-outs won as a percentage of total hit outs.
- The white line charted over the entire graph is our score as a percentage.
Stuff it tells us:
- You can see as the chemistry between the ruck and the mids improves, so does the correlation between the hit-outs and the clearances.
- Likewise, as the chemistry between the inside and outside mids improves, so does the correlation between winning clearances and winning games.
- The correlation between score line and clearances also shows how often we were outplayed in particular parts of the ground and whether we could counter it in other parts:
- Lost the clearances but won the game, beaten in the middle but probably won it off rebound and getting loose on the wings or through the corridor.
- Won the clearances but lost the game, probably couldn't counter their rebound.
- McKernan clears the ball himself when he plays ruck, but when he is rucking the players around him win it a lot less, which more than counters the ones he wins himself. So basically five clearances forward, fifteen steps back.
- You can see how often our midfield wins the clearances as a group (that is, just the players who have their own sections), versus winning the clearances with the help of the rest of the team rotating through there, or straight up losing the stat altogether.
- When the midfield group are collectively winning less than a third or even just a quarter of the total clearances in a game, I think that's a pretty clear deficiency.
- No Jobe, lose the clearances, probably lose the game. Likewise if Jobe not in good form that day.
- Add Myers, win more clearances than otherwise. When Myers' came into a bit of form later in the year you can see his improvement as well. You can also see which games he was playing as a tagger xD
- Parish, Goddard, Myers and Merrett seem to have roughly the same amount of clearances in each game between them, which is probably representative of the amount of midfield minutes they each had. (Myers coming into form and Goddard playing more in defence, Merrett being tagged and Parish takes up the midfield duties, etc.)