‘Extraordinary’ mistakes that are killing 0-2 Cats

‘Extraordinary’ mistakes that are killing 0-2 Cats

Confronted on AFL 360, Geelong coach Chris Scott described scores from turnovers as “a really broad stat that you’ve got to dig into a little bit deeper”.

Champion Data knowledgeable analyst Daniel Hoyne did simply that, and located one thing “extraordinary”.

Defending turnovers, and scoring off turnovers they create, has been a power of the Cats in latest seasons.

This yr the numbers have flipped, and there’s a easy contributing issue for why opposition groups are capable of win the ball again off the Cats and hit the scoreboard.

“They are going for the hardest kicks in the competition by a mile,” Hoyne stated on this week’s episode of Pure Footy.

WATCH THE FULL EPISODE OF PURE FOOTY ABOVE

Hoyne stated he “almost fell off my chair” when he analysed the kicks Geelong gamers have been trying all around the area.

“The AFL average is about 50 per cent of your kicks should be going to a teammate.

“This year only 40 per cent of their kicks are meant to be hitting a teammate, based on the AFL average.

“Collingwood are going for hard kicks, they’re going at 48 per cent – that’s a low number. Geelong are going at 40 per cent. That’s extraordinary.

“I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a number like that over a two-week period.”

Incredibly, recruit Ollie Henry is the one Geelong participant trying kicks with a greater than 50 per cent anticipated hit price – “everyone else is around that 35-40 per cent mark”.

“As a result of pulling the trigger and trying to hit these amazingly challenging, difficult kicks, they’re getting absolutely torched the other way”.

In two rounds the Cats have given up 141 factors from turnovers, a mean of 70.5 per match. Last yr they conceded a mean of 34 factors a sport from the identical supply.

When it involves “giveaways” – howlers that go straight to the opposition – “they’ve gifted up six goals a game.” Last season the Cats averaged 13.9 factors towards from giveaways.

“They weren’t boring last year, they were great to watch,” Hoyne stated. “It’s just that for some reason they are trying to pull off the most outrageous kicks.”

In an enormous episode, Hoyne and Fox Footy knowledgeable David King took a detailed take a look at the Bulldogs’ midfield issues, the one stat hurting Adelaide coach Matthew Nicks, Fremantle’s Nat Fyfe dilemma and the parable of Collingwood’s lightning quick ball motion.

Originally printed as Pure Footy: Stats males David King and Daniel Hoyne on the massive spherical 2 developments

Source: www.news.com.au