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Leafs Finally Win One

There have been lots of reasons all season to think that the Leafs are a lot better than they've actually played.  The fact that no team - not even the expansion Atlanta Thrashers - has been this bad over a full season was a pretty good one.  One fact that was definitely in their favor was that they were out-shooting their opponents 32.8 to 30.0 per 60 minutes at 5-on-5.  Horrendous goaltending aside, that's the hallmark of a good team.

So when they finally beat the Anaheim Ducks last night, I looked at the shot totals - 39-28 Toronto - and thought, of course they beat them if they out-shot them by 11.  And if you assume all shots are created equal, a team that outshoots its opponent 39-28 is going to win 70% of the time.  Except not all shots are created equal...

Star-divide

Over the last four seasons, visiting teams that have outshot their opponents by 11 shots have a winning percentage of just 53% - counting regulation and OT wins, and splitting shootouts 50/50.  And the reason why is shown in this graph:

Outshot_medium

Teams that get outshot tend to have much higher shooting percentages, so while the shot totals may not be close, scoring is, and so the advantage to the outshooting team is limited.  Additionally, there's a significant home-ice advantage - about 6% - on shooting percentage, which reduces the road team's winning percentage.

Likens has explored the primary reasons that this happens in the aggregate over at his blog.  A team with the lead will play defensively, allowing a lot more shots in general while limiting the number of good scoring chances.  At the same time, they'll limit their offensive focus, and end up with fewer shots on goal as a result.  If we had the same number of shots on goal, but teams scored six goals per game instead of three - say by requiring every NHL goaltender to be 17 or under - we'd be less likely to see this disparity.

As for the Leafs, they got a big chunk of their shots - and two goals - in the first period last night during an extended 5-on-3 power-play.  The two-man advantage is an obvious exception to the notion that all shots are equally likely to go in, and the Leafs scored two goals on seven shots in under three minutes, and it leads to the second-most important truism in hockey: don't take more penalties than your opponents.

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“Additionally, there’s a significant home-ice advantage – about 6% – on shooting percentage, which reduces the road team’s winning percentage.”

Tyler seemed to have found differently…

http://www.mc79hockey.com/?p=2980

You may have been talking about overall Sh% and not just ES, but that’s probably an indication that home teams, on average, get slightly more PP’s than road teams. (I think that last part is true, actually.)

by sunnymehta.com on Oct 27, 2009 3:59 PM EDT reply actions  

Yeah, just total shooting percentage. I was trying to point out the error in my thinking.

by Hawerchuk on Oct 27, 2009 4:09 PM EDT up reply actions  

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