zoogs
Assistant Coach
bball, the implication being made with this stat is that the offense will always disappear when it counts. I think of it as less of an active indictment, so much as a passive reflection that the defense is a much better unit than the offense right now, but I think everyone knows how elite the defense is.
For two years now the Blackshirts almost never seriously get scored on. There have been FOUR games where we had more than 21 points allowed in this time period. FOUR! Amazing statistic. Consequentially, the only times we lose will be the times when we don't score a lot of points on offense.
The opposite case would be if we had a world-beater offense that would put up 30 points on anyone. Then you look at the handful of losses that do happen in that timeframe, and you think, "Hmm, the common theme here is that the defense gives up a ton of points in each loss." Nooooo, really? Doesn't mean the defense is bad. Could be a very good defense, in fact, just not as good as the offense that scores points on everyone. The eliteness of the offense would mean you pull up any loss and it will almost certainly be one where the other team scored a lot, because that was the only way they could win.
Similarly the only way any team (TT aside) has been able to win on Nebraska in two years is to stop the offense. Third alternative - if neither the offense or defense is elite, then you would get some 10-13 losses, some 10-30 losses, and some 30-40 losses. The defense has carried the team largely for two years which is why almost every loss is of the 10-13 variety, but it doesn't mean the offense sucks so much as the defense is the better unit. Again - unremarkable. I would say the offense was pretty bad last year though, and also bad this year after Taylor's injury.
I guess my point is: it's kind of a good thing at the extremes. When the only way a team can beat us, is if they have to completely shut down the offense from scoring any kind of points. Or (if the O and D had their situations reversed) if the only way a team could beat us, is if they have the guns to put up a million points. If either of those scenarios describe a team, it's a pretty good sign that it's a team that is just not going to have a lot of losses.
What do we want this statistic to be? Higher? I bet that is the case for countless middling, average teams out there that don't have an elite unit and lose games every which way. Actually after thinking everything over, maybe the best statistic to look at would be "average margin of defeat." The best teams have that as a low number, and for us, this year especially, it has been.
For two years now the Blackshirts almost never seriously get scored on. There have been FOUR games where we had more than 21 points allowed in this time period. FOUR! Amazing statistic. Consequentially, the only times we lose will be the times when we don't score a lot of points on offense.
The opposite case would be if we had a world-beater offense that would put up 30 points on anyone. Then you look at the handful of losses that do happen in that timeframe, and you think, "Hmm, the common theme here is that the defense gives up a ton of points in each loss." Nooooo, really? Doesn't mean the defense is bad. Could be a very good defense, in fact, just not as good as the offense that scores points on everyone. The eliteness of the offense would mean you pull up any loss and it will almost certainly be one where the other team scored a lot, because that was the only way they could win.
Similarly the only way any team (TT aside) has been able to win on Nebraska in two years is to stop the offense. Third alternative - if neither the offense or defense is elite, then you would get some 10-13 losses, some 10-30 losses, and some 30-40 losses. The defense has carried the team largely for two years which is why almost every loss is of the 10-13 variety, but it doesn't mean the offense sucks so much as the defense is the better unit. Again - unremarkable. I would say the offense was pretty bad last year though, and also bad this year after Taylor's injury.
I guess my point is: it's kind of a good thing at the extremes. When the only way a team can beat us, is if they have to completely shut down the offense from scoring any kind of points. Or (if the O and D had their situations reversed) if the only way a team could beat us, is if they have the guns to put up a million points. If either of those scenarios describe a team, it's a pretty good sign that it's a team that is just not going to have a lot of losses.
What do we want this statistic to be? Higher? I bet that is the case for countless middling, average teams out there that don't have an elite unit and lose games every which way. Actually after thinking everything over, maybe the best statistic to look at would be "average margin of defeat." The best teams have that as a low number, and for us, this year especially, it has been.
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