Michael Schuckers does not consider himself a die-hard hockey fan, yet all he seems to think about in his spare time is that frozen rubber disk and what happens to it in every moment of every NHL game.
That is to be expected for someone in the vanguard of hockey analytics. Schuckers, a statistics professor at St Lawrence University, has been crunching hockey numbers in his office for more than a decade.
“Ten years ago, a lot of academics would dabble with the stuff, but wouldn’t do it a lot, because it was not really rewarded in academia,” said Schuckers, whose first paper was a chart on the NFL draft that placed a value on each player picked as a guide for possible trades. “At that time, it was a very, very small community of folks who were doing it. Now, probably half the teams in the NHL have somebody on staff doing this.”
Hockey is following the lead of baseball and basketball, the forerunners in the expansion of advanced statistics in sports. Just over a year ago, the NHL began offering enhanced statistics on its Web site.
For front offices and fans alike, the simple stuff (goals for and against, power-play goals, assists, saves, etc.) is simply not enough.
“There’s more and more data becoming available, and it’s being accepted more and more in the industry,” said Brian Macdonald, director of hockey analytics for the Florida Panthers. “It’s becoming more acceptable to use data to make a decision. It’s something that we would like to be a priority in our organization, both on the hockey side and the business side.”
“Corsi” and “Fenwick,” formulas to figure out time of possession in hockey, paved the way in hockey analytics. They are very similar and flawed, because they treat all events as equal — a hit in the neutral zone, a blocked shot, a scoring chance on a breakaway, from the blue line or from in front of the net, and so on.
More complex analytics have followed, and the sky seems to be the limit going forward. Analytics data is to be used in player personnel decisions, trades, evaluating coaches, matchups, line combinations and in professional and amateur scouting.
Schuckers, who combined with St Lawrence women’s hockey coach Chris Wells to create Statistical Sports Consulting, won second prize three years ago at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference with his Total Hockey Rating (THoR). It was a joint project with Jim Curro, a student writing his senior thesis.
THoR is a two-way player rating that accounts for every on-ice action event for every player. The score of the game and where players’ shifts start are also accounted for. Each event is assessed a value according to the chance that it leads to a goal. THoR also uses a statistical model to determine the value of each player’s contribution to the overall outcomes that occur while they are on the ice.
Each play from the NHL’s Real Time Scoring System (RTSS) is evaluated for its likelihood to lead to a goal in the ensuing 20 seconds. Ratings account for a player’s impact after adjusting for the quality of teammates, quality of competition, zone starts, score effects, etc. The metric is Wins Above Replacement relative to position.
To be certain, this is not yet rocket science. RTSS is known to be skewed with inconsistencies in the recording of events from rink to rink, although THoR accounts for this in its calculations.
Analytics has also shown that the value of winning face-offs is not what was expected, and that among the most valuable players are two-way forwards.
“There’s a great phrase — one of the hardest things to do is to count the things that don’t happen,” Schuckers said. “In hockey, how do we sort of quantify how somebody prevents goals? That’s hard, but two-way players like Patrice Bergeron [of the Boston Bruins], it’s very clear that when they’re on the ice they’re having a huge impact on the play at both ends.”
Schuckers said it is also difficult to gauge the impact of a coach unless there is something concrete to consider, such as a team that is relatively static and the only change made is the coach. History suggests a change sometimes can have a dramatic impact.
“When the Penguins won the Stanley Cup, you can look at how the Penguins were under [current Montreal Canadiens coach Michel] Thierren [27-25-5] and under [Dan] Bylsma [18-3-4],” Schuckers said. “It’s a clear break in terms of the team playing much better under Bylsma.”
Despite the evolution of equipment that has enabled goalies to become seemingly impregnable between the pipes, the impact they have also is not as great as expected — at least on paper.
“Analytically, the consensus would be that goalies are not as valuable, that the difference between your [reigning league most valuable player] Carey Price [of the Canadiens] and an average NHL goalie is only about two or three wins a year,” Schuckers said. “The hard part is that goalies are very hard to predict. We don’t know enough about the shots that are taken. We do not have whether the goalie is screened and we do not have the speed of the puck.”
That is about to change. Technology is to open doors to more complex analytics that better measure performance.
At a January hockey analytics symposium at Carleton University in Ottawa that was co-organized by Schuckers and Shirley Mills of Carleton, there was discussion of computer chips being inserted in skates and more cameras recording games. That would make it easier for data keepers to know when players go over the boards, and who is on the ice and who is not.
Schuckers thinks two computer chips per player is probably going to happen in the NHL, because it would give some directional information, not just location.
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