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League One xG table
Comments
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ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?2 -
Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.I was at that Brentford game and we scored and then camped in our box and on another day could have been thrashed by a very good Brentford side - I imagine the other games were similar and they were just hugely unfortunate and the stats proved this - they knew that over the long term that the results would come and they did!2 -
Scoham said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?
Which is where the latter part of your post is nail on head.
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ElfsborgAddick said:Scoham said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?
Which is where the latter part of your post is nail on head.
It would be mad to ignore data or put too much trust in it.6 -
Scoham said:ElfsborgAddick said:Scoham said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?
Which is where the latter part of your post is nail on head.
It would be mad to ignore data or put too much trust in it.4 -
ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?1 -
The debate doesn’t need to be complicated, it’s a straight choice between:
a) having lots of information.
b) not having lots of information.And before anyone says “too much information is bad!” That’s what analysts are for.
If you’re somehow yelling for option b) in 2024 you need to adjust your watch.5 -
Maybe XG will save me
And after all it's my wonderwall.0 -
BR7_addick said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?Maybe that football is a simple game and that you pass the ball to a team mate, and move towards the opponents goal.That is my humble opinion rather than being difficult and argumentative.0 -
ElfsborgAddick said:BR7_addick said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?Maybe that football is a simple game and that you pass the ball to a team mate, and move towards the opponents goal.That is my humble opinion rather than being difficult and argumentative.4 - Sponsored links:
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fenaddick said:ElfsborgAddick said:BR7_addick said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?Maybe that football is a simple game and that you pass the ball to a team mate, and move towards the opponents goal.That is my humble opinion rather than being difficult and argumentative.
Yes daddy.
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Karel Fraeye levels of analysis!3
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ElfsborgAddick said:BR7_addick said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?Maybe that football is a simple game and that you pass the ball to a team mate, and move towards the opponents goal.That is my humble opinion rather than being difficult and argumentative.0 -
BR7_addick said:ElfsborgAddick said:BR7_addick said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?Maybe that football is a simple game and that you pass the ball to a team mate, and move towards the opponents goal.That is my humble opinion rather than being difficult and argumentative.
Well I'm glad that you now agree with me.
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fenaddick said:Scoham said:ElfsborgAddick said:Scoham said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?
Which is where the latter part of your post is nail on head.
It would be mad to ignore data or put too much trust in it.1 -
BR7_addick said:golfaddick said:Still a load of bollox.
We've let 2 goals in this season (league games) from shots outside the box. I bet the XG on those were pretty low. But they went in. So the stats are meaningless. Only thing that matters is goals scored & goals conceded.1 -
killerandflash said:Stats don't replace the scoreline, but they do give an indication of how a team is playing.
Two 1-0 wins. One in which the winning team has 2 shots, 1 on target. The second in which the winning team has 25 shots, 11 on target.
The same scoreline but very different performances.0 -
golfaddick said:killerandflash said:Stats don't replace the scoreline, but they do give an indication of how a team is playing.
Two 1-0 wins. One in which the winning team has 2 shots, 1 on target. The second in which the winning team has 25 shots, 11 on target.
The same scoreline but very different performances.
When we lost 5-0 to Watford in the Luzon days I looked at the XG stats and thought we were unlucky.
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golfaddick said:killerandflash said:Stats don't replace the scoreline, but they do give an indication of how a team is playing.
Two 1-0 wins. One in which the winning team has 2 shots, 1 on target. The second in which the winning team has 25 shots, 11 on target.
The same scoreline but very different performances.2 -
can someone actually post the league table based on xG ?
That is, after all the point of the thread0 - Sponsored links:
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This is the Opta table ranked by XGD. Numbers down the left are actual league position0 -
MrOneLung said:can someone actually post the league table based on xG ?
That is, after all the point of the thread
The point about xG is that it takes 25-30 data points per game, and not just the goals. It can therefore be useful to judge over ten games and compare vs:
- the competition
- previous seasons
- changes when there's a change in management, or players in/out due to transfers or injury
There will always be outliers, but most clubs will revert to their mean. If a club is outperforming xG then the choice is to ride out their luck, change approach, accept a downturn, or acquire / rehabilitate players.
In our case, Leaburn and Edwards are now available, and we require a win away to Stevenage or Bristol Rovers so as to stay in the frame. Should we win one plus our performances and xG improve then the bookies will perhaps place us back as one of the six favourites for a top six finish?
The point being that the bookies and xG are both independent of any Charlton bias, thus giving us a view which isn't distorted by our own views and emotions when watching the games.
What matters is that Nathan Jones needs to find away to create more, decent chances without compromising the serious progress made in defence. We've made some inroads with set pieces - whether one uses anecdotes or xG our attacking threat is roughly half our competition!5 -
Here's the link if you want to sort by any different metric: https://theanalyst.com/competition/english-league-one/table0
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seriously_red said:MrOneLung said:can someone actually post the league table based on xG ?
That is, after all the point of the thread
The point about xG is that it takes 25-30 data points per game, and not just the goals. It can therefore be useful to judge over ten games and compare vs:
- the competition
- previous seasons
- changes when there's a change in management, or players in/out due to transfers or injury
There will always be outliers, but most clubs will revert to their mean. If a club is outperforming xG then the choice is to ride out their luck, change approach, accept a downturn, or acquire / rehabilitate players.
In our case, Leaburn and Edwards are now available, and we require a win away to Stevenage or Bristol Rovers so as to stay in the frame. Should we win one plus our performances and xG improve then the bookies will perhaps place us back as one of the six favourites for a top six finish?
The point being that the bookies and xG are both independent of any Charlton bias, thus giving us a view which isn't distorted by our own views and emotions when watching the games.
What matters is that Nathan Jones needs to find away to create more, decent chances without compromising the serious progress made in defence. We've made some inroads with set pieces - whether one uses anecdotes or xG our attacking threat is roughly half our competition!
No one else had noticed.3 -
Covered End said:seriously_red said:MrOneLung said:can someone actually post the league table based on xG ?
That is, after all the point of the thread
The point about xG is that it takes 25-30 data points per game, and not just the goals. It can therefore be useful to judge over ten games and compare vs:
- the competition
- previous seasons
- changes when there's a change in management, or players in/out due to transfers or injury
There will always be outliers, but most clubs will revert to their mean. If a club is outperforming xG then the choice is to ride out their luck, change approach, accept a downturn, or acquire / rehabilitate players.
In our case, Leaburn and Edwards are now available, and we require a win away to Stevenage or Bristol Rovers so as to stay in the frame. Should we win one plus our performances and xG improve then the bookies will perhaps place us back as one of the six favourites for a top six finish?
The point being that the bookies and xG are both independent of any Charlton bias, thus giving us a view which isn't distorted by our own views and emotions when watching the games.
What matters is that Nathan Jones needs to find away to create more, decent chances without compromising the serious progress made in defence. We've made some inroads with set pieces - whether one uses anecdotes or xG our attacking threat is roughly half our competition!
No one else had noticed.
For your own team it adds evidence or challenges your own views, just as any stats do.1 -
Covered End said:seriously_red said:MrOneLung said:can someone actually post the league table based on xG ?
That is, after all the point of the thread
The point about xG is that it takes 25-30 data points per game, and not just the goals. It can therefore be useful to judge over ten games and compare vs:
- the competition
- previous seasons
- changes when there's a change in management, or players in/out due to transfers or injury
There will always be outliers, but most clubs will revert to their mean. If a club is outperforming xG then the choice is to ride out their luck, change approach, accept a downturn, or acquire / rehabilitate players.
In our case, Leaburn and Edwards are now available, and we require a win away to Stevenage or Bristol Rovers so as to stay in the frame. Should we win one plus our performances and xG improve then the bookies will perhaps place us back as one of the six favourites for a top six finish?
The point being that the bookies and xG are both independent of any Charlton bias, thus giving us a view which isn't distorted by our own views and emotions when watching the games.
What matters is that Nathan Jones needs to find away to create more, decent chances without compromising the serious progress made in defence. We've made some inroads with set pieces - whether one uses anecdotes or xG our attacking threat is roughly half our competition!
No one else had noticed.
Let's just go back to the early 1900s and focus on the final score and vibes only.3 -
Covered End said:seriously_red said:MrOneLung said:can someone actually post the league table based on xG ?
That is, after all the point of the thread
The point about xG is that it takes 25-30 data points per game, and not just the goals. It can therefore be useful to judge over ten games and compare vs:
- the competition
- previous seasons
- changes when there's a change in management, or players in/out due to transfers or injury
There will always be outliers, but most clubs will revert to their mean. If a club is outperforming xG then the choice is to ride out their luck, change approach, accept a downturn, or acquire / rehabilitate players.
In our case, Leaburn and Edwards are now available, and we require a win away to Stevenage or Bristol Rovers so as to stay in the frame. Should we win one plus our performances and xG improve then the bookies will perhaps place us back as one of the six favourites for a top six finish?
The point being that the bookies and xG are both independent of any Charlton bias, thus giving us a view which isn't distorted by our own views and emotions when watching the games.
What matters is that Nathan Jones needs to find away to create more, decent chances without compromising the serious progress made in defence. We've made some inroads with set pieces - whether one uses anecdotes or xG our attacking threat is roughly half our competition!
No one else had noticed.4 -
Callumcafc said:Covered End said:seriously_red said:MrOneLung said:can someone actually post the league table based on xG ?
That is, after all the point of the thread
The point about xG is that it takes 25-30 data points per game, and not just the goals. It can therefore be useful to judge over ten games and compare vs:
- the competition
- previous seasons
- changes when there's a change in management, or players in/out due to transfers or injury
There will always be outliers, but most clubs will revert to their mean. If a club is outperforming xG then the choice is to ride out their luck, change approach, accept a downturn, or acquire / rehabilitate players.
In our case, Leaburn and Edwards are now available, and we require a win away to Stevenage or Bristol Rovers so as to stay in the frame. Should we win one plus our performances and xG improve then the bookies will perhaps place us back as one of the six favourites for a top six finish?
The point being that the bookies and xG are both independent of any Charlton bias, thus giving us a view which isn't distorted by our own views and emotions when watching the games.
What matters is that Nathan Jones needs to find away to create more, decent chances without compromising the serious progress made in defence. We've made some inroads with set pieces - whether one uses anecdotes or xG our attacking threat is roughly half our competition!
No one else had noticed.
Let's just go back to the early 1900s and focus on the final score and vibes only.2 -
ElfsborgAddick said:BR7_addick said:ElfsborgAddick said:Callumcafc said:ElfsborgAddick said:ValleyGary said:I don’t take too much notice of it, but the fact that clubs analytics departments use it keenly, shows it means something.
I agree with that, but how meaningful and successful it is would be an interesting question to coaches and managers.
They’ve both no doubt moved on to even more advanced metrics these days to stay ahead of the game - and the same discussions will be had in 2040 about whatever they’re using today.
And there are clubs using this stuff that get relegated, so where does that leave XG?Maybe that football is a simple game and that you pass the ball to a team mate, and move towards the opponents goal.That is my humble opinion rather than being difficult and argumentative.2