Comments on: The Road to WAR (for hockey), Part 5: Getting Goals Above Baseline http://blog.war-on-ice.com/the-road-to-war-for-hockey-part-5-getting-goals-above-baseline/ Your site for modern hockey analytics Mon, 09 Nov 2015 19:11:37 +0000 hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.0 By: The Road To WAR, Part 11: Shot Rates For And Against, or that quality that we deliberately avoid calling “possession” | WAR On Ice: The Blog http://blog.war-on-ice.com/the-road-to-war-for-hockey-part-5-getting-goals-above-baseline/#comment-63 Wed, 08 Apr 2015 15:17:25 +0000 http://blog.war-on-ice.com/?p=47#comment-63 […] start with the model we proposed in our 2013 paper and demonstrated in Part 5 for teams. We start by measuring the rates at which low, medium and high danger shot […]

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By: The Road to WAR, Part 10: Modern Goaltending and Shooting | WAR On Ice: The Blog http://blog.war-on-ice.com/the-road-to-war-for-hockey-part-5-getting-goals-above-baseline/#comment-57 Fri, 03 Apr 2015 04:05:04 +0000 http://blog.war-on-ice.com/?p=47#comment-57 […] The process of generating shot attempts, at each level of danger, given the skaters for both teams (and not their goaltenders), is temporal and measured in rates. This will be done for skaters in the next post but uses the same approach as in Goals Above Baseline for teams. […]

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By: The Road to WAR, Part 7: What do we mean by “replacement”? A case study with faceoffs | WAR On Ice: The Blog http://blog.war-on-ice.com/the-road-to-war-for-hockey-part-5-getting-goals-above-baseline/#comment-50 Mon, 23 Mar 2015 14:02:01 +0000 http://blog.war-on-ice.com/?p=47#comment-50 […] a benchmark for performance isn’t sufficient here. When we measure team achievement, we simultaneously adjust for the strengths of their opponents to get a more precise estimate. To […]

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