After reading Ian’s piece, and the discussion following it, it occurred to me that one of the things we’ve all be struggling with is understanding what the baseline for success for a #1 or #6 etc pick looks like. Last year’s rookie class was headlined by guys like Odell Beckham Jr and Mike Evans, who both look like bargains, but what about in normal or quiet years. How good does a QB or DE have to be to justify a #1 pick, compared to say an RB or WR? That’s what I’m going to attempt to answer. Continue reading
Alternative Uptown Top Ranking the 2014 Season
Some of you may remember that at the end of the last season of the DynaBowl, when tallying up wins and losses and working out the draft order there was some ‘heated’ debate. I forget who was involved or exactly what the outcome was, aside from Dyna Hard, the 4th top scorers in the league in 2014, getting the first pick in the draft.
Anyway, it got me thinking. Firstly, how did a possible perception of unfairness occur and secondly is there anything that could be done to rectify this?
So, one of the quirks with Fantasy Football is how short the season is and how few games are played in a typical, traditional season. 13 games is not very many. It’s less than are played in the NFL, let alone football, basketball, ice hockey or let alone baseball. As such, it’s really difficult to use the season as a marker of true quality.
This is often noted in NFL, but at least in the NFL your opponent on any given weekend (or Thursday night. Or Monday night) has an impact on how you play your game. In fantasy football it would theoretically be possible to be the second highest scorer every single week and not win a game. Or be the second lowest scorer every week and win every game. Obviously the chances are ludicrously small, but it is just about possible. Therefore a win/loss record doesn’t necessarily reflect the strength of the teams.
Extrapolating from this, not only does it mean that the order the picks are made in could be compromised, but so too could the teams making the playoffs. In theory the best 4 teams should make the playoffs, but in 2014 The Brees made the playoffs despite scoring more regular season points than only 2 teams. Again, this isn’t like the NFL (or the Premier League) where a low scoring team can be successful by having a really good defence. A low scoring team has no control over whether they get beaten or not – it’s entirely based on luck.
In a venture like the ChatterBowl this is less of an issue (to me, at any rate), but the DynaBowl is a comparatively serious endeavour, given the time spent assessing rookies for the draft, assessing the value of contracts, managing the cap etc and so on. Given the time spent on managing teams, shouldn’t we work to reward the best teams rather than leaving it up to luck?
Of course, luck will always be present (as will Luck, the unbreakable man). This can be in the form of a defensive player getting 3 of his 5 sacks in one week or a 90 yard pick 6, or it can be that your opponent loses his bets 3 players to a bye the week you play him. I’m not saying we completely eliminate luck – we couldn’t.
What I am saying is that we should look to ways to reduce it so that the best teams are rewarded and the worst teams get the chance to pick from the new players before everyone else.
“But wait!” I hear you cry, “How much does the schedule really affect the standings?”
With our schedule in 2014, every team ended up with 5, 6, 7 or 8 wins. But complete fluke we were really bunched together. With a random re-arrangement of the fixtures, ensuring that no one played the same team in the same week they had before (so every fixture was new), the first variation I have produced the following results:
Team | Wins | Losses |
Dyna Hard | 11 | 2 |
Dynasore Losers | 10 | 3 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 9 | 4 |
Tamworth Two | 7 | 6 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 6 | 7 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 5 | 8 |
Champions of the Sun | 5 | 8 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 4 | 9 |
Here Comes The Brees | 4 | 9 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 4 | 9 |
I promise this was complete fluke that the worst team in 2014 ended up on top with this schedule and The Brees came in second from bottom.
Under this scenario our 2014 champions, DynaForOne Firebirds, didn’t make the cut for the playoffs.
The point of this is merely to say that schedule plays a massive part of success and perhaps we should look to remove that element as best we can.
I’m not saying we should just work on total points or anything like that. We all like the weekly competition. But there may be other options that operate as halfway houses, which are just as fun but more representative. Specifically two other options (with further variations thereon).
OPTION 1 – DOUBLE HEADERS
This is pretty simple. Everyone plays two fixtures a week. That’s it. It just doubles the number of games per season giving you a better chance of producing a record that is more representative of a team’s talent.
So I had the original schedule and the schedule used to create the above standings. Using those templates I just rearranged the order of the teams (so if, in week 1 team 1 played team 2 etc, I just changed who team 1 was and who team 2 was (etc and so on), which then created effectively a new schedule. I then created tables for how the season would have gone with the new double fixture lists. There are several versions to demonstrate how different results would have been, each of which is reproduced below for illustrative purposes and because I have no limit on space. The first of these tables uses the original schedule and the revised one produced above as the two schedules (I used total points, not head to head, as a tie-breaker, for simplicity):
Team | Total Points | Wins with schedule 1 | Wins with schedule 2 | Total Wins | Total Losses |
Dynasore Losers | 2478.93 | 8 | 10 | 18 | 8 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 2494.355 | 8 | 9 | 17 | 9 |
Dyna Hard | 2396.135 | 5 | 11 | 16 | 10 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 2397.8 | 7 | 6 | 13 | 13 |
Tamworth Two | 2388.085 | 6 | 7 | 13 | 13 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 2297.19 | 7 | 5 | 12 | 14 |
Here Comes The Brees | 2258.885 | 8 | 4 | 12 | 14 |
Champions of the Sun | 2392.665 | 6 | 5 | 11 | 15 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 2138.915 | 5 | 4 | 9 | 17 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 2008.795 | 5 | 4 | 9 | 17 |
Team | Total Points | Wins with schedule 1 | Wins with schedule 2 | Total Wins | Total Losses |
Dynasore Losers | 2478.93 | 9 | 10 | 19 | 7 |
Champions of the Sun | 2392.665 | 7 | 9 | 16 | 10 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 2494.355 | 8 | 7 | 15 | 11 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 2397.8 | 8 | 7 | 15 | 11 |
Tamworth Two | 2388.085 | 5 | 8 | 13 | 13 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 2297.19 | 6 | 7 | 13 | 13 |
Here Comes The Brees | 2258.885 | 7 | 5 | 12 | 14 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 2138.915 | 5 | 5 | 10 | 16 |
Dyna Hard | 2396.135 | 6 | 3 | 9 | 17 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 2008.795 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 18 |
Team | Total Points | Wins with schedule 1 | Wins with schedule 2 | Total Wins | Total Losses |
Dynasore Losers | 2478.93 | 9 | 8 | 17 | 9 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 2494.355 | 7.5 | 9 | 16.5 | 9.5 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 2397.8 | 7 | 9 | 16 | 10 |
Dyna Hard | 2396.135 | 7.5 | 7 | 14.5 | 11.5 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 2297.19 | 7 | 7 | 14 | 12 |
Champions of the Sun | 2392.665 | 7 | 5 | 12 | 14 |
Tamworth Two | 2388.085 | 6 | 6 | 12 | 14 |
Here Comes The Brees | 2258.885 | 5 | 5 | 10 | 16 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 2138.915 | 5 | 4 | 9 | 17 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 2008.795 | 4 | 5 | 9 | 17 |
Team | Total Points | Wins with schedule 1 | Wins with schedule 2 | Total Wins | Total Losses |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 2494.355 | 10 | 9 | 19 | 7 |
Dynasore Losers | 2478.93 | 8 | 9 | 17 | 9 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 2397.8 | 6 | 9 | 15 | 11 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 2297.19 | 7 | 8 | 15 | 11 |
Here Comes The Brees | 2258.885 | 9 | 6 | 15 | 11 |
Tamworth Two | 2388.085 | 5 | 7 | 12 | 14 |
Champions of the Sun | 2392.665 | 6 | 5 | 11 | 15 |
Dyna Hard | 2396.135 | 6 | 3 | 9 | 17 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 2008.795 | 4 | 5 | 9 | 17 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 2138.915 | 4 | 4 | 8 | 18 |
Team | Total Points | Wins with schedule 1 | Wins with schedule 2 | Total Wins | Total Losses |
Dynasore Losers | 2478.93 | 11 | 8 | 19 | 7 |
Dyna Hard | 2396.135 | 6 | 10 | 16 | 10 |
Tamworth Two | 2388.085 | 7 | 9 | 16 | 10 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 2494.355 | 8 | 7 | 15 | 11 |
Champions of the Sun | 2392.665 | 7 | 8 | 15 | 11 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 2397.8 | 7 | 6 | 13 | 13 |
Here Comes The Brees | 2258.885 | 7 | 5 | 12 | 14 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 2297.19 | 6 | 4 | 10 | 16 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 2008.795 | 5 | 4 | 9 | 17 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 2138.915 | 1 | 4 | 5 | 21 |
Team | Total Points | Wins with schedule 1 | Wins with schedule 2 | Total Wins | Total Losses |
Dynasore Losers | 2478.93 | 8 | 10 | 18 | 8 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 2397.8 | 8 | 8 | 16 | 10 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 2494.355 | 8.5 | 7 | 15.5 | 10.5 |
Here Comes The Brees | 2258.885 | 7 | 8 | 15 | 11 |
Dyna Hard | 2396.135 | 8.5 | 6 | 14.5 | 11.5 |
Tamworth Two | 2388.085 | 7 | 6 | 13 | 13 |
Champions of the Sun | 2392.665 | 6 | 6 | 12 | 14 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 2297.19 | 5 | 7 | 12 | 14 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 2008.795 | 3 | 5 | 8 | 18 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 2138.915 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 20 |
So with this method we end up with more match-ups and more rivalries, but there’s a risk that too many games are happening at once and we lose a bit of focus. It could be more fun or it could be confusing and, frankly, I don’t think we’d know until we did it.
OPTION 2 – VICTORY POINTS
So, under this scenario, each team would get 2 points for a win and 1 for a tie, rather than the traditional W/L result, but what we add in is 2 further points for the top 3 scoring teams in the week, 1 point for the 4 teams that score in the middle and 0 points for the 3 lowest scoring teams. This way, if you are the second top scoring team in a week, and you lose to the top scoring team, all is not lost! You still get 2 points towards your playoff push.
Want examples? Why sure. In week 1 of the 2014 season, the top scoring team beat the 4th top scoring team while the 2nd top scoring team beat the 3rd top scoring team. So under the victory point scenario, Dynablaster Bombermen would have scored 1 point despite the loss and Dyna Hard 2 points, despite their loss.
What would last season’s table have looked like?
Team | Victory Points | Scoring Points | Total Points |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 16 | 18 | 34 |
Dynasore Losers | 16 | 17 | 33 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 14 | 15 | 29 |
Here Comes The Brees | 16 | 12 | 28 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 14 | 12 | 26 |
Champions of the Sun | 12 | 14 | 26 |
Tamworth Two | 12 | 13 | 25 |
Dyna Hard | 10 | 14 | 24 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 10 | 8 | 18 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 10 | 7 | 17 |
Less of an impact – the same 4 teams in the playoffs and a little shuffling lower down, but I think you’d agree that it is a slightly more fair representation of the quality of teams.
The advantage is that even if you’re clearly beaten or going up against a team that is much stronger you still have something to cheer and getting a few more points in your Monday night game could give you an extra point and push you a step closer to the playoffs.
OPTION 3 (?!?) – COMBINED DOUBLE HEADERS AND VICTORY POINTS!
Using the first double header table to construct a double header and victory points table, we get the following:
Team | Total Wins | Total Losses | Victory Points | Scoring Points | Total Points |
Dynasore Losers | 18 | 8 | 36 | 17 | 53 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 17 | 9 | 34 | 18 | 52 |
Dyna Hard | 16 | 10 | 32 | 14 | 46 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 13 | 13 | 26 | 15 | 41 |
Tamworth Two | 13 | 13 | 26 | 13 | 39 |
Champions of the Sun | 11 | 15 | 22 | 14 | 36 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 12 | 14 | 24 | 12 | 36 |
Here Comes The Brees | 12 | 14 | 24 | 12 | 36 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 9 | 17 | 18 | 8 | 26 |
East Flanders Dungeoneers | 9 | 17 | 18 | 7 | 25 |
2014 DynaBowl Post Season Raw Data
That’s right, the raw data I used for my analysis is available. And it’s available here.
Just download that file and you can do your own analysis. The file gives you raw data for every team for every week, with the players who started and those who didn’t indicated (no IR or Taxi Squad players are included), along with their rank overall, by position and by team each week. There’s loads of stuff you could do. I’ll probably do some more, but I might not share it. Or I might.
If you do some and want to share it, let me know, and I will publish it.
2014 DynaBowl Post Season Performance Analysis – Part 3
So we were about to look at some positional statistics. Let’s start with a nice, simple split, total points by position, starting with the defence:
DT | DE | LB | CB | S | Def Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 40.000 | 306.500 | 527.500 | 157.300 | 231.300 | 1262.600 |
Dyna Hard | 88.750 | 370.150 | 473.200 | 153.600 | 156.800 | 1242.500 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 123.450 | 254.600 | 418.250 | 177.300 | 217.700 | 1191.300 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 270.000 | 172.200 | 295.600 | 188.600 | 134.450 | 1060.850 |
Dynasore Losers | 63.250 | 220.250 | 557.550 | 115.750 | 224.900 | 1181.700 |
East Flanders Flahutes | 177.000 | 176.000 | 342.000 | 174.450 | 171.950 | 1041.400 |
Here Comes The Brees | 254.750 | 123.350 | 322.000 | 212.250 | 257.600 | 1169.950 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 74.500 | 278.550 | 326.500 | 168.500 | 241.650 | 1089.700 |
Tamworth Two | 172.250 | 195.000 | 390.500 | 239.950 | 183.450 | 1181.150 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 80.000 | 151.550 | 447.000 | 157.575 | 160.500 | 996.625 |
Grand Total | 1343.950 | 2248.150 | 4100.100 | 1745.275 | 1980.300 | 11417.775 |
Now, when looking at these stats, you need to remember the flex options – teams did have the option of starting 1 or 2 DTs and 3 or 4 LBs. For example, in 8 of the 16 weeks, Here Comes The Brees started 2 DTs, while DFO did so in 12 of the 16 weeks, hence these two teams had by far the greatest number of points from this position.
Four teams, Champions of the Sun, Dyna Hard, Dynablaster Bombermen and Dynasore Losers only ever started 1 DT, while two more teams – Kelkowski and Dynasty of Sadness – only started 2 DTs once. We’ll get into the points per starter stats shortly, that was just to put the above numbers in a bit of context. What it does mean, though, is that only Dynablaster managed to get at least 100 points out of starting a solo DT.
So, as a percentage of all points gained by the team, how do the defensive positions break down?
DT | DE | LB | CB | S | Def Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 1.34% | 10.25% | 17.64% | 5.26% | 7.74% | 42.23% |
Dyna Hard | 3.04% | 12.67% | 16.19% | 5.26% | 5.37% | 42.52% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 4.34% | 8.95% | 14.70% | 6.23% | 7.65% | 41.87% |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 8.69% | 5.54% | 9.52% | 6.07% | 4.33% | 34.15% |
Dynasore Losers | 2.10% | 7.31% | 18.51% | 3.84% | 7.46% | 39.22% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 6.99% | 6.95% | 13.51% | 6.89% | 6.79% | 41.15% |
Here Comes The Brees | 9.50% | 4.60% | 12.01% | 7.92% | 9.61% | 43.63% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 2.47% | 9.23% | 10.82% | 5.58% | 8.01% | 36.10% |
Tamworth Two | 6.13% | 6.94% | 13.91% | 8.55% | 6.53% | 42.06% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 3.14% | 5.96% | 17.57% | 6.19% | 6.31% | 39.17% |
Grand Total | 4.72% | 7.90% | 14.41% | 6.13% | 6.96% | 40.12% |
It’s pretty clear which teams had the star DEs – Dyna Hard having JJ Watt gave a massive boost at that position. Watt scored 275 points in 16 weeks of the season, leaving 95 to be scored by the second choice DE. There were 4 teams which didn’t average 95 points per DE, so this was good going for the second string player at the position.
All in all, there wasn’t a huge variation in the proportion of points scored by defenses. The low of 34.15% scored by DFO was more a result of the massively high offensive scoring done by the team, likewise the 36.10% put up by Kelkowski. On total defensive points, these teams finished 8th and 7th in the league, 80 and 50 points below the league average (respectively).
So flipping it around then and looking at it on an average points per starter basis, how does it look? First of all, it’s important to remember that regularly starting fewer players at a position *should* lead to a higher average points per game on the basis that the additional flex player who has been overlooked in theory should be less likely to score a high number of points. Should be.
Row Labels | DT | DE | LB | CB | S | Def Ave | Overall Ave |
Champions of the Sun | 2.500 | 9.578 | 8.242 | 4.916 | 7.228 | 7.174 | 8.494 |
Dyna Hard | 5.547 | 11.567 | 7.394 | 4.800 | 4.900 | 7.060 | 8.302 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 7.716 | 7.956 | 6.535 | 5.541 | 6.803 | 6.769 | 8.083 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 9.643 | 5.381 | 5.796 | 5.894 | 4.202 | 6.062 | 8.849 |
Dynasore Losers | 3.953 | 6.883 | 8.712 | 3.617 | 7.028 | 6.714 | 8.559 |
East Flanders Flahutes | 9.316 | 5.500 | 5.607 | 5.452 | 5.373 | 5.917 | 7.190 |
Here Comes The Brees | 10.615 | 3.855 | 5.750 | 6.633 | 8.050 | 6.647 | 7.617 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 4.382 | 8.705 | 5.183 | 5.266 | 7.552 | 6.191 | 8.599 |
Tamworth Two | 9.066 | 6.094 | 6.402 | 7.498 | 5.733 | 6.711 | 7.977 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 4.706 | 4.736 | 7.095 | 4.924 | 5.016 | 5.663 | 7.228 |
Grand Total | 7.149 | 7.025 | 6.710 | 5.454 | 6.188 | 6.491 | 8.090 |
So I’ve included the overall average for some context – that tells you what the aveage player on the 22 man starting line-up scored. As we’d expect, in the vast majority of cases, defensive players score less than average. Watt, Dareus, Suh, McCoy, Quinn, Pierre-Paul and Sen’Derrick Marks are the ones that tip the balance, while Dynasore Losers have an exceptionally strong selection of LBs.
We can look at this as a ratio. In the table below, 100% represents the average score at a position being equal to the average score for the team overall. Over 100% means that position scored above average while below 100% means below average.
DT | DE | LB | CB | S | Def Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 29.43% | 112.77% | 97.04% | 57.87% | 85.10% | 84.46% |
Dyna Hard | 66.81% | 139.33% | 89.06% | 57.82% | 59.02% | 85.03% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 95.45% | 98.43% | 80.85% | 68.54% | 84.16% | 83.74% |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 108.97% | 60.81% | 65.50% | 66.60% | 47.48% | 68.50% |
Dynasore Losers | 46.19% | 80.41% | 101.78% | 42.26% | 82.11% | 78.45% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 129.57% | 76.50% | 77.98% | 75.83% | 74.74% | 82.30% |
Here Comes The Brees | 139.35% | 50.60% | 75.49% | 87.08% | 105.68% | 87.27% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 50.96% | 101.22% | 60.27% | 61.23% | 87.82% | 72.00% |
Tamworth Two | 113.65% | 76.39% | 80.25% | 94.00% | 71.86% | 84.13% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 65.11% | 65.52% | 98.16% | 68.13% | 69.39% | 78.34% |
Grand Total | 88.37% | 86.85% | 82.95% | 67.42% | 76.50% | 80.24% |
I didn’t spot before that the Brees safeties also scored over the team average points. Impressive given that no one else’s safeties manage to average more than 88% of an average player’s contribution. Harrison Smith seems to be the main (sole?) reason for that.
This might flag up key areas of weakness. I would not be surprised if Champions of the Sun were chasing a DT in the off-season. To be honest, Max might be better of fielding himself rather than whatever potato was taking the field for him this year. 2.5 points per player per game is by a fair distance the lowest average points per game of any psoition group for any team.
So what about the offensive side of the ball? It tells you to fuck off, it’s that offensive.
QB | RB | WR | TE | Off Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 272.280 | 569.175 | 614.850 | 84.500 | 1540.805 |
Dyna Hard | 240.440 | 557.475 | 611.510 | 44.925 | 1454.350 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 290.420 | 488.250 | 540.500 | 135.700 | 1454.870 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 344.500 | 541.700 | 646.700 | 313.900 | 1846.800 |
Dynasore Losers | 329.640 | 456.300 | 644.300 | 203.300 | 1633.540 |
East Flanders Flahutes | 308.260 | 370.175 | 437.575 | 170.100 | 1286.110 |
Here Comes The Brees | 350.560 | 428.400 | 333.500 | 158.400 | 1270.860 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 273.700 | 615.300 | 608.250 | 237.900 | 1735.150 |
Tamworth Two | 349.460 | 438.600 | 561.850 | 91.900 | 1441.810 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 179.240 | 388.100 | 681.700 | 83.800 | 1332.840 |
Grand Total | 2938.500 | 4853.475 | 5680.735 | 1524.425 | 14997.135 |
Lots more flex options available to teams here, with 2 flex positions spread across RB, WR and TE. 3 teams opted for only 1 TE in every game, with the 2 flexes used at the other positions – Dyna Hard, Dynablaster and the Dynasty of Sadness. Two of these teams accounted for the two lowest scores at TE, while the Bombermen were 6th in TE scoring despite only ever fielding one.
Only Kelkowski and DFO didn’t start 4 WR in at least 10 games. Despite this, both managed over 600 points at the position. The points per player information which is to follow will get into this a little more.
At RB, East Flanders started 3 in only 1 of the 16 games, Dynasore in 9 and DFO in 10. Despite this, East FLanders scored more RB points than 5 other teams while Dynasore and DFO clocked in at 4th and 3rd respectively in total RB points.
As a percentage, by position, these split down as follows:
QB | RB | WR | TE | Off Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 9.11% | 19.04% | 20.57% | 2.83% | 51.54% |
Dyna Hard | 8.23% | 19.08% | 20.93% | 1.54% | 49.77% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 10.21% | 17.16% | 19.00% | 4.77% | 51.13% |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 11.09% | 17.44% | 20.82% | 10.11% | 59.46% |
Dynasore Losers | 10.94% | 15.15% | 21.39% | 6.75% | 54.22% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 12.18% | 14.63% | 17.29% | 6.72% | 50.82% |
Here Comes The Brees | 13.07% | 15.98% | 12.44% | 5.91% | 47.40% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 9.07% | 20.39% | 20.15% | 7.88% | 57.49% |
Tamworth Two | 12.45% | 15.62% | 20.01% | 3.27% | 51.35% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 7.04% | 15.25% | 26.79% | 3.29% | 52.39% |
Grand Total | 10.33% | 17.05% | 19.96% | 5.36% | 52.70% |
You can tell which team had Gronkowski – the one which had TE accounting for over 10% of the team’s total points. He may have started slowly but he clocked up a total of 184 points across the 16 week season, 36 more than Anotonio Gates in second. Oh, and DFO had Gates as well, just for good measure.
Looking at the average points per game per player for offensive players then…
Row Labels | QB | RB | WR | TE | Off Ave | Overall Ave |
Champions of the Sun | 17.018 | 12.110 | 9.917 | 4.447 | 10.700 | 8.494 |
Dyna Hard | 15.028 | 11.614 | 9.555 | 2.808 | 10.100 | 8.302 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 18.151 | 10.172 | 8.445 | 8.481 | 10.103 | 8.083 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 21.531 | 12.898 | 11.346 | 10.824 | 12.825 | 8.849 |
Dynasore Losers | 20.603 | 11.129 | 10.738 | 7.530 | 11.344 | 8.559 |
East Flanders Flahutes | 19.266 | 11.217 | 6.837 | 5.487 | 8.931 | 7.190 |
Here Comes The Brees | 21.910 | 9.313 | 5.558 | 7.200 | 8.825 | 7.617 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 17.106 | 13.984 | 10.862 | 8.496 | 12.050 | 8.599 |
Tamworth Two | 21.841 | 9.332 | 8.779 | 5.406 | 10.013 | 7.977 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 11.203 | 8.085 | 10.652 | 5.238 | 9.256 | 7.228 |
Grand Total | 18.366 | 10.931 | 9.237 | 6.898 | 10.415 | 8.090 |
Naturally, we’d expect offensive scoring to be much higher. There aren’t many positional groups which end up scoring below the team average. Only two teams manage higher than average with their TEs – the Bombermen and DFO, otherwise it’s the WRs of East Flanders and the Brees that show themselves up as below average.
The other big highlight is the underperformance of the Dynasty of Sadness’ QB, clocking in a full 7 points below the league average QB. To put that in context, 7 points per game equates to 112 points across the year. If you add 112 points on to the 2,544 the Dynasty scored in the 16 weeks of the season, they’d move from 9th top scorers to… oh… 9th. But now only 25 points behind league runners-up Here Comes The Brees in 8th.
QB | RB | WR | TE | Off Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 200.35% | 142.58% | 116.76% | 52.36% | 125.98% |
Dyna Hard | 181.01% | 139.89% | 115.09% | 33.82% | 121.65% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 224.55% | 125.84% | 104.48% | 104.92% | 124.99% |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 243.31% | 145.75% | 128.21% | 122.32% | 144.93% |
Dynasore Losers | 240.71% | 130.03% | 125.46% | 87.97% | 132.54% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 267.97% | 156.02% | 95.10% | 76.32% | 124.22% |
Here Comes The Brees | 287.64% | 122.26% | 72.97% | 94.52% | 115.86% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 198.92% | 162.62% | 126.31% | 98.80% | 140.12% |
Tamworth Two | 273.80% | 116.98% | 110.05% | 67.77% | 125.51% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 154.99% | 111.86% | 147.36% | 72.46% | 128.05% |
Grand Total | 227.03% | 135.13% | 114.18% | 85.27% | 128.74% |
Those percentages then… they say basically the same kind of thing I was saying above. Dyna Hard and, to a lesser extent, Champions of the Sun may want to look at their TE options going forward.
Special Teams then?
PK | PN | ST Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 86.850 | 99.525 | 186.375 |
Dyna Hard | 100.100 | 125.400 | 225.500 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 95.150 | 104.025 | 199.175 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 108.150 | 90.325 | 198.475 |
Dynasore Losers | 104.250 | 93.320 | 197.570 |
East Flanders Flahutes | 124.500 | 78.750 | 203.250 |
Here Comes The Brees | 136.500 | 103.975 | 240.475 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 107.050 | 86.475 | 193.525 |
Tamworth Two | 90.150 | 94.865 | 185.015 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 120.450 | 94.375 | 214.825 |
Grand Total | 1073.150 | 971.035 | 2044.185 |
I have nothing really to say here.
PK | PN | ST Total | |
Champions of the Sun | 2.90% | 3.33% | 6.23% |
Dyna Hard | 3.43% | 4.29% | 7.72% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 3.34% | 3.66% | 7.00% |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 3.48% | 2.91% | 6.39% |
Dynasore Losers | 3.46% | 3.10% | 6.56% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 4.92% | 3.11% | 8.03% |
Here Comes The Brees | 5.09% | 3.88% | 8.97% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 3.55% | 2.86% | 6.41% |
Tamworth Two | 3.21% | 3.38% | 6.59% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 4.73% | 3.71% | 8.44% |
Grand Total | 3.77% | 3.41% | 7.18% |
But now… I still have nothing really to say.
Yeah. That’s all you’re getting this time.
2014 DynaBowl Post Season Performance Analysis – Part 2
So last time I looked at scores and consistency. This time, I wanted to kick things off by examing a league of two halves.
The DynaBowl is something new for all of us and had a steep learning curve. While our overall season performance may have been greatly defined by the players bought at auction, in theory each team could have used the waiver wire and trades to improve their team. Granted, injuries may have scuppered some performances so we shouldn’t necessarily expect improvement, but improvement would be good.
So, starting with the overall figures, let’s split the league into the first 8 and last 8 games of the year and see who got better and who got worse…
First 8 Games | Last 8 Games | Change | % Change | |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 173.794 | 214.472 | 40.678 | 23.4% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 170.827 | 184.841 | 14.014 | 8.2% |
Champions of the Sun | 180.165 | 193.558 | 13.393 | 7.4% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 154.278 | 163.758 | 9.480 | 6.1% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 155.222 | 161.123 | 5.901 | 3.8% |
Here Comes The Brees | 166.783 | 168.378 | 1.594 | 1.0% |
Dynasore Losers | 188.170 | 188.431 | 0.261 | 0.1% |
Dyna Hard | 184.674 | 180.620 | -4.054 | -2.2% |
Tamworth Two | 180.094 | 170.903 | -9.192 | -5.1% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 195.506 | 181.791 | -13.714 | -7.0% |
It’s no surprise, after what was looked at last time, to see DFO at the top of the list. A 40 point per game improvement from one half of the year to the next is pretty extraordinary and shows how the title was won.
It’s interesting how the next 4 teams are not playoff teams though. You could argue that they had the most improving to do, but Champions of the Sun improved from the 4th highest scoring team across the first half of the year to the 2nd highest scoring team in the second half and still failed to make the leap.
One team that leapt out to me, precisely because they look so anonymous here, is Here Comes The Brees, who registered a 1% rise in scoring despite the majority of their team being the victim of Billy Cole, the running back in Last Boy Scout.
On the flip side, some serious questions may need to be asked in the owners offices at the Tamworth Two and Kelkowski.
Kelkowski and Dynasore Losers are in the bottom 4 and lost in the first round of the playoffs. Coincidence? Maybe.
So now, of course, it’s time to see where the gains and losses were made. Let’s start on offence:
First 8 Games | Last 8 Games | Change | % Change | |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 106.825 | 124.025 | 17.200 | 16.1% |
Tamworth Two | 84.435 | 95.791 | 11.356 | 13.4% |
Champions of the Sun | 91.846 | 100.754 | 8.908 | 9.7% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 79.972 | 86.633 | 6.661 | 8.3% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 79.819 | 80.945 | 1.126 | 1.4% |
Here Comes The Brees | 80.974 | 77.884 | -3.090 | -3.8% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 94.343 | 87.516 | -6.826 | -7.2% |
Dynasore Losers | 106.049 | 98.144 | -7.905 | -7.5% |
Dyna Hard | 96.099 | 85.695 | -10.404 | -10.8% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 117.528 | 99.366 | -18.161 | -15.5% |
So pick your own team out and tell the story. That’s what I’m going to do.
I know that the Bombermen suffered injuries to Ellington, Bernard and AJ Green, while also trading FHTWMIJ to Kelkowski and so the reduction in average points is explicable. And given we were second in terms of increased performance through the year, we must have hit big on defence. Unless it was on special teams. But seriously, it was on defence…
First 8 Games | Last 8 Games | Change | % Change | |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 55.456 | 77.150 | 21.694 | 39.1% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 63.994 | 84.919 | 20.925 | 32.7% |
Dynasore Losers | 68.463 | 79.250 | 10.788 | 15.8% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 62.606 | 67.569 | 4.962 | 7.9% |
Here Comes The Brees | 70.750 | 75.494 | 4.744 | 6.7% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 66.988 | 69.225 | 2.238 | 3.3% |
Dyna Hard | 76.575 | 78.738 | 2.162 | 2.8% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 61.431 | 63.147 | 1.716 | 2.8% |
Champions of the Sun | 78.144 | 79.681 | 1.538 | 2.0% |
Tamworth Two | 83.444 | 64.200 | -19.244 | -23.1% |
Everybody got better on defense! Well done everyone.
No, wait. Who’s that down the bottom? The Tamworth Two. They had the second highest increase in offensive performance, gaining 11 points per game in the second half of the season, but then giving away nearly 20 on the defensive side. Tamworth sprinted out to a 2-0 start and looked like the team to beat. Or one of them. But it’s not difficult to see where things went wrong.
On the other side, I am very happy with the improvement on the defence. I drafted the defence really badly, but Dan and I made some really solid moves through the year to gain more than 20 points per game from the unit. Over the second half of the year, the Bombermen defence scored more than 5 points per game more than any other defence, and that was without a JJ Watt, Justin Houston or Cameron Wake defensive star to do the majority of the damage. It turned into a really good all round unit.
Now, special teams. Probably nothing to see here, right?
First 8 Games | Last 8 Games | Change | % Change | |
Dyna Hard | 12.000 | 16.188 | 4.188 | 34.9% |
Champions of the Sun | 10.175 | 13.122 | 2.947 | 29.0% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 10.991 | 13.200 | 2.209 | 20.1% |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 11.513 | 13.297 | 1.784 | 15.5% |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 12.875 | 13.978 | 1.103 | 8.6% |
Here Comes The Brees | 15.059 | 15.000 | -0.059 | -0.4% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 12.491 | 12.406 | -0.084 | -0.7% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 12.797 | 12.609 | -0.187 | -1.5% |
Tamworth Two | 12.216 | 10.911 | -1.304 | -10.7% |
Dynasore Losers | 13.659 | 11.038 | -2.621 | -19.2% |
To be honest, while that setup might have seemed like I was going to have some shocking revelation, I really don’t. There are some numbers up there. The percentages get high, but does that tell us much about special teams? You decide…
Now as a teaser for what’s to come, here’s the same information presented in this and the last post, but for QBs only… First, total points scored:
Max Score | Min Score | Regular Season Total | Playoff Total | Full Season Total | |
Here Comes The Brees | 32.800 | 0.360 | 311.460 | 39.100 | 350.560 |
Tamworth Two | 36.600 | 6.100 | 300.760 | 48.700 | 349.460 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 37.120 | 8.700 | 267.400 | 77.100 | 344.500 |
Dynasore Losers | 30.960 | 2.720 | 301.460 | 28.180 | 329.640 |
East Flanders Flahutes | 30.280 | 11.320 | 257.740 | 50.520 | 308.260 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 31.420 | 10.040 | 220.440 | 69.980 | 290.420 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 29.420 | 3.860 | 205.680 | 68.020 | 273.700 |
Champions of the Sun | 26.540 | 7.200 | 218.140 | 54.140 | 272.280 |
Dyna Hard | 30.040 | 4.640 | 199.960 | 40.480 | 240.440 |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 19.060 | 0.000 | 126.920 | 52.320 | 179.240 |
It’s interesting that only two teams had a minimum score of at least 10, and neither made the playoffs, while 3 of the top 4 QBs made the playoffs. Coincidence? Yes.
So how about QB consistancy? Well…
Team | Max Consistency Score | Min Consistency Score | Season (Root Ave) Consistency | Total Points |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 125.50 | 0.89 | 5.24 | 179.24 |
East Flanders Flahutes | 121.30 | 0.06 | 5.59 | 308.26 |
Champions of the Sun | 96.38 | 0.02 | 5.87 | 272.28 |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 176.06 | 0.33 | 6.14 | 290.42 |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 175.46 | 0.00 | 6.42 | 273.7 |
Dynasore Losers | 319.78 | 0.34 | 7.42 | 329.64 |
Dyna Hard | 225.38 | 0.35 | 7.50 | 240.44 |
Tamworth Two | 247.79 | 4.33 | 8.06 | 349.46 |
Here Comes The Brees | 464.40 | 1.51 | 8.13 | 350.56 |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 243.01 | 0.24 | 8.91 | 344.5 |
Inconsistent QBs made the playoffs. Must be a boom or bust type thing, I guess.
Finally, a league of 2 halves:
First 8 Games | Last 8 Games | Change | % Change | |
The 4th Dynmension: Dynasty of Sadness | 9.100 | 13.305 | 4.205 | 46.2% |
East Flanders Flahutes | 18.525 | 20.008 | 1.483 | 8.0% |
Dynablaster Bombermen | 17.518 | 18.785 | 1.268 | 7.2% |
Tamworth Two | 21.360 | 22.323 | 0.962 | 4.5% |
Kelkowski Don’t Play By No Dyna Rules | 17.403 | 16.810 | -0.593 | -3.4% |
Champions of the Sun | 18.753 | 15.283 | -3.470 | -18.5% |
DynaForOne Firebirds | 23.363 | 19.700 | -3.663 | -15.7% |
Dyna Hard | 16.893 | 13.163 | -3.730 | -22.1% |
Here Comes The Brees | 24.955 | 18.865 | -6.090 | -24.4% |
Dynasore Losers | 24.243 | 16.963 | -7.280 | -30.0% |
Only 4 teams saw an improvement in the second half of the season. Interesting. Obviously the Dynasty of Sadness was helped by Cam getting his mojo back. Unless he didn’t start Cammy-Cam. I don’t know. I know Cam was benched for a bit. Did the Dynasty get the big scoring performances at the end of the season, or was it that he played Cam early in the season when he scored nothing?
Especially interesting that those inconsistent QBs for the playoff teams all regressed in the second half of the year. Obviously couldn’t bring their A game when it mattered and had to be dug out of it by the rest of the team…