SteelersPride
Well-Known Member
laptop, few websites.....a brain.........thats all
Bandit, are you out there?
Because you wrote this I've done a lot of number-crunching. (I hate you BTW.) I copied the entire NFL schedule and pasted it in Excel. Then I extracted the fantasy points allowed from ESPN for each position (QB, RB, WR & TE) and pasted this into Excel as well. For example: The Colts on average allowed 20.4 fantasy points to opposing QB.
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The combination of the NFL schedule and the OPRK ("Opponents Rank" above) gives me a basis to calculate how each position will do this season on each individual NFL team.
Just taking it alphabetically, this season Atlanta will face defenses that allowed an average of 19 fantasy points to the QB last year. Allowed 24.9 points to RB; 38.7 to WR; and 12 points to TE.
Now I'm stuck. (Once again, I hate Bandit.) Because I'm not sure what calculation I should use for each player to bounce it off of this data?
In other words, how do I factor Matt Ryan's numbers into the fact that his schedule this season could see him averaging 24.9 points a game?
I have "usage" numbers, which is a percentage of how each player is used on their respective team based on all offensive plays called - both rushing & receiving. But I'm not sure I can just apply a percentage formula against the ORPK. I must be missing a formula?
Maybe I need to sleep on it? Is there a mathematician in the house?
My lord Joe/Bandit... your turning this into work
Nah. This is the way I enjoy FF. Or as Albert Einstein said: "[FONT=georgia, bookman old style, palatino linotype, book antiqua, palatino, trebuchet ms, helvetica, garamond, sans-serif, arial, verdana, avante garde, century gothic, comic sans ms, times, times new roman, serif]Pure mathematics is, in its way, the poetry of logical ideas." [/FONT][FONT=georgia, bookman old style, palatino linotype, book antiqua, palatino, trebuchet ms, helvetica, garamond, sans-serif, arial, verdana, avante garde, century gothic, comic sans ms, times, times new roman, serif]And I don't know who this person is, but S. Gudder is quoted as saying: [/FONT][FONT=georgia, bookman old style, palatino linotype, book antiqua, palatino, trebuchet ms, helvetica, garamond, sans-serif, arial, verdana, avante garde, century gothic, comic sans ms, times, times new roman, serif]"[/FONT][FONT=georgia, bookman old style, palatino linotype, book antiqua, palatino, trebuchet ms, helvetica, garamond, sans-serif, arial, verdana, avante garde, century gothic, comic sans ms, times, times new roman, serif]The essence of mathematics is not to make simple things complicated, but to make complicated things simple."[/FONT]
Ah yes Joe, a man after my own heart. Okay, so this is the part that comes from the tiering and rankings that I use for players. The base number that you use is completely arbitrary, at least it is on my part. I just tier the qb's and let's say Ryan ranks in the 4th tier of quarterbacks I use, all 4th tier quarterbacks start with a base score of 19. I suppose you could take a guy's projected total for the year from ESPN and divide it by 16, which in Ryan's case would be 317 points divided by 16 which is 19.81 points a game. Either way, then you have to take every teams points against quarterbacks and divide that by 32. So you said that the Falcons will face teams that allow 19 fantasy points to qb's next year. Add up that same number of average points against for each team. I am just going to say that the total points against for each team adds up to 573 (I am completely making this number up). You take that 573 and divide it by 32 which gives you 17.9 as the average for the league. Since the will face defenses that average 19 points per game, you would divide 19 by 17.9 which is 1.06. Then you would multiply Matt Ryan's base score (19.81) by that factor to get his adjusted average score against his schedule which would be 19.81 x 1.06 = 21.0. Hope this helps. If you would like me to email you the spreadsheet I did last year, let me know and I'd be happy to. The way I do it is slightly different and I can go into a lot more detail if you would like me to.
As a conclusion, he'd say, "Since these reflect real events, there was presumably additional information determining these outcomes, but that information, if it was ever obtainable, is absent here."
laptop, few websites.....a brain.........thats all
You guys are all trying too dammed hard. Me and this guy know how to do it it. One list with bye weeks to keep track of who's been taken and where you need backups is all you need
I think that same approach would rule out Montee Ball going 2nd overall; Foles being the 5th or 6th QB taken; and Watkins being drafted at all. Those wacky mathematicians.As a conclusion, he'd say, "Since these reflect real events, there was presumably additional information determining these outcomes, but that information, if it was ever obtainable, is absent here."