it is very easy to watch second guessing of coaches making decisions that seem very risky when things don't workout. already we see a few post-game interviews challenging coaches for decisions that backfire. IF you want to second guess a decision you don't wait for the outcome.........you do it before the play.
so far every coach that is going through this has said "we want to be aggressive". The word aggressive has a positive connotation, and kind of covers for what is going on - i.e. have you ever heard a coach say we want to be cautious and not take chances? A coach is taking a calculated risk that the chance of successful outcome will net more than the chance of failure and what that outcome entails. More coaches seem to use the words "the analytics supported the decision". There is a fine line between being aggressive and being stupid, and historic analytics do not a
An example from the Kansas State game on 4th down try. KS goes for it on 4th down and 1 around their own 30. Their analytics told them that through the season they have made the 1st down at a X rate to more than makeup for the downside of failure - i.e. giving up a score. Their analytics however are not real time in the game, and not taking into account the true chance of failure against Rutgers at that moment. In any game, the real time odds can be quite different than the season experience.
so far every coach that is going through this has said "we want to be aggressive". The word aggressive has a positive connotation, and kind of covers for what is going on - i.e. have you ever heard a coach say we want to be cautious and not take chances? A coach is taking a calculated risk that the chance of successful outcome will net more than the chance of failure and what that outcome entails. More coaches seem to use the words "the analytics supported the decision". There is a fine line between being aggressive and being stupid, and historic analytics do not a
An example from the Kansas State game on 4th down try. KS goes for it on 4th down and 1 around their own 30. Their analytics told them that through the season they have made the 1st down at a X rate to more than makeup for the downside of failure - i.e. giving up a score. Their analytics however are not real time in the game, and not taking into account the true chance of failure against Rutgers at that moment. In any game, the real time odds can be quite different than the season experience.