AreWeThereYet
Well-Known Member
So, old dogs can learn new tricks. Good to know.
In the coaching business most dogs don't get to stick around long enough to learn a few new tricks.
So, old dogs can learn new tricks. Good to know.
In the coaching business most dogs don't get to stick around long enough to learn a few new tricks.
I think you could argue the opposite. For a long time, Kirk was making decisions based upon "coaching wisdom," which is really nothing more than a fear of being second-guessed (i.e., deciding based upon emotion). That is why you punt instead of going for it, take the 90% chance FG instead of going for the 60% change TD, lean on the run instead of the pass, etc.. Those are things that coaches have been doing for decades, and if you continue to fall in line the criticism will be muted. But logical analysis says you should almost never punt, that a 60% chance of 7 points is better than a 90% chance of 3, and that passing will yield more productivity than running (even though "three things can happen when you pass, and two of them are bad").
So if anything, he is being controlled less by fear of second-guessing, and he is making logical decisions about what will give the team the best chance to win.
I get the overall gist of your post and don't disagree with all of it, but that stat is misleading and paints Iowa as in some way being comparable to Alabama and Clemson. Those two teams are literally the favorite in every game they play unless they're playing each other, usually by a loooooong way. Pretty hard to screw that up. Clemson's total winning percentage since 2015 is .920 and Alabama's is .941.Old Kirk Narrative: Kirk always finds ways to lose games they shouldn't.
New Kirk (from 2015 onward) reality: Iowa is 29-3 as a favorite, with a 90.6% win rate as a favorite trailing, only Alabama and Clemson over that span.
That's both true and poignant.In the coaching business most dogs don't get to stick around long enough to learn a few new tricks.
I get the overall gist of your post and don't disagree with all of it, but that stat is misleading and paints Iowa as in some way being comparable to Alabama and Clemson. Those two teams are literally the favorite in every fucking game they play unless they're playing each other, usually by a loooooong way. Pretty hard to screw that up. Clemson's total winning percentage since 2015 is .920 and Alabama's is .941.
Again, I see where you're going, but you're twisting it around a little. Win/loss when favored isn't a measure of Ferentz "winning when he should," it's a measure of how accurate the odds-maker is. They literally have zero to do with each other. I'd argue that in Iowa's case, it's even more of a worthless stat than when you use teams like Clemson and Alabama. They are orders of magnitude better than the Hawkeyes so setting odds is WAY more of a crap shoot when it comes to Iowa.
Let's say you're a hiring manager for a book in a casino, and somebody wanted to work for you. They'd use the same stat and say, "Hey look, since 2015 I've covered 91% of my lines at closing." If you look at it that way, can you see now how that stat has nothing to do with anything? It isn't Ferentz's skill you're measuring, it's the odds-maker. Favorite/underdog vs. actual outcome is a ridiculous stat that doesn't show any correlation and for damn sure not any causation to coaching success.
Sorry for the rant, but statistics isn't about numbers; you can make them say anything you want. Statistics is about whether you can weed through the bullshit ones or not.
'01-'04 was great. For whatever reason '05-'14 was overwhelmingly mediocre. '15-onward is setting up to be pretty good right now. Next year's team will be uber-talented.
'01-'04 was great. For whatever reason '05-'14 was overwhelmingly mediocre. '15-onward is setting up to be pretty good right now. Next year's team will be uber-talented.