The '89 Steelers (9-7) were a minus-61 PD. If you take away that notorious opener vs Cleveland, 51-0, and also the 26-16 loss to the Bengals four weeks later, it's actually an even PD despite four other defeats during this campaign being lopsided...
Wk#2 at Cincy, 41-10
Wk#7 at Houston, 27-0
Wk#9 at Denver, 34-7
Wk#10 vs Bears, 20-0
Seems much easier to remember those games than some of the more-than-a-TD victories they posted...(more than you'd think)...
Wk#3 vs Vikings, 27-14
Wk#4 at Detroit, 23-3
Wk#6 at Cleveland, 17-7
Wk#12 at Miami, 34-14
Wk#14 at NYJ, 13-0
Wk#15 vs Patriots, 28-10
Wk#16 at Tampa Bay, 31-22
How much does point differential correlate with W-L records?
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Re: How much does point differential correlate with W-L reco
Point differential, for me, is sometimes useful when combined with other stats. Using it requires first looking for outlying blowouts, as others have mentioned. A high point differential combined with a low points allowed, that's a sign a team didn't just win games 14-10 or something like that. A lot of those teams tend to be winning most of their games comfortably in non-shootout fashion. 1973 Dolphins, 1991 Washington are two that come to mind off the top of my head.
If a team with a good record or a poor record has a thin point differential that doesn't necessarily make sense, (say -3 or +5) - the first thing I'm going to look up is whether they had one or more significant injuries at some point during the season that caused a few games to be closer or blowout losses if their opponents had substantial injuries. Maybe someone's out or playing injured.
If a team with a good record or a poor record has a thin point differential that doesn't necessarily make sense, (say -3 or +5) - the first thing I'm going to look up is whether they had one or more significant injuries at some point during the season that caused a few games to be closer or blowout losses if their opponents had substantial injuries. Maybe someone's out or playing injured.
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Re: How much does point differential correlate with W-L reco
Differentials in turnovers, sacks, and penalty yardage are all meaningful imo.
Re: How much does point differential correlate with W-L reco
Sure, but all of those things should be reflected in the point totals, right?Sonny9 wrote:Differentials in turnovers, sacks, and penalty yardage are all meaningful imo.
Re: How much does point differential correlate with W-L reco
yes but like any stat, including points scored, if you pile up a big difference in a couple games it will skew things. Not that you are saying otherwise. Plus pic sixes are a big determination. Could be a difference in 2 more wins.Bob Gill wrote:Sure, but all of those things should be reflected in the point totals, right?Sonny9 wrote:Differentials in turnovers, sacks, and penalty yardage are all meaningful imo.
Re: How much does point differential correlate with W-L reco
1976 Browns -20 point differential and they were 9-5. 5 wins by 4 or less. Every loss was by 15 or more
They went on a 5 game winning steak near the end of the season
Opponents
Houston twice 5-9
Tampa Bay 0-14
Philly 4-10
Miami 6-8
They went on a 5 game winning steak near the end of the season
Opponents
Houston twice 5-9
Tampa Bay 0-14
Philly 4-10
Miami 6-8
Re: How much does point differential correlate with W-L reco
The 9-7 Bills of 2004 were +111ChrisBabcock wrote:The exact reverse of that... The 2017 Bills were 9-7 and -57.Joe Bugel's Phoenix Cardinals in '93 finished 7-9 yet put up a +57 PD!!
And go figure the -57 PD team made the playoffs