HeySethUTB
Active Member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2017
- Messages
- 1,871
- Reaction score
- 3,499
Maybe just me but I didn’t find anything special about Bellingham in the final.
He’s got stature but it feels like he’s trading on the family name.
Hamer is streets ahead of him for instance though I acknowledge the age range makes a difference in value with players.
Interesting that Sunderland will enter the season having lost two of their better players. Sounds familiar.
The comparison of Jobe and Peck is intriguing. Statistically you’re splitting hairs in most data sets. I do believe Jobes “name” has increased his profile and therefore price.
As an overarching factor Peck has completed 32 90mins in comparison to Jobes 39.
Final Third Contribution:
- Both players are level in non-penalty goal+assist output per 90 (0.15).
- Jobe: 0.07 xAG, Peck: 0.08 xAG – marginal difference.
- Jobe carries more (52 vs 33), but adjusted for minutes, Peck would project 40–48 – fairly even.
- Peck excels in progressive passing: 187 vs Jobe’s 193, despite 7 fewer games which is a clear and advantageous strength.
- Peck is more accurate (28% SoT vs 17%) but shoots less often.
- Jobe is +1 vs xG, while Peck is -2 – Jobe’s shots carry more threat or luck; Peck possibly unlucky or over-precise. This could also be explained by tactical instructions.
- Jobe has higher accuracy (86% vs 80%) but attempts fewer passes.
- Peck’s passes cover significantly more progressive distance (+2000m) and he's more involved in set-pieces (21 corners vs 0), explaining the lower completion.
- Peck is more combative: 66 tackles vs 72 in fewer games – scaled up he wins that duel.
- Tackle win rates are close (Jobe 61%, Peck 58%).
- In the air, Peck is superior: 56% success vs Jobe’s 46%.
I’m really not getting this athleticism or because his brother is good argument as to why peck shouldn’t be valued the same suggested on this thread, for example Wayne Rooney played for England while his younger brothers John and Graham have reached the dizzy heights of Macclesfield town and Guiseley.
The comparison between peck and Jobe to me shows similar statistical output. Jobe may have the bigger name and marginally more attacking flair when it comes to progressive carries, but Peck shows greater value in deeper midfield attributes progressive passing, defensive actions, and aerial duels. A smarter recruiter would probably find a more cost-effective upside in Peck, but only if we as a club don’t recognise or leverage the value of Jobe to increase the valuation of peck.
Last edited: