ChrisBlade
Member
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2009
- Messages
- 543
- Reaction score
- 1,460
In this third installment of „Captain Morgan’s Haven”, things look remarkably more relaxed than at any point before. In my statistical model of placing matches into three buckets of matches with differing points targets, United always had a two-tiered safety net regarding promotion.
One, even after the Boro home defeat in February, our points already on the board meant that we could afford a relatively sustained period of iffy scores as long as we tended to alternate wins with defeats rather than drew too many matches.
Two, the faint of heart amidst our fan base vastly over-stated the levels of excellence than any Championship is ever likely to sustain over a long period of time. That probably made Boro look more threatening than history suggests anyone ever could be....
As we speak ahead of Easter, statistically both of these safety nets have started nudging us towards an increasingly solid position. Of course, young William Carey will point to the unpredictability of individual scorelines and call all of this a futile shit exercise. But averaged out, statistics are usually a good guideline even if they do get individual details wrong.
I remember when I first discussed this with Captain Morgan. One of the things I said was that Boro will not get 11 wins out of 13 or any such-like miracle run. I cited refereeing decisions going against them once in a while or the odd wild-card game completely out of the blue as likely "black box" features. Huddersfield away was just that. The one game nobody has on the radar where it all comes apart at the seams. And with tight margins for error as the chasing side, those blips bite them increasingly hard.
So where are we then in our initial reference system?
Well, two of the initial five toughies remain on the menu, Burnley and West Brom. These remain free hits, nothing has changed there. Despite losing to Luton and Millwall, the win at Sunderland has already given us my (extremely negatively calculated) minimum target of three points from that hardest basket of five matches.
In the medium basket, I again pitched a very low initial target of two draws from the tricky matches against Watford and Norwich. We got six points, therefore building up a healthy cushion for the run in with the supposedly easy games to come.
Of course, stats being stats, based on this, we are up and it is already realistically over. Because Boro have dropped quite a few points already and now no longer look like a team that will tear through the rest of the season on a guaranteed +2 points per game trajectory.
But caution must be exercised. Just as the bunching up of mega-tough, difficult looking matches in March did not mean we would indeed go on to lose tons in a row, the sequence of easy looking matches up ahead is also likely to yield averaged out results rather than straightforward wins only. Law of averages allowed us to claim four extra points in my two top buckets. Law of averages may now see us underperforming my target in the easiest tier.
What, then, do we need from this remaining basket of “easier” games? The target for the initial eight was five wins, two draws and one defeat. Mislabeling Blackburn as “easy” in late February means our solitary defeat is already used up. Reading away was a win.
Thus, we approach Wigan, Preston, Cardiff, Bristol City, Huddersfield and Birmingham with a target of four wins and two draws. With four of those at home, that looks by and in itself very reasonable. It also disregards the four extra points already gained on the model in the medium basket. Or indeed the fact that West Brom and Burnley still need to be played without the need for points in the model.
Statistically, that is a lot of wriggle room, isn’t it? Expressed in terms of points, we need ten from an available twenty-four to reach my initial 83 point target. That allows form worse than we had at any stage of the season over eight matches (I have not checked our worst batch of eight matches, mind).
Is there evidence that my target of 83 points in February was too low and now needs tweaking upwards?
Boro are on 67 points. They have only 21 points left to play for. To get the 16 points they need to take it to goal difference on 83 points, that is five wins, a draw and two defeats. Doable, but strong form over a season. With both Burnley and Luton in there to play, as well as signs of weakness away from home, however, I continue to feel that they are not that the dreaded “über-team” that forces me to adjust the model just yet.
Voice of Reason as of today:
It isn’t slippers and cigars yet. We need to stay on it and keep ticking off our homework. Wigan is a very big match as it looks almost too easy on paper and could unduly erode our statistical cushion if we fuck up. Win that and see how Boro deal with Burnley. Then re-draw the battle lines and see where we are next week in chapter 4 of this.
In any event, a reasonable summary would be that we have had our fuck ups but not fucked it up. United retains full control of the situation and the stats are very much stacked in our favour here. When needed, our boys have constantly responded well and got us the minimum requirements to keep the pressure on Boro at all times. Boro may still be easier on the eye, but results-wise they have yielded to the pressure about as much as we have. Nobody has bottled it yet, it's just two teams playing out the seasons which long term stats would suggest them to get in their respective positions. Which suits us fine...
Away from the boring cold stats and reasonable behaviour that is generally at odds with the emotions at football, I’d like to end this one with a hearty “Fuck off, Middlesboro FC – Fuck Off, Blades11”…


One, even after the Boro home defeat in February, our points already on the board meant that we could afford a relatively sustained period of iffy scores as long as we tended to alternate wins with defeats rather than drew too many matches.
Two, the faint of heart amidst our fan base vastly over-stated the levels of excellence than any Championship is ever likely to sustain over a long period of time. That probably made Boro look more threatening than history suggests anyone ever could be....

As we speak ahead of Easter, statistically both of these safety nets have started nudging us towards an increasingly solid position. Of course, young William Carey will point to the unpredictability of individual scorelines and call all of this a futile shit exercise. But averaged out, statistics are usually a good guideline even if they do get individual details wrong.
I remember when I first discussed this with Captain Morgan. One of the things I said was that Boro will not get 11 wins out of 13 or any such-like miracle run. I cited refereeing decisions going against them once in a while or the odd wild-card game completely out of the blue as likely "black box" features. Huddersfield away was just that. The one game nobody has on the radar where it all comes apart at the seams. And with tight margins for error as the chasing side, those blips bite them increasingly hard.
So where are we then in our initial reference system?
Well, two of the initial five toughies remain on the menu, Burnley and West Brom. These remain free hits, nothing has changed there. Despite losing to Luton and Millwall, the win at Sunderland has already given us my (extremely negatively calculated) minimum target of three points from that hardest basket of five matches.
In the medium basket, I again pitched a very low initial target of two draws from the tricky matches against Watford and Norwich. We got six points, therefore building up a healthy cushion for the run in with the supposedly easy games to come.
Of course, stats being stats, based on this, we are up and it is already realistically over. Because Boro have dropped quite a few points already and now no longer look like a team that will tear through the rest of the season on a guaranteed +2 points per game trajectory.
But caution must be exercised. Just as the bunching up of mega-tough, difficult looking matches in March did not mean we would indeed go on to lose tons in a row, the sequence of easy looking matches up ahead is also likely to yield averaged out results rather than straightforward wins only. Law of averages allowed us to claim four extra points in my two top buckets. Law of averages may now see us underperforming my target in the easiest tier.
What, then, do we need from this remaining basket of “easier” games? The target for the initial eight was five wins, two draws and one defeat. Mislabeling Blackburn as “easy” in late February means our solitary defeat is already used up. Reading away was a win.
Thus, we approach Wigan, Preston, Cardiff, Bristol City, Huddersfield and Birmingham with a target of four wins and two draws. With four of those at home, that looks by and in itself very reasonable. It also disregards the four extra points already gained on the model in the medium basket. Or indeed the fact that West Brom and Burnley still need to be played without the need for points in the model.
Statistically, that is a lot of wriggle room, isn’t it? Expressed in terms of points, we need ten from an available twenty-four to reach my initial 83 point target. That allows form worse than we had at any stage of the season over eight matches (I have not checked our worst batch of eight matches, mind).

Is there evidence that my target of 83 points in February was too low and now needs tweaking upwards?
Boro are on 67 points. They have only 21 points left to play for. To get the 16 points they need to take it to goal difference on 83 points, that is five wins, a draw and two defeats. Doable, but strong form over a season. With both Burnley and Luton in there to play, as well as signs of weakness away from home, however, I continue to feel that they are not that the dreaded “über-team” that forces me to adjust the model just yet.
Voice of Reason as of today:

It isn’t slippers and cigars yet. We need to stay on it and keep ticking off our homework. Wigan is a very big match as it looks almost too easy on paper and could unduly erode our statistical cushion if we fuck up. Win that and see how Boro deal with Burnley. Then re-draw the battle lines and see where we are next week in chapter 4 of this.
In any event, a reasonable summary would be that we have had our fuck ups but not fucked it up. United retains full control of the situation and the stats are very much stacked in our favour here. When needed, our boys have constantly responded well and got us the minimum requirements to keep the pressure on Boro at all times. Boro may still be easier on the eye, but results-wise they have yielded to the pressure about as much as we have. Nobody has bottled it yet, it's just two teams playing out the seasons which long term stats would suggest them to get in their respective positions. Which suits us fine...

Away from the boring cold stats and reasonable behaviour that is generally at odds with the emotions at football, I’d like to end this one with a hearty “Fuck off, Middlesboro FC – Fuck Off, Blades11”…


