Players such as Romero, Udogie, Maddison, weren't playing well when they were fit earlier in the season.
Not at their best consistently I agree but they still give us a much better chance of winning football games in the PL and EL.
The Fighting Cock is a forum for fans of Tottenham Hotspur Football Club. Here you can discuss Spurs latest matches, our squad, tactics and any transfer news surrounding the club. Registration gives you access to all our forums (including 'Off Topic' discussion) and removes most of the adverts (you can remove them all via an account upgrade). You're here now, you might as well...
Players such as Romero, Udogie, Maddison, weren't playing well when they were fit earlier in the season.

Yeah 5/1 is 17%, but bookies always overplay the likelihood to minimise losses, i.e. it's likely closer to 10% in pure statistical terms.Bookies have us at 5/1 which is 17%? so maybe 30% is a touch on the optimistic side tbf![]()
VDV and Vicario will probably make a difference, I dunno about the rest though.Not at their best consistently I agree but they still give us a much better chance of winning football games in the PL and EL.
Yeah 5/1 is 17%, but bookies always overplay the likelihood to minimise losses, i.e. it's likely closer to 10% in pure statistical terms.
There isn't a single method. People like Opta run models on all the possible outcomes, thousands of times, and generate probabilities. That's probably the most robust way.Don't even know how you create a % for something like that tho
LolWhy wouldn't they be motivated? Players want to win the EL, it's an amazing trophy to have on your CV
What does the data say? and how long does new manager bounce last in the data? 1 game? max 2? That doesn't win you the EL from here.
I said after Villa that they had to replace him this week of they wanted to give a new manager a chance to implement anything significant before the EL starts again. They haven't done that so now we just have to hope that players do come back from injury and stay back.
Lol
You really are wrong far more than you realise
Yeah, sorry, you’re right all along. Ange js great. It’s all down to bad luck. He’s the best available coach for us
I remember reading a book called the numbers game which disproved this showing that it's just a reversion to the mean. Managers get sacked when form is worst and then there is usually an uptick in results which they argued would have happened anyway. Could be bollocks though!We are more likely to wi
we are more likely to win the EL if they are fit and motivated I agree
However the new manager bounce is a real thing. Can be seen in the data. And I’d suggest Ange is so damaging that there could be really quite a big bounce at Spurs, coinciding with the latter stages of the EL
Ah. The plot thickens !
Nah There is solid evidence that bottom half PL teams have a bounce. But of course not all do. Everton are it seems. Better team than us nowI remember reading a book called the numbers game which disproved this showing that it's just a reversion to the mean. Managers get sacked when form is worst and then there is usually an uptick in results which they argued would have happened anyway. Could be bollocks though!
Same thing shown here Redirect Notice
schrodinger's VDVWish somebody would just come out and clarify this shit now. He either is or isn't. Who was in training today and who was out.
Not true. If you look on an exchange like Betfair, where you can see the prices for both 'back' and 'lay' (with the difference effectively being the 'margins' for each gambler), then you'll get a better idea. At present:Yeah 5/1 is 17%, but bookies always overplay the likelihood to minimise losses, i.e. it's likely closer to 10% in pure statistical terms.
I doubt it is bollocks, as it totally makes sense statistically / logically - teams most often sack their managers when they have just been through a terrible run of results, so the next few results after terrible run of results (whether you sack the manager or not) is statistically likely to be better. Which is exactly what you've just said.I remember reading a book called the numbers game which disproved this showing that it's just a reversion to the mean. Managers get sacked when form is worst and then there is usually an uptick in results which they argued would have happened anyway. Could be bollocks though!
Same thing shown here Redirect Notice
I'd say on an even more basic level the "bounce" makes perfect sense because, assuming you have a bit of faith in the people running the club, they are getting rid of someone unfit for the role, and replacing them with someone better.I doubt it is bollocks, as it totally makes sense statistically / logically - teams most often sack their managers when they have just been through a terrible run of results, so the next few results after terrible run of results (whether you sack the manager or not) is statistically likely to be better. Which is exactly what you've just said.So for me it's not bollocks at all, it makes perfect sense.
With respect to all concerned, responses above like "There is solid evidence that bottom half PL teams have a bounce" simply suggest that the poster does not understand what the analysis is saying, i.e. they are confusing a 'bounce' or 'improved results caused by manager change' with simple 'reversion to the mean'.![]()
I doubt it is bollocks, as it totally makes sense statistically / logically - teams most often sack their managers when they have just been through a terrible run of results, so the next few results after terrible run of results (whether you sack the manager or not) is statistically likely to be better. Which is exactly what you've just said.So for me it's not bollocks at all, it makes perfect sense.
With respect to all concerned, responses above like "There is solid evidence that bottom half PL teams have a bounce" simply suggest that the poster does not understand what the analysis is saying, i.e. they are confusing a 'bounce' or 'improved results caused by manager change' with simple 'reversion to the mean'.![]()
Yes all of that could be true, but it is ignoring the statistical explanation posted earlier which could equally be the cause of the better results. Getting better results because you changed the manager could be true in some cases, but equally it could be the simple reversion to the mean that causes better results in the cases of what many people assume (therefore sometimes incorrectly) to be a 'new manager bounce'. I'm not saying that a new manager can't have an effect, of course no one would say that, I'm just saying that when people say things like "There is solid evidence that bottom half PL teams have a bounce" this is grossly misleading as it is ignoring (or more likely not understanding) statistical analysis such as that posted earlier, and hence should be taken with a large pinch of salt (well, by anyone educated anyway).I'd say on an even more basic level the "bounce" makes perfect sense because, assuming you have a bit of faith in the people running the club, they are getting rid of someone unfit for the role, and replacing them with someone better.
Nobody is sacking a manager because they think they're great, and likewise nobody is bringing in a new guy that they don't think is better.
Of course results should be better once the change is made.