by Hoop Blah »
08 Oct 2010 10:36
Snowball Hoop Blah What your science and stats is failing to recognise is why you get excited. It's not because you expect something to happen but because you want something to happen and actually want the excitement and euphoria of the expectation.
It's like buying a lottery ticket and planning how you'd spend the £5m. It doesn't mean you think you'll win!
Utterly illogical.
We don't get excited when Fedders is about to take a goal-kick, or a full-back has the ball on the edge of our box
yet we are far more likely to score within 30 seconds of a Fedders kick-out.
No, the reason we get excited is because EMOTIONALLY we believe
we have a "good chance" of a goal, even though, if we paused and
used our brains we'd know that was dumb.
It is a fact that last season we scored 1 in 77 and went about 140 corners without a goal.
Why then, when we fail to win do we sometimes hear, "But we had 18 corners to their 2!"
Corner-count has almost zero relationship to goals from corners
For starters, supporting a football team and getting excited over any of it is pretty illogical. There's no problem in that though, it's kind of what makes it entertaining!
You say we get excited because 'EMOTIONALLY we believe we have a "good chance" of a goal'. Do you have any evidence to support that? All the people I've ever watched a significant number of Reading games with say we're rubbish at corners and never expect us to score. That doesn't stop them joining in with 'come on you Royals' as we line up….I think it's called supporting and getting behind your team, something like that anyway. It's not something they do because they think we're likely to score (although I'm sure there are some within the crowd that do….but it's probably more out of hope than anything else).
As for why people quote corner count as a positive, as in 'But we had 18 corners to their 2' I think you'll find that's because corners is, in many people's eyes, a good proxy for pressure on the oppositions goal. You can't win a corner without have the ball near their goal-line, and if you're close to their goal-line you're making them defend. If they're defending it's because you're in some way threatening to score in their goal
Can you provide the data to back up your stats by the way? You have a history of getting even the basic's wrong so even though I don't disbelieve the 140 corners without a goal, or 1 in 77, it would be interesting to give someone the opportunity to see if it's correct.