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 by Elvis
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   40500  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

http://regressing.deadspin.com/is-disci ... 1496283805

Is "Discipline" Overrated In The NFL?

Reuben Fischer-Baum

The 2013-14 Seahawks finished the year with a 13-3 record, a +186 point differential, and +40.1 percent DVOA, making them arguably the best team in the NFL. They also led the league in penalties (128) and penalty yards (1,193). Baltimore led in both categories last year and won the Super Bowl over the 49ers, who were second in penalty yards. We're told time and again by broadcasters and pundits that good teams have to be "disciplined," by which they largely mean "not prone to penalties." Is "discipline" overrated?

To find out, we compared penalty totals by team, from 2009 through 2013, to points scored, points allowed, and total point differential for each season. Data comes from the site NFL Penalty Stats Tracker (thanks to BestTicketsBlog for pointing us toward the site). It's possible that better teams could accrue more penalties because they play at a faster pace (and get more opportunities to commit penalties); to control for this we looked at the percentage of snaps—offensive, defensive, and total—in which the team got flagged.

If discipline is instrumental to success, we'd expect to see offensive penalty rate linked to points scored, defensive penalty rate linked to points allowed, and total penalty rate linked to point differential. Here's how the numbers looked for the 160 seasons in our dataset:

Image

This data show no statistically significant correlation between penalty rates and offensive, defensive, or team performance. The negative relationship between offensive penalties and points scored is the closest to significant; I suspect that if I bumped up my sample by a couple seasons it would prove to be a statistically valid but extremely small effect (as is, p=0.08). You can perform the same analysis using pace-adjusted penalty yards instead of penalty totals and get similar results (offense r=-0.118, defense r=-0.09, total r=0.115).

So what does this mean? This doesn't imply that penalties aren't bad for teams; individual penalties are clearly detrimental on both offense and defense. What it does imply, I think, is that the sort of teams that accumulate more penalties—teams you might call "aggressive" when they're winning—aren't necessarily bad teams, and the sort of teams that accumulate fewer penalties aren't necessarily good teams.

Given the advantages that can come from plays that get you flagged, the best place for a team to be is just barely on the good side of the rulebook. It would make sense that an aggressive team that tried to live in this gray area (resulting in some flags) would be better off than a relatively passive team that never comes close to committing anything resembling a penalty, but gets bulldozed. Something to keep in mind when the penalty-heavy Detroit Lions implode again in 2014 and prompt another 1,000 articles about how they're "undisciplined."

 by Hacksaw
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   24523  
 Joined:  Apr 15 2015
United States of America   AT THE BEACH
Moderator

Do penalties = dicipline,, or lack of? I have to agree there is a fine line between the advantage of aggressiveness and the yards and downs lost to penalties.

 by Gareth
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   1229  
 Joined:  Mar 30 2015
United States of America   LA Coliseum
Pro Bowl

The article should ask"Are Penalties Overrated in the NFL?" I would answer that with a big fat "yes".

Discipline is too wide a term. There are plenty of ways that discipline come into play beyond penalties.

 by ramsman34
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   9666  
 Joined:  Apr 16 2015
United States of America   Back in LA baby!
Moderator

I have always held the concept that it isn't the number of penalties or even the hidden yards lost, but rather, the timing of particular penalties. The drive killers, the one's that take you out of field goal range, the ones that negate a turnover or first down. THOSE are the areas of lack of focus/discipline, and just plan smarts that get to me.

 by Hacksaw
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   24523  
 Joined:  Apr 15 2015
United States of America   AT THE BEACH
Moderator

ramsman34 wrote:I have always held the concept that it isn't the number of penalties or even the hidden yards lost, but rather, the timing of particular penalties. The drive killers, the one's that take you out of field goal range, the ones that negate a turnover or first down. THOSE are the areas of lack of focus/discipline, and just plan smarts that get to me.


This definetly factors into the conversation. Those bonehead back breakers in critical situations. The false start in a 2 minute drill or personal fouls when you aren't involved in the action. We seem to get our fair share of those.

 by Elvis
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   40500  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

ramsman34 wrote:I have always held the concept that it isn't the number of penalties or even the hidden yards lost, but rather, the timing of particular penalties. The drive killers, the one's that take you out of field goal range, the ones that negate a turnover or first down. THOSE are the areas of lack of focus/discipline, and just plan smarts that get to me.


Hey,

what was you take on the Tennessee game?

 by dieterbrock
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   11512  
 Joined:  Mar 31 2015
United States of America   New Jersey
Hall of Fame

Ill say it a million times, Ill take a holding call over a sack, a PI over TD pass and a roughing the passer any time

The arguement is that "good teams can overcome penalties" seems to come up. "Bad teams need to play mistake free becasue they cant afford penalties" (Im paraphrasing) is some sort of cure.
To me, thats the tail wagging the dog
I'd rather work on being a better team and let the penalites fall where they may

 by Elvis
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   40500  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

dieterbrock wrote:Ill say it a million times, Ill take a holding call over a sack, a PI over TD pass and a roughing the passer any time

The arguement is that "good teams can overcome penalties" seems to come up. "Bad teams need to play mistake free becasue they cant afford penalties" (Im paraphrasing) is some sort of cure.
To me, thats the tail wagging the dog
I'd rather work on being a better team and let the penalites fall where they may


A perfect example is Jacksonville, least penalized team in the NFL, didn't seem to help even though they had so little to over come...

 by Hacksaw
9 years 5 months ago
 Total posts:   24523  
 Joined:  Apr 15 2015
United States of America   AT THE BEACH
Moderator

And the most penalized did well in most cases. Good point about those specific types of penalties though deiter.

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9 posts Feb 05 2025