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Dowdle is a High Variance Rusher

Discussion in 'Steelers Talk' started by Bubbahotep, Jun 19, 2026.

  1. NorthernBlitz

    NorthernBlitz Well-Known Member

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    What do you think the flaw in the argument is again? Because it's unclear to me what your objection to succ% is...beyond handwavy "empty rhetoric" of course.

    Please be specific. And if you can, please type it slow so us numbers folk can understand. :)

    Maybe start with what you think my argument is? Then you can point out why you think it's flawed? Again, please be specific on why your objection "points out the flaw" in my argument. Shouldn't be hard for a modern day Cicero, right?:drinks:

    Because last time you said you pointed out the flaw in my argument, you said you didn't know what my argument was when I asked you.

    I also think it's funny that the other day you were criticizing someone else for using appeal to their own authority as a negotiator. Now you're trying to win this argument by telling me how great you are at rhetoric. I'm an experimentalist, so I'd prefer that you show me instead of telling me.

    Also, have you ever thought about how subjectivity total yards is? My guess is that it's not easy to find 5 stats in the NFL that are completely objective...if we're super anal, there may not be any.

    My first thought for a completely objective stat was pass attempts. Then I remembered this play.

    [​IMG]

    Which is why the NFL rule book is enormous and I assume crafted by highly trained lawyers. Because everything in the NFL is subjective.

    Aside: This is why I dislike the "football move" rule for receptions and much preferred the "you have to keep possession when you go to ground" rule. Even though it meant that James didn't catch that ball...but if we ran that same play now, it would be a catch.

    The keep possession rule was more objective than the football move rule, despite still having some subjectivity. It's much easier to understand. And it's also how you'd play if you were just throwing it around with your friends.
     
    Last edited: Jul 2, 2026 at 10:24 AM
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  2. MojoUW

    MojoUW Well-Known Member

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    I missed that the first and only time I watched it. Gonna have to go back and look again. I've seen several different versions on various streaming platforms....got one that stands out? Extended? Directors? or whatever.
     
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  3. MojoUW

    MojoUW Well-Known Member

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    Is this all just a really long discussion for a certain someone to get back round to how Harris was/is a better RB than Warren?
     
    • Informative Informative x 1
  4. S.T.D

    S.T.D Well-Known Member

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    Honestly I watched whatever version was on HBO, Showtime, or whatever movie channel I 1st watched it on, but because of being such a fan of John Carpenters the Thing, which I own about 3 different copies of, and have also on my DVR, I noticed it , and pointed out to a friend of mine while watching Hateful 8 the 1st time. The soundtrack/score was the 1st clue.
     
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  5. S.T.D

    S.T.D Well-Known Member

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    Modern day Cicero had me rolling with a great belly laugh.
     
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  6. NorthernBlitz

    NorthernBlitz Well-Known Member

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    An interesting comparison from the Depot:
    https://steelersdepot.com/2026/07/study-a-key-difference-of-steelers-new-running-back-duo/

    Shows that Warren ranked 4th in forced missed tackles on running plays by RBs (despite having the fewest number of carries in the sample).

    Dowdle had 25 more carries than Warren and forced 41 tackles.

    On passes: Warren had one more reception than Dowdle. Warren forced 24 missed tackles. Dowdle forced 7.

    I think both will be good (but not great) backs for us. I hope that Warren gets the larger workload of the two because I think he's the better back. But I won't be too upset as long as it's around even (provided that they keep giving similar results as they have in the past).
     
  7. jeh1856

    jeh1856 Chilling by the pool

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    I’m anticipating George Pickens being added as well :shrug:

    Some people think if they say the same thing 37 times while ignoring the facts it helps them gain some lost credibility
     
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  8. Formerscribe

    Formerscribe Well-Known Member

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    I just explained this. I have explained the flaws in success percentage before. In your rush to try to falsely portray something subjective as objective, you contradicted yourself. You claimed I didn't understand the word, then admitted that your pet statistic is subjective. That a bunch of statisticians decided they have refined the statistic enough to like it doesn't change that it is subjective, and therefore, inferior to objective measures.

    Now you are trying to argue that poor interpretations of the rules on a specific play are the same thing as using the statistics that result from one game or many games. It isn't.

    Still waiting for you to admit the claim that I dodged anything was pure nonsesne.
     
  9. NorthernBlitz

    NorthernBlitz Well-Known Member

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    Almost every spot of the ball is subjective. I think the exceptions are: touch backs, XPs, adjustments for penalties (though the "previous spot" would have been subjectively determined in these cases).

    There is no objective way of determining where the ball is at the end of a play in many cases. And it would make the product aweful if we reviewed the spot on every play...which would be closer to an objective measure in cases where we can see both the ball and whether a player is down / in bound in the same frame...probably multiple frames because you also have to figure out where the ball is relative to the yard lines. It's actually pretty frequent that the ref on the field can't even objectively determine when a play ends. And that doesn't even account for how subjective it is when they call / don't call holding (which happens to some extend on basically every play). Pretty much every decision made by the refs in real time is subjective. Also true in the replay booth, but they have more information and time so they're probably more accurate in large samples.

    This means that every yardage stat is subjective.

    But just because these stats are objective doesn't mean they aren't useful
    (kind of like the George Box quote...I think made famous by Feynman). But just because stats aren't the exact same thing as "ground truth", doesn't mean they aren't "useful".

    Which is the point that you keep missing. Others above have suggested you may be intentionally missing this point to avoid admitting that you were wrong in a previous argument.

    I don't think it's true that you have "explained the flaws in success percentage before". I believe that you've only said that it's subjective (and implied that means that it's arbitrary or at least not useful). I think you've explained why you think it's subjective. But never why it's not useful. If I missed it, I apologize. I'd be happy to be proven wrong if you have a link or something. Or you could just write down what you think the flaws are and we could try to discuss them.

    So I think re: succ% you're arguing against a straw man. You seem to think that I think it's (1) perfect or even (2) good by itself. My argument for the benefit of succ% isn't that it's either of these things.

    As I've said to you many times, my argument is that: I think that combining YPC (how many big runs a player has) and succ% (how consistent the runner is) gives you a much better sense of a back's performance (in large samples) than any single metric alone.

    I've believe that you've argued that YPC is a good metric for consistency. Again, you got an object lesson (it's funny, I always want to say "abject lesson") in this against the Lions last year. And Budda's post above shows that YPC is a strong function of the yardage a back gets on the top 10% of their carries. It doesn't tell you much about the other 90% of their carries...because those are basically the same for all backs (which Budda also showed us in a sample in this post while comparing the distributions for Dowdle and Warren).

    Again, when we first starting talking about this you made the argument that it was a fringe stat that wasn't available on reputable sites like PFR. And I would have agreed with that 5 years ago. But you need to "update your priors" here. Because these arguments are not longer valid.

    I believe you've also argued that Najee 2 years ago was better than Warren last year because Najee got over your subjective benchmark of 1000 yards (1043 yards on 263 carried). But Warren only got to 958 yards (85 fewer yards and 52 fewer carries).

    Re: Dodging. I would prefer to remain honest in my assessment of your previous post. You may disagree, but it's my honest assessment.

    Also, FWIW while I disagree with you on this I'd always be happy to have a drink with you (or anyone here) and talk Steelers. It's no fun if we agree on everything :drinks::drinks::drinks::drinks::drinks:
     

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