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Defending Reality

  Posted 8/6 by Jeff Pasquino, Exclusive for Footballguys.com

Note: This article first appeared on Footballguys.com in 2005 here and has been revamped year over year since its debut. This year's version of this analysis continues this alternative outlook on team defense valuation.
Nearly every Fantasy League has different rules for how to score Team Defense. Many use the tried and true method of 1 point for a sack and 2 for a turnover. To add a little variety, many also add 6 points for the rare touchdown and yet another two for the rarest of scores - a safety. Other leagues try to tweak this scoring method by incorporating points against, yards against, or both.

Fantasy Football Scoring - A History Lesson

The basis for fantasy scoring comes from an attempt to quantify an individual player's performance numerically and assign that a value proportional to his team's performance. Touchdowns and yardage usually translate to team success, and the offensive player is rewarded for such productivity.

The second iteration of fantasy scoring came about as an attempt to normalize different positions to a similar scoring system. Quarterbacks produce more touchdowns and yardage than running backs, who produce even more than wide receivers. The result for many leagues was to reduce the points for passing touchdowns and also passing yardage so as to make running backs more valuable. Other leagues go one step further by awarding an extra point per catch to each player to increase wide receiver and tight end values closer to running backs.

What does any of this have to do with Team Defense? I am glad that you asked that question. This article is an attempt to determine how to quantify Team Defense scoring in a manner that reflects the impact a defense has on the outcome of a game, and also to provide a normalized score for a Team Defense that puts the value of a Defense at or near par for other fantasy football positions.

Baseline Defense

First, we have to determine what constitutes a good Team Defense. Is it one that gives up the fewest yards, or the fewest points? An argument can be made for either being the case, so let's take a look at the rankings from last year to see which method more accurately reflects a successful season. The results for the 2008 Season are in Table 1:v

Table 1: Baseline Defense Rankings

Team
Yds Vs Rk
Pts Vs Rk
Avg Rk
Pittsburgh Steelers 
1
1
1.0
Baltimore Ravens 
2
3
2.5
Philadelphia Eagles 
3
4
3.5
Tennessee Titans 
7
2
4.5
New York Giants 
5
5
5.0
Washington Redskins 
4
6
5.0
New England Patriots 
10
8
9.0
Indianapolis Colts 
11
7
9.0
Minnesota Vikings 
6
13
9.5
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 
9
10
9.5
Miami Dolphins 
15
9
12.0
Dallas Cowboys 
8
20
14.0
Buffalo Bills 
14
14
14.0
Carolina Panthers 
18
12
15.0
Cincinnati Bengals 
12
19
15.5
New York Jets 
16
18
17.0
Atlanta Falcons 
24
11
17.5
San Francisco 49ers 
13
23
18.0
Chicago Bears 
21
17
19.0
Jacksonville Jaguars 
17
21
19.0
San Diego Chargers 
25
15
20.0
Green Bay Packers 
20
22
21.0
Cleveland Browns 
26
17
21.5
Arizona Cardinals 
19
28
23.5
New Orleans Saints 
23
26
24.5
Houston Texans 
22
27
24.5
Oakland Raiders 
27
24
25.5
Seattle Seahawks 
30
25
27.5
St. Louis Rams 
28
31
29.5
Denver Broncos 
29
30
29.5
Kansas City Chiefs 
31
29
30.0
Detroit Lions 
32
32
32.0

Upon further review of Table 1, all but one of the Top 7 teams in Points Against were in the 2008 playoffs, and Carolina, San Diego, Miami and the Colts all made the postseason due to their scoring defense more than holding teams from racking up yardage. Just like in the past, it appears that Points Against is a better indicator of a good defensive team than just looking at the yardage. We shall adopt Points Against as the baseline for Team Defense.

Sack the Sack

The most common scoring system for Team Defense awards a point for every sack. This seems like a good idea, since it is an accomplishment by the defense to stop the offense from moving downfield, and it is an easy statistic to track. However, how realistic is this as a measure of Team Defense? Do sacks truly translate to team victories?

We obviously need some way to test this idea. Turning to statistics, we find that correlation is a measure of how two groups of statistics relate to one another. The formula used for correlation gives an answer between 0 and 1, with 1 representing a perfect match - 100% correlation. We can use this to see if sacks line up with our baseline, the Baseline Ranking (Points Against) from Table 1.

Table 2 lists the Team Defense rankings for sacks and the Baseline Ranking from Table 1. The correlation factor is given at the bottom of the table.

Table 2: Sacks vs. Baseline Defense Rankings

Team
Pts Vs Rk
Sacks
Sacks Rk
Pittsburgh Steelers 
1
51
2
Tennessee Titans 
2
44
5
Baltimore Ravens 
3
34
11
Philadelphia Eagles 
4
48
3
New York Giants 
5
42
6
Washington Redskins 
6
24
28
Indianapolis Colts 
7
30
16
New England Patriots 
8
31
14
Miami Dolphins 
9
40
8
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 
10
29
20
Atlanta Falcons 
11
34
11
Carolina Panthers 
12
37
9
Minnesota Vikings 
13
45
4
Buffalo Bills 
14
24
28
San Diego Chargers 
15
28
22
Chicago Bears 
17
28
22
Cleveland Browns 
17
17
30
New York Jets 
18
41
7
Cincinnati Bengals 
19
17
30
Dallas Cowboys 
20
59
1
Jacksonville Jaguars 
21
29
20
Green Bay Packers 
22
27
25
San Francisco 49ers 
23
30
16
Oakland Raiders 
24
32
13
Seattle Seahawks 
25
35
10
New Orleans Saints 
26
28
22
Houston Texans 
27
25
27
Arizona Cardinals 
28
31
14
Kansas City Chiefs 
29
10
32
Denver Broncos 
30
26
26
St. Louis Rams 
31
30
16
Detroit Lions 
32
30
16

Correlation: 0.435

Based upon the results, it would appear that we should stop right here as a correlation that high should tell you all we need to know, right? Well, looking back over the three years we have for data, the numbers are really all over the place. In 2005 the correlation was just 0.393 and in 2004 it was 0.509, while in 2006 it was 0.626 and 2007 was 0.444. This translates to a wide range of answers, anywhere from a weak correlation (39.3%) between Sacks and Baseline Defensive Ranking to a strong correlation (62.6%). Why would that be the case?

The common misconception is that a sack translates readily to the defense getting the ball back for the offense. The reality is that not all sacks are created equal. While a 15-yard sack on 3rd-and-10 would likely result in a Team Defense getting the ball for the offense, a 1-yard sack on first down is not nearly as valuable. However, in the 1 point for a sack scoring system, there is no differentiation between the two different sacks. It would appear that the sack statistic is misleading, and should be replaced by another one.

Turning Over Turnovers

Perhaps we should look harder at the other common statistic used in Team Defense scoring, the turnover. Surely one cannot dispute that turnovers relate strongly to team victories. That has to correlate well with Team Defense rankings, right?

Table 3: Turnovers vs. Baseline Defense Rankings

Team
Takeaways
TA Rank
Pts Vs Rk
Pittsburgh Steelers 
29
9
1
Tennessee Titans 
31
3
2
Baltimore Ravens 
34
1
3
Philadelphia Eagles 
29
9
4
New York Giants 
22
20
5
Washington Redskins 
18
28
6
Indianapolis Colts 
26
13
7
New England Patriots 
22
20
8
Miami Dolphins 
30
5
9
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 
30
5
10
Atlanta Falcons 
18
28
11
Carolina Panthers 
25
15
12
Minnesota Vikings 
25
15
13
Buffalo Bills 
22
20
14
San Diego Chargers 
24
17
15
Chicago Bears 
32
2
17
Cleveland Browns 
31
3
17
New York Jets 
30
5
18
Cincinnati Bengals 
24
17
19
Dallas Cowboys 
22
20
20
Jacksonville Jaguars 
17
31
21
Green Bay Packers 
28
12
22
San Francisco 49ers 
18
28
23
Oakland Raiders 
24
17
24
Seattle Seahawks 
20
26
25
New Orleans Saints 
22
20
26
Houston Texans 
22
20
27
Arizona Cardinals 
30
5
28
Kansas City Chiefs 
29
9
29
Denver Broncos 
13
32
30
St. Louis Rams 
26
13
31
Detroit Lions 
20
26
32

Correlation: 0.333

OK, things got worse. How can turnovers not significantly contribute to a good defensive ranking?

The answer really comes from the mathematics - correlation does not work well with numbers that are close together. From Table 3, you can see most Team Defenses (24 of 32) have from 21 and 33 turnovers, so such a tight grouping will compromise the calculations.

A sanity check is in order - we need to use the common scoring method in its entirety (1 point per sack + 2 points for a turnover) and correlate that result against Average Points (See Table 4):

Table 4: Turnovers and Sacks vs. Baseline Defense Rankings

Team
TAs x 2 + Sks
TAs x 2 + Sks Rk
Pts Vs Rk
Pittsburgh Steelers 
97
3
1
Tennessee Titans 
102
1
2
Baltimore Ravens 
96
4
3
Philadelphia Eagles 
94
5
4
New York Giants 
86
10
5
Washington Redskins 
66
23
6
Indianapolis Colts 
74
16
7
New England Patriots 
65
25
8
Miami Dolphins 
94
5
9
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 
87
9
10
Atlanta Falcons 
66
23
11
Carolina Panthers 
69
20
12
Minnesota Vikings 
91
7
13
Buffalo Bills 
56
31
14
San Diego Chargers 
64
26
15
Chicago Bears 
78
14
17
Cleveland Browns 
81
12
17
New York Jets 
85
11
18
Cincinnati Bengals 
61
28
19
Dallas Cowboys 
99
2
20
Jacksonville Jaguars 
61
28
21
Green Bay Packers 
89
8
22
San Francisco 49ers 
70
18
23
Oakland Raiders 
80
13
24
Seattle Seahawks 
69
20
25
New Orleans Saints 
72
17
26
Houston Texans 
63
27
27
Arizona Cardinals 
77
15
28
Kansas City Chiefs 
68
22
29
Denver Broncos 
52
32
30
St. Louis Rams 
70
18
31
Detroit Lions 
60
30
32

Correlation: 0.495

Now we're seeing some improvement. The correlation between the basic scoring system and Points Against is almost 50% better than the turnover ranking correlation alone and more that 10% better than our first score with sacks. The combination of both statistics helped in achieving point separation (ranging from 52 to 102 points) and agreement with the baseline, but there is definitely room for improvement.

The basic argument against using the sack as a standard measure remains - there is little direct correlation between the sack and elite defenses. Another measure of defense should be considered in place of sacks. However, if sacks are going to be eliminated from the Team Defense scoring system, what will be inserted in its place?

Give Me The $#@!! Ball

Let us reconsider the basic premise of Team Defense. Defenses have two main objectives - keeping the opposition from scoring, and getting the ball back for their offense. We have already seen that the first objective is the baseline measure of Team Defense, so we need to quantify the second criteria to the best of our ability to see if this should be the new fantasy football measure of the performance of a Team Defense.

There are two defensive categories of getting the ball back for the offense that are overlooked in the "turnover" category. Defenses succeed in stopping the opponent by forcing the traditional turnover (fumbles and interceptions) and also by forcing punts and stopping the opponent on fourth down. Our new formula for Team Defense needs to have basis in reality to weigh the value of forced punts and turnovers on downs.

Punts happen numerous times during the game, but they rarely result in the defense giving the offense a short field (under 50 yards from a touchdown). As such, forcing a punt has to be viewed as less opportunistic and less valuable than a fumble or interception, which results in a short field about half of the time. Therefore, our formula begins to look like this:

New Team Defense Score = Turnovers (INTs and Fumbles) x 2 + Forced Punts

Now for the second portion of the new formula - incorporation of turnovers on downs. While this can happen anywhere on the field, it is more likely to occur at both a crucial point in the game and also in a position where the opposing team is in scoring territory. While the resulting field position may not be as good as with a traditional turnover, the impact of both getting the ball for the offense and the likelihood that the 4th down turnover kept the opposition off the scoreboard gives this type of turnover approximately equal value to a fumble or interception. Therefore, we modify the formula to be:

New Team Defense Score = Turnovers (INTs + Fumbles + 4th Down Stops) x 2 + Forced Punts

We label this new equation the "Realistic Team Defense" scoring system. Now all that is left is to test our new formula.

Is the Fantasy a Reality

Let us revisit the 2008 season for data once again. Obtaining the two new statistics (4th down turnovers and forced punts), we get the following results:

Table 5: All Turnovers and Forced Punts vs. Baseline Defense Rankings

Team
TOs x 2 + Punts
Reality Def Rk
Points Vs. Rk
Pittsburgh Steelers 
214
1
1
Tennessee Titans 
209
2
2
Baltimore Ravens 
200
3
3
Philadelphia Eagles 
199
4
4
Dallas Cowboys 
195
5
20
New York Giants 
184
6
5
Minnesota Vikings 
181
7
13
Green Bay Packers 
177
8
22
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 
174
9
10
Chicago Bears 
173
10
17
New York Jets 
170
11
18
Washington Redskins 
169
12
6
Miami Dolphins 
167
13
9
Carolina Panthers 
165
14
12
Atlanta Falcons 
164
15
11
Oakland Raiders 
162
16
24
St. Louis Rams 
159
17
31
Cincinnati Bengals 
156
18
19
San Francisco 49ers 
154
19
23
Arizona Cardinals 
152
20
28
New Orleans Saints 
150
21
26
Cleveland Browns 
148
22
17
Jacksonville Jaguars 
148
22
21
New England Patriots 
148
22
8
Seattle Seahawks 
147
25
25
Houston Texans 
146
26
27
Indianapolis Colts 
145
27
7
Kansas City Chiefs 
140
28
29
Buffalo Bills 
136
29
14
San Diego Chargers 
132
30
15
Detroit Lions 
127
31
32
Denver Broncos 
120
32
30

Correlation: 0.617

Definite progress. The correlation between the new and improved scoring system and Points Against is over 60% (61.7%), a sign of a strong correlation and the best correlation so far. This also matches well with prior years (66.9% in 2007, 68.8% in 2006, 66.6% in 2005, 62.4% in 2004). The addition of all turnovers and punts forced has increased the point separation once again, ranging now from 120 to 214 (a range of 94 points instead of 50 as before in Table 4).

There are additional benefits to this new equation. First, the scores are higher (average score of 10.2 / game) than under the original system (4.8 / game), which goes more towards a better normalization of the Team Defense position on the fantasy roster. By increasing the average score, the net effect is that a Team Defense is now representative of another normalized position player. Table 6 represents the 2008 average score by position of the Top 12 players based upon the default Footballguys.com scoring system.

Table 6: Average Fantasy Points / Game for Top 12 Players by Position

Pos
Non-PPR Pts
PPR Pts
QB
19.2
19.2
RB
14.7
17.0
WR
11.3
16.6
TE
6.5
10.4
PK
8.9
8.9
Def*
14.0
14.0

*Based upon the new Realistic Team Defense formula.

Now the Team Defense is comparable to the value of close to a Top 12 wide receiver but below a Top 12 RB. With PPR, the Team Defense declines to a good RB2 or WR2 in value. That would seem to be an appropriate position of value for a strong Team Defense, below a top skill position (QB, RB, WR) but above the lesser valued tight end or kicker position.

One last additional benefit (and variance to the Realistic Team Defense formula) is that the addition of scoring points for a Team Defense scoring play (Touchdown or Safety) allows for the added point value, and also reduces the impact of that event to a lower percentage of the total Team Defense score. Previously, under the original scoring method, teams scored between 52 and 102 points for the season without defensive or special teams touchdowns added (see Table 4). Adding a single touchdown (6 points) varied the overall season score by 6-11%, a large impact. Now with the Realistic Team Defense formula, the range is much larger (120 to 214, see Table 5) so adding a touchdown reduces the impact to 3-5%. This smaller valuation relative to the seasonal performance does seem to be more appropriate.

Conclusion

Adoption of the Realistic Team Defense formula for defensive scoring for fantasy leagues going forward would result in a more accurate representation of the value of a Team Defense and better reflect how the actual defensive unit for each team performs in that particular season. The formula incorporates the significant statistics to quantify how well an actual defense performs, and results in a normalized score relative to the skill position players. The variation of adding back in the relatively rare event of a defensive score reduces the impact of the additional points to less of an overall change to the season Team Defense total, and increases the relative value of a Team Defense closer to that of an upper echelon wide receiver.

As always, feedback is welcome at pasquino@footballguys.com.

Data Sources

www.nfl.com
www.footballguys.com