I spent a lot of today reading Behindthenet. Good stuff.
For hockey guys, is there a general time remaining/goals behind change of pace "switch"?
For example, down 2 goals with 10 minutes left or down 1 going into the 3rd period. A "switch" when the team behind starts a furious pace while the winning team tries to control the clock.
It seems like teams would generally play at a consistent pace up to a certain point where they are desperate to win or simply in preventive mode.
It probably varies by team, but I think most teams with a lead in the 3rd period would tend to play more defensively and vice versa. Also, probably just gets elevated in the last 10 minutes or so.
In hockey, if the game is tied late in the 3rd, you will often see both teams get more conservative as they play for a tie and guarantee themselves each at least a point.
how do you track the tackles? Been digging around PFF and noticed they do them also. This was week 5
Tm Total Solo AssistCAR 133 75 58DAL 134 102 32DEN 96 89 7DET 113 92 21GB 130 92 38IND 134 90 44JAX 111 93 18NE 146 80 66NO 127 90 37NYG 163 112 51PHI 120 108 12SD 128 103 25SF 119 90 29TEN 137 93 44WAS 133 71 62We’re continuing to see huge numbers from the Giants crew. Week 5 marks the second time they’ve topped 160 total tackles, and they awarded a season-high 1.77 tackles per opportunity. It’s no surprise that we saw big tackle performances out of
Kemal Ishmael (14),
Paul Worrilow (14),
Jacquian Williams (14),
Prince Shembo (14), and
Antrel Rolle (11). The Giants are on the road the next two weeks and then head into their bye. We won’t see them home again until Week 9 when they face Indy. Upgrade
Jerrell Freeman and
D’Qwell Jackson in that one.
Besides New York, San Diego and Dallas stick out as the most favorable IDP venues in Week 5. The numbers were a bit spread out among the players in the Cowboys win over Houston, but this is a great indication of the IDP floor in this venue. In San Diego, we saw both
David Harris and
Dawan Landry top 10 tackles, so we’ll want to continue to exploit this crew for IDP purposes. The Chargers are home again next week against the Chiefs.
Josh Mauga anyone?
Tennessee also appears to be a favorable crew. This makes
George Wilson and
Avery Williamsonespecially appealing fliers going forward.
Carolina, New England, and Washington remain extremely assist-heavy venues, with all three awarding solos on less than 60 percent of their total tackles. Fortunately,
Luke Kuechly wasn’t impact much this time around, as 11 of his 15 total tackles were solos. But that’s more of an anomaly, and we should expect assist-heavy lines from players in these venues.
We’re going to see solo-heavy lines from players in Philly, Jacksonville, and Denver. While their total tackles numbers remain on the lowest end of the spectrum, we can still get strong fantasy performances in these venues.
Paul Posluszny and
Johnathan Cyprien both topped double-digits in Week 5. Likewise,
T.J. McDonald managed 11 total tackles (10 solo) against the Eagles. The Denver crew is a little concerning. They’re currently among the league’s most stingy crews, which could impact
Danny Trevathan going forward. The Broncos are on the road this week, but then have back-to-back home games, so keep that in mind.