this post was submitted on 25 Oct 2023
13 points (74.1% liked)
Football (Soccer fútbol fußball 足球 )
5667 readers
12 users here now
Here for discussion of all things association football/soccer!
Rules
- No bigotry - including racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, or xenophobia.
- Be respectful, especially when disagreeing. Everyone should feel welcome here.
- No porn.
- No Ads / Spamming.
- No piracy
Other Football/Soccer Related Communities
- Eredivisie
- MLS
- Football Manager
- Ajax FC
- Arsenal FC
- Chelsea FC
- Liverpool FC
- Tottenham Hotspur FC
- US National Woman’s Soccer League
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Son has impressive overperformance of xG but that graphic has very suspect math. Just based off the raw Goals and xG numbers from the graphic:
This summing of xG from season to season and averaging of xG from season to season is total BS. Especially considering some of the injury plagued seasons by both players they played very few games, for instance Messi this year.
So yes, Son is a great finisher but please don't bring this fraudulent math and claim he's so head and shoulders above everyone else. Also, an argument can be made that scorers lose efficiency when they attempt higher volume, so I'd like to see him replicate that efficiency with a higher goal output.
Lastly, here's a chart with Messi's goals and xG so we can compare in the same age range (25-31).
From 12-13 to 18-19 Messi had a total of 250 goals with an xG of 185.02. That's an overperformance of 35% with more than twice the output. Obviously it's debatable but I think peak Messi is a better finisher than Son, and current Messi is not too far behind son despite being 5 years older.
A little heavy to say "fraudulent" and "total BS" - it's a sketch I quickly knocked up from FBref data (which only goes back to '17) to help me understand Son's low xG and relatively high actual goals. It's meant to be indicative rather than precise. Critique and improvement always welcome, but no need to be so rude, mate. I'll make some improvements based on your feedback.
I was a little surprised by these figures myself so went looking for any prior work in this area and found this from '21: https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/premier-league/tottenham/son-heung-min-xg-harry-kane-b1782968.html. The figures there broadly reflect what I've got here. The point being made remains the same. It also contains some theories as to why Son is such an outlier, but the conclusion seems to be Son is indeed unusual.
"Goodman" here is Mike L Goodman, the former managing editor of StatsBomb.
I agree it will be good to see how he fares with a) more shots; b) more goals; c) more play in the box. This season and beyond with him playing as a 9 should hopefully shed some light.
I also agree he's probably not the one-of-a-kind genius Messi is. But to be even vaguely comparable is in itself quite a remarkable thing. And the bigger question for me is, is there anyone else, aside from Messi, that comes close?
Update: here's an improved version: https://thelastboyscout.uk/assets/img/son_xg_stats.webp
I don't think the claim that Son is one of the best finishers ever is BS or fraudulent.
I think that summing xG over performance by season is very very poor math. For instance, if Son scored 20 goals on 10 xG in one season followed by 0 goals on 1 xG, you would sum those to have an over performance of 0%. When in reality proper counting techniques should state 20 goals on a total of 11 xG for over performance of 82%.
The mathematical "technique" you chose grossly inflates his numbers compared to other finishers and grossly short changes Messi over the examined time period.
I've redone it with a little more care (see above) and agree the summing of xG over performance wasn't a good idea. It was a vestigial artefact where I'd been mucking about and I wish I'd removed it, but it was late and I couldn't be bothered as it didn't really affect the point I was making and it's not intended to be rigorous maths.
The results in the updated version aren't significantly different apart from Messi. The reason Messi's over performance has shifted so much in the update is because I removed the three PSG and MLS years, which I think are an unfair reflection on him.
I don't agree averaging the xG overperformance "grossly" inflated the numbers (unless you consider 6% gross). I do agree including the PSG and MLS years grossly short changes Messi, but I noted something to that effect in the original.
You don't need to be quite so hostile to people sharing their stuff here btw - save that for Twitter or Reddit if hostilities float your boat. I take it you're not and have never been an educator? But no harm done - thx for the feedback - it was useful and improved the analysis :)
You're right, I am sorry about being hostile. I should have been more light hearted about it. I just thought that it's another hyperbolic post contriving to exxagerate how good a player is, just like a lot of Twitter posts.
However, I disagree that cherry picking data would improve your analysis. Include all the years, but weight them properly (as the overall G/xG would).
Keep up the OC. Sorry again and cheers!
Do you know where I can get xG data before 2017? That's where FBref stops.
I just googled it for Messi. I assume it's available for a smattering of top forwards.