Saturday, August 21, 2010

Referee Crews Influence Games Unintentionally To Different Degrees

Much of our statistical analysis of referees is based on an assumption that different referee crews will influence games in different ways. Perhaps some referee crews tend to call penalties more strictly against both defenses so they wind up with more penalties per game and more points scored per game. By discussing differences among the referee crews, we are not saying that a specific crew is biased against a particular team. Or biased intentionally at all. Maybe they just have different characteristics (unintentionally). By looking at these differences, we can deepen our understanding of the game.

Judy Battista of The New York Times wrote an article on August 22, 2010 called Umpires Moved, And A Tactic Is Removed
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/22/sports/football/22umpire.html

She explained that some astute coaches tracked referee crews for specific characteristics about how the umpire would move on certain types of plays. Umpires were in the middle of the field and could essentially be used as an obstacle for the offense or defense to run around (or into) during plays.

It's more evidence that different referee crews influence games (unintentionally) in different ways. Back when the umpire always stood in the middle of the field, some referee crews opened up more options for the offense to succeed by using the umpire as an obstacle for defenders. So much so that astute coaches tracked differences among referee crews.

Can you think of some ways referee crews may influence games differently? Any theories you want to offer that someone can try to track during the season? It's easiest to make a theory that can be tested with standard statistics everyone already tracks (to avoid having to watch all the games yourself to track a new statistic!)