Replacement officials in the NFL have been mildly
controversial lately. From players to coaches to numerous columnists, it
appears that the call for the real refs is universal.
Several of my usual reads have already analyzed various
aspects of the situation. At advancednflstats.com, Brian Burke took a look at home
field advantage and concluded that the numbers for this season are not
conclusively different from the long-term trend. Bill Barnwell comes at it from
more of an “integrity
of the game” approach that a great
number
of
columnists are
favoring.
Are they really
that bad?
Year
|
Avg Penalties
per Week (1-3)
|
2005
|
237.3
|
2003
|
233.0
|
2004
|
218.33
|
2012
|
218.30
|
2010
|
208.7
|
2011
|
207.7
|
2002
|
203.0
|
2009
|
200.3
|
2008
|
191.3
|
2006
|
188.7
|
2007
|
182.0
|
Stats-wise, any time I see this kind of consensus opinion
I want to look into it and see what’s up. Through three weeks, the replacement
refs are averaging 218 penalty calls per week. This puts them comfortably in
range of the past ten seasons when compared against the first three weeks of
each. When compared against the full-season numbers, 2012 looks terrible with
only 2004 and 2005 above 200. But this is because the replacements have so far
participated only in 16 game weeks while full seasons have several weeks with
13 or 14 games to accommodate byes. Penalties per week also tend to go down
slightly throughout the season even accounting for byes.
So if they aren’t calling more penalties, what is the
problem? The 2012 season is seeing more penalties than 2011, about 0.5 extra
calls per game, but that doesn’t seem like enough to cause this outcry.
The real issue is in the composition of the penalties. The
table below shows penalty averages in 2012, from 2002 to 2011 and just in 2011
to highlight the different composition of calls this year.
Penalty
|
2012
|
2002-11
|
2011
|
Offensive Holding
|
43.7
|
37.3
|
36.7
|
False
Start
|
43.3
|
46.7
|
42.3
|
Defensive Pass Interference
|
20
|
12.7
|
12.7
|
Unnecessary
Roughness
|
12
|
9.0
|
14.3
|
Defensive
Offside
|
10.3
|
13.1
|
12.0
|
Defensive Holding
|
9.7
|
6.7
|
6.7
|
Delay
of Game
|
9
|
9.4
|
8.3
|
Illegal
Block
|
8.3
|
8.7
|
9.3
|
Personal Foul
|
7.7
|
3.4
|
1.7
|
Roughing
the Passer
|
6.7
|
6.4
|
7.7
|
In a typical season, the most common penalty called is a False
Start. From 2002 to 2011, the False Start averaged 25% more calls than the
number two penalty, Offensive Holding. In 2011 the numbers were slightly closer
with 15% more False Starts than holds called. So far this year holding has been
called more frequently than False Starts.
The numbers only get worse from there. The three penalties
with significant divergence from prior numbers, besides Offensive Holding, are
Defensive Pass Interference, Defensive Holding and Personal Foul. These three
are huge in the flow of the game. Defensive Pass Interference has increased by 60%
over the 2002-11 average, Defensive Holding has increased by 44% and Personal
Fouls have more than doubled. If you want to see why the calls “feel” wrong,
this is it.
This disparity should also come through in the average
yards penalized per week, which takes into account the composition of the
calls. The typical weekly penalty yards through 3 weeks are 1,699 with a
standard deviation of 168. If we look at just the last five years the numbers
are 1,606 and 133. In 2012 the average weekly penalty yards are 1,898. This
puts 2012 just inside 1.2 standard deviations from the ten year average (significantly
different at 75% confidence), but nearly 2.2 standard deviations from the five
year average (significantly different at 97% confidence).
The bottom line is that these officials are demonstrably
worse than the real refs, even if that is only visible a level or two below the
top line penalties per game number.
Who blinks?
All the numbers in the world aren’t going to talk the NFL
– specifically the owners – out of their bargaining position. The referees look
similarly dug-in on their side. The details are obviously more complicated, but
the NFL is looking to move from defined benefit to defined contribution
pension, create some backup referees for any in-season changes necessitated by
poor performance – currently only possible after the season – and add a full
time employee at each position (line judge, referee, umpire etc.). I don’t have
a particular side in this, but a bit of advice to some of the louder voices:
For those who say “it’s
only 0.33%” of the NFL’s revenue (some sources say as little as 1/20th
of one percent), just remember that pursuing this argument implicitly says
they’re worth anything they demand unless you’re willing to specify an
appropriate percentage. Maybe the appropriate percentage is actually less than
the current state.
For those who say demand for the NFL is robust and is not
at risk from this dispute, just remember that things tend to be robust until
they’re not. Also, seriously, it’s only 1/20th of one percent (that’s
0.05%) separating the sides in terms of the NFL’s $9 billion annual revenue.
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