RobRoyal
Christ.
Yes, my child?
RobRoyal A player who creates chances for themselves is superior to a player who has the same goals-to-games ratio but depends on other players to create chances for them. The former lightens the responsibility of the rest of the team.
Is that not clear? Is that too "esoteric" for you?
So THAT's it? That's the crux of this "amazing" argument?
So the argument is, instead of passing to a team-mate (poor assist record) I will take it totally on myself to score. I will be SO successful my hit rate will be one goal every 8.5 shots (not including the presumed hundreds of times when I dribble into a dead-end, get tackled without shooting, accidentally fall over or put the ball out of play.)
I will be SO successful that my goals-per game record will be 1%, maybe 2% better than a much-maligned footballer called Shane Long, who didn't play football until his teens, and is only 23 now.
RobRoyal
Incidently if Forster, as he often did, received the ball from James Harper 30 yards from goal, ran past the centre-backs and scored, Harper would get the assist.
You KNOW that for a fact? You mean the last previous player to touch the ball gets the assist?
I don't think so
If that was the case that would mean that the number of assists should always equal the number of goals
This season we have 18 league goals but only 9 league assists (50%).(On target for 64 goals)
In 2009/10 it was 66 goals from 43 assists 65%
In 2002/03 it was 59 goals from 39 assists 66%
In 2003/04 it was 50 goals from 32 assists 64%
In 2004/05 it was 54 goals from 34 assists 63%
So pretty "standard" except we didn't score so many goals in those three seasons.
If Gunnarsson nutmegs the full-back and whips in a perfect cross that Long heads home from 6 yards, Gunnarsson gets the assist.
Are you satisfied that Harper and Gunnarsson deserve equal credit for the creation of the respective goals?
No, but then your original assumption was INCORRECT
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If the point of the assist stat is "to show who was the player who gave the scorer the chance" then it does a poor job.
Who says it does? YOU.
When does an ssist turn into NOT an assist? If Player X plays a ball to player Y IN HIS OWN HALF
and player Y beats every single opposition player TWICE, then does it a third time just because
he can, I very much doubt that "X" gets the assist.
I suggest an assist is given when a player has a genuine part in a goal but is not the goal-scorer. But I don't know the official rules. For example if I shoot and the keeper saves and my strike partner taps the ball in. Do I get the assists? Why not, my too hard to hold shot "caused" the chance? What if I merely hit the post? What if I shoot a mis-hit, it rebounds off the defending centre-half and Kebe taps in?
In the above scenario no statistics we have to hand credit Forster with the creation of the goal, and his impact will necessarily appear equal to Long's.
Sounds like Forster should have been awarded 59 assists for his own goals, as he so clearly ploughed his own furrow