Why I Won’t be Listening to TK

Reading the Pre-Season Blurb (https://gnvulty.com/2023-spring-league-predictions) about my team was honestly a bit offensive. Jessica and Nathan were two of the best scorers last season. That combined with a solid handler core makes the last place ranking feel a little bit unwarranted. There was one part that was a little confusing. Who is this TK guy and why am I ignoring him. During the preseason I struck up a conversation with him about offensive philosophy. I found some common ground. We both hate turning the disc over. We both think hucks can sometimes be stupid. But here’s the rub, TK seems to think that a huck is almost always a bad throw, and he’s wrong.

Why TK is Wrong

Flipping a coin three times in a row and landing heads all three times is harder than rolling a six on a dice. The probability is trivial to calculate. Assuming a 50/50 shot, the coin flip is (1/2) * (1/2) * (1/2) = 1/8 Whereas the probability of rolling a dice and landing a 6 is 1/6.

Applied to Hucking

Hucks are not a high percentage throw. However, they almost always lead to a score making them a high value throw. Let’s just say for the sake of argument that a huck always scores. Let’s also say that it takes six high percentage throws to score with a 90% completion percentage. What is the chance of scoring with high percentage throws? .9^6 = .53. A huck only needs a completion percentage of 54% to be just as good as the low percentage throw. So far our team has completed at least 100% of our hucks. Meaning that we should almost always be hucking it.

Addendum

I wrote this blurb, but can’t help but wonder how relevant it is as I recall when TK called a three man weave. I sat on the equivalent of a field sideline and watched him effortlessly tear up a defense saying things like, “Don’t cut we need space.” Maybe it’s best if I let the adults do the scoring.

Email

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from GNV ULTY

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

GNVULTY