Quote:
Originally Posted by GTripp0012
By looking at estimated wins, and pythagorean wins courtesy of FootballOutsiders.com
Estimated Wins provides a figure that attempts to reevaluate each teams' season in terms of wins, but eliminate factors that the team cannot control.
Pythagorean wins simply looks at the points scored and points against, and determines how many games should have been won if the scores had been spread out over the entire season.
2004: Washington wins 6 games, with 6.8 estimated wins, and 7.1 pythagorean wins
2005: Washington wins 10 games, with 10.4 estimated wins, and 9.9 pythagorean wins
2006: Washington wins 5 games, with 6.8 estimated wins, and 6.1 pythagorean wins
2007: Washington wins 9 games, with 8.3 estimated wins, and 8.7 pythagorean wins
Overall 2nd Gibbs stint: 30 regular season wins, 32.3 estimated wins, and 31.8 pythagorean wins.
If not for luck, Joe Gibbs would have turned two of those 34 regular season losses into wins, effectively giving him a legitimate .500 record in these 4 years.
I don't think that's very bad at all.
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Funny, I can think of THE 2 games that Gibbs really got screwed in:
2004;
1) the first Dallas game - Walt Harris gets a bogus PI call on Glenn on a 3rd & 10 at the wash. 45 to give Dallas 1st & goal at the 1. We lose 21-18.
2) Green Bay - Portis catches the go-ahead td only to have it called back for a bogus illegal motion call on Thrash.