I wanted to look at Mike Cammalleri and Evgeni Malkin‘s shooting performance over the last five years relative to expected shooting based purely on shot location. These are only even-strength initial shots since I think we want to know how they do at picking a corner while being defended:
Ev Shots | EXPG | G | S | M |
Cammalleri | 13.9 | 14.8 | 147.6 | 65.1 |
Malkin | 15.3 | 14.5 | 146.3 | 60.0 |
Cammalleri has exceeded expectations very slightly, while Malkin underperformed very slightly. If this is a true talent, we'd expect to see the same pattern in their even-numbered and odd-numbered shots. Looking at 999 shots for Cammalleri and 824 for Malkin:
Exceed Sh% | Odd Shots | Even Shots |
Cammalleri | 2.2 | 10.7 |
Malkin | -18.1 | 7.3 |
It's hard to draw any conclusions there. If we look at the amount by which all players with 500+ shots since the lockout exceeded expectations in odd and even games, we see that there's not much of a relationship. This "talent" regresses 71% to the mean:
Only six forwards were able to exceed their expected shooting percentage by 1.5 standard deviations in both even and odd shots: Ilya Kovalchuk, Daniel Alfredsson, Alexander Semin, Marian Gaborik, Jason Spezza and Nathan Horton. I think Kovalchuk, and to a lesser extent, Horton, are the only players who show up in this list no matter how many different ways I put it together. So if you ever want to credit a player with better shooting talent than anyone else, those are the only two guys who I’d have any confidence in. Otherwise, a shooter is basically a shooter…