Sweden is the best country in the floorball world.
Finland and Sweden are two best countries in the world.
Czech Republic, Switzerland, Finland and Sweden are the best four countries in the world.
These discussions and some proved by the history of the game arise every two years when World Floorball Championships take hold.
We looked at some basic stats from last four* Championships and compiled so called „PDO chart“ for four teams mentioned above.
PDO is a simple formula that sums “shooting percentage” and “goalkeeping save percentage” of a team.
Let´s have a look at the chart.
*There are no shots on goal data found for WFC prior to 2010.
Important note: Only data from games played against the best 8 teams at the tournament included (wish was not to include games with a score such as 15-1 as these could bring more bias to comparisons).
In the chart we see that Sweden is always pushed to the right side. This means their goalkeeping efficiency has very good results (you need more shots on them to score). Additionally, in 2012, Swedish offence was deadly, scoring on a record rate of more than 37%.
Only Finland in 2010 equaled Sweden in goalkeeping efficiency values. Finland is usually above average in shooting percentage values.
Switzerland represents itself with a solid shooting percentage and poor (in comparison only) goalkeeping percentage.
Czech Republic has usually problem to be efficient in shooting, their goalkeeping numbers are solid.
Two basic questions can arise looking at the chart. The first is:
The chart helps us to recognize the best country in floorball, right?
Yes, ability to score and prevent goals on efficient rates belongs to best teams and it is showing year by year (and not only at the WFC).
But is there something more? Look at the second question:
What´s up with the 2012 Fins?
How is it possible that Finland was so bad in 2012? The answer lies in what we already know about PDO. In the NHL (the best hockey league in the world), PDO chart is used mainly as an indicator of luck. In other words, it was researched that the most significant predictor of PDO is uncertainty or simply „luck“. It is good to have in mind that the NHL is pretty competitive league with no big differences among teams (unlike floorball). You still find some better PDO teams over time in the NHL with good shooters and goalies but these values do not go outside 97 and 103 interval per season. What makes the PDO value to be extreme is lack of data, in other words not enough games. PDO over time converges to the value of 100 with certain variability (can be assigned to quality of teams). On tournaments such as World Floorball Championships, lack of data problem is always present. Knowing all of this makes me feel confident saying 2012 Finish flaws were influenced mainly by lack of luck.
Why PDO?
PDO gives us the best correlation with final results of teams in last four World Floorball Championships. We can also test share of shots on goal for (Shots For%, calculated as “shots on goal for” divided by “shots on goal for and against”) or Shooting percentage (Shooting%) and Goalkeeping save percentage (Goalkeeping%) itselfs and correlations are these:
-0.79 Tournament results + PDO
-0.72 Tournament results + Shooting%
-0.67 Tournament results + Shots For%
-0.61 Tournament results + Goalkeeping%
Closer to value -1 the greater influence statistic has on final results.
As we can see, all metrics are important (less than -0.6 is strong correlation) for good teams. At the end of the day it is PDO that your country must ride high in order to take the most precious medals.
So what do you think? How much things changed over last few years? Does Sweden still have some edge over Finland? Can Switzerland repeat or improve their PDO from 2016 in order to get to Finals? Can host country Czech Republic add efficiency to their game this year? Soon we will find out!
By Petr Malina
DAY 4: Group Stage Culminating, Czech Republic to Face Switzerland – 4.12.2018
Germany Saves Czechs by Beating Latvia, Nordic Powers Post Convincing Wins – 4.12.2018
Sweden Dominates Norway to Get Easy 9-1 Win – 3.12.2018
Estonia Beats Thailand 11-4 to End Group Stage Unbeaten – 3.12.2018
Great First Period Secures First Victory for Finland – 3.12.2018
Great Defense Gives Australia First Tournament Win over Poland – 3.12.2018
Data Analysis: Latvia vs Czech Republic 4:3 – 3.12.2018
Impressive Third Period Pushes Germany to First Win in Prague – 3.12.2018
Zubir‘s Two Goals Help Singapore Beat Japan in Front of 6,341 Spectators – 3.12.2018
Data Analysis: Finland vs Sweden 4:5 – 3.12.2018
DAY 3: Program Starts with Asian Battle, Fans to See Two Nordic Derbies – 3.12.2018
Latvia Stuns the Hosts, Slovakia and Switzerland on Scoring Surge – 3.12.2018
Estonia Wins Evening Thriller in Arena Sparta – 2.12.2018
First Tournament Surprise as Latvia Beats Czech Republic 4-3 – 2.12.2018
Battle between Canada and Singapore Ends in First Tournament Draw – 2.12.2018
Switzerland Outclasses Germany 13-1, Känzig Scores Four Goals – 2.12.2018
Japan Enters Tournament with 1-15 Loss against Slovakia – 2.12.2018
Norway Turns Score to Get First Tournament Win – 2.12.2018
Data Analysis: Germany vs Czech Republic 5:10 – 2.12.2018
DAY 2: Twelve Teams in Action, Czechs to Face Latvia – 2.12.2018