Strength of Schedule
Strength of schedule is one
of the many factors that fantasy football players often include in
their player rankings to try and get an edge over their opponents.
One of the problems with it however is that there is so much parity
in the NFL that a bad run defense can become one of the best ones in
the following year. This article will consider statistics from the
past six seasons in order to determine whether or not strength of
schedule is one of the factors worth worrying about in fantasy
football.
The first step for this
analysis was to determine how much defensive statistics vary from
year to year. In order to do this, I used the “points allowed by
position” statistics which tell us how many fantasy points each team
allowed to quarterbacks, running backs and wide receivers in a given
season. The goal was to determine how much a team’s statistics from
a given season impact that team’s statistics for the next season.
Using statistics from 2003 through 2009, here are the formulas that
predict the most accurately each team’s points allowed by position
for the next season (it may seem complicated but just bare with me,
I’ll explain what those mean in a second):
|
|
Formula |
|
QB |
Next Year Pts
Allowed = 220.9 + 0.198 x Previous Year Pts Allowed |
|
RB |
Next Year Pts
Allowed = 255.9 + 0.334 x Previous Year Pts Allowed |
|
WR |
Next Year Pts
Allowed = 394.4 + 0.227 x Previous Year Pts Allowed |
These formulas show us that
it is very difficult to predict how defenses will perform in the
upcoming season as only 20% to 35% of the previous year’s statistics
help us predict next year’s statistics. For example, the Arizona
Cardinals were the worst passing defense last season by allowing 340
fantasy points to opposing quarterbacks but according to the above
formula, you can expect them to allow only 288 in 2010 (220.9 +
0.198 x 340 = 288). For those who doubt these formulas here is an
interesting statistic: four of the top ten defenses against QBs
in 2009 had finished in the bottom half in 2008.
The next step was to use
these numbers and determine each team’s strength of schedule by
position for the 2010 season. The following charts show the three
easiest and the three hardest schedules for each position as well as
the multiplier which shows how much easier or harder their schedule
is compared to the league average:
|
Easiest Schedules |
|
QB |
RB |
WR |
|
WAS |
1.014 |
KC |
1.024 |
DAL |
1.013 |
|
PHI |
1.013 |
SF |
1.022 |
PHI |
1.011 |
|
DAL |
1.011 |
SD |
1.021 |
WAS |
1.011 |
|
Hardest Schedules |
|
QB |
RB |
WR |
|
CLE |
0.988 |
BUF |
0.977 |
BAL |
0.985 |
|
NE |
0.988 |
DET |
0.982 |
PIT |
0.986 |
|
PIT |
0.989 |
CLE |
0.983 |
NE |
0.986 |
These numbers show us that
the difference is less than 5% between the teams with the easiest
schedules and the teams with the hardest schedules. For example the
San Francisco 49ers have the second easiest schedule for running
backs but we can expect the defenses they will face to allow only
2.2% more fantasy points to running backs than the league average.
This means that if you project Frank Gore to have 310 fantasy
points, his easier 2010 schedule would mean you can expect him to
have 317 fantasy points. As you can see, it makes absolutely no
sense to look at strength of schedule for 2010 based on last year’s
defensive statistics as the difference is minimal. Some sites do
adjust strength of schedule based on off-season changes but can they
really increase the percentage that much? Personally I have big
doubts about this and it may be worth using as a tiebreaking method
between a few players but no more than that.
|