Points scored and points conceded have long been the way to judge a team’s prowess on each side of the ball.

However, when teams play at an extremely fast or slow pace, those numbers tend to be slightly distorted.

A team may score 90 points for a match, but if it takes them 60 inside 50’s to do so, they’re not utilising their time in the forward half very well.

With that in mind, Champion Data has created a way to find out just which sides are elite, offensively and defensively.

When the time between goals and centre bounces are taken out of the equation, the average match length is close to 100 minutes. So to even out the numbers, both offensive and defensive efficiency are based on a side having 50 minutes in each half during a game.

Here are the efficiency tables for 2013, with the numbers reflecting favourably on North Melbourne.

Offensive Efficiency (Points scored per 50 minutes in forward half)

Defensive Efficiency (Points conceded per 50 minutes in defensive half)

Club

Total

Rank

Club

Total

Rank

Hawthorn

110.5

1st

Fremantle

73.6

1st

North Melbourne

110.2

2nd

Sydney

80

2nd

Geelong

102.5

3rd

Richmond

87.5

3rd

Sydney

99.4

4th

North Melbourne

92.3

4th

Essendon

99.2

5th

Hawthorn

92.5

5th

Richmond

98.3

6th

Adelaide

94.3

6th

Carlton

98.1

7th

Gold Coast

94.7

7th

Collingwood

96.1

8th

Carlton

96

8th

Western Bulldogs

94.3

9th

Port Adelaide

96.1

9th

West Coast

94

10th

Geelong

96.2

10th

Adelaide

93.6

11th

Collingwood

96.3

11th

Gold Coast

93.3

12th

Brisbane

97.1

12th

Port Adelaide

92.5

13th

Essendon

97.7

13th

Fremantle

92.5

14th

St Kilda

98.5

14th

Brisbane

92.4

15th

West Coast

102.2

15th

GWS Giants

89.5

16th

Western Bulldogs

102.7

16th

St Kilda

86.2

17th

Melbourne

112

17th

Melbourne

78.7

18th

GWS Giants

118.4

18th


The external expectation would no doubt have been for North to have a lower defensive efficiency than fourth. However if one was to cast an eye back to 2013, it’s two losses that illustrate the improvement.

In successive away games against Gold Coast and Fremantle, North conceded 66 and 67 points. Its defensive work kept it in the game for longer than it probably deserved to be, going by the flow of general play.

To figure out the Roos’ defensive efficiency in these games, it’s quite simple.

v Gold Coast

66 (points conceded) / 64:03 (time in defensive half)
x 50

The result is a very good defensive efficiency of 51.5.

v Fremantle

67 (points conceded) / 56:20 (time in defensive half)
x 50

The result is another quality performance of 59.1.

Both numbers are no doubt unsustainable over a whole season. However in isolation it shows the value of these numbers in explaining how a side being outplayed over the field can stay in the game thanks to the good work of its back six.

Against the Suns, North only trailed by 15 points approaching time on of the final term. Against the Dockers the margin was just 19 points early in the last. On another day, it wouldn’t have been too unexpected to see North rebound with late goals and steal an unlikely victory.

Ranking offensive and defensive efficiency will be a common staple of post-game wraps. Visit NMFC.com.au’s advanced stats page