It turns out that, since 1998 over a quarter of the time
when a team changes coach it has improved its winning percentage by over 0.20
percentage points (over 4 wins) the next season! Less than 10 per cent of the
time has a team’s winning percentage fallen by over 0.20 percentage points. By
contrast, when there has been no coaching change, only around 10 per cent of
the time has a team’s winning percentage increased by over 0.20 percentage
points the next season, and over 15 per cent of the time the team’s
winning percentage has fallen by over 20 percentage points.
To put all this into a neater summary statistic, the average
increase in a team’s wins the season after it changes coach is 1.5 wins
(compared to -0.2 wins if it doesn’t change). That’s a pretty handy pick-up. However,
it could be that a coaching change often occurs when the team just happens to
have a stretch when it is performing below its long-run capabilities, and the
improvement we see on average when a new coach comes in is just a case of mean
reversion. As it turns out, when I looked to see if anyone had suggested this
before, I found that a study
that looked at coaching changes in Italian football had suggested pretty
much the same thing! They concluded that, once you do some controlling for
other factors that change when the coach changes, changing a coach does not
seem to have a significant impact on team performance. I’d like to think then, that if I could be bothered to do the econometrics, my first theory would still be proved right in the end. In the meantime though, maybe teams looking to boost membership after a brutal coaching change could send out the above histogram to their fanbases.
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